- Carl Auer von
Welsbach (1
September 1858 – 4
August 1929), who
received the
Austrian noble title of
Freiherr Auer von
Welsbach in 1901, was an Austrian...
-
conducted less heat. The last
burner that was
experimented with was the
Welsbach burner.
Around this time the
Bunsen burner was in use
along with some forms...
- An
incandescent gas mantle, gas
mantle or
Welsbach mantle is a
device for
generating incandescent bright white light when
heated by a flame. The name refers...
-
Ferrocerium alloy was
invented in 1903 by the
Austrian chemist Carl Auer von
Welsbach. It
takes its name from its two
primary components: iron (from Latin: ferrum)...
-
burns with a blue
flame and does not
produce light except when used with a
Welsbach gas mantle. Lowe's
Water Gas:
Water gas with a
secondary pyrolysis reactor...
-
special stoves and
Welsbach mantle lanterns, the
company rapidly expanded to
foreign markets.
Starting in 1952,
lighting and
burner stoves are launched...
-
upright low-pressure
Welsbach burners installed in the
reflectors in
place of the old
Argand lamps. The
arrangement of
fourteen burners was retained, seven...
- 1905,
osmium was also used as a
filament in
lamps made by Carl Auer von
Welsbach. The
metal was so
expensive that used
lamps could be
returned for partial...
-
Phippard Brothers. The
building was
illuminated by
about 1,000
Welsbach incandescent burners,
equal in
lighting power to
about 70,000 candles, producing...
- to run on coal gas, a
cluster of
seven Welsbach mantle burners being installed within the optic. The
burners were
switched on and off by clockwork, to...