Out here, everything seems to go in circles.
Once again, we have a poster linking to a film of a Bray lamp and telling us that it was a lamp that emitted very little light.
That is as untrue as it was the last time over this was claimed.
The Bray lamp was produced to meet the threat of the new electric lamps. And it was manufactured years before 1888, so claiming that there were no bright gas lamps available at that time is false.
There were a number of manufacturers producing competitive gas lamps. There was the Sugg lamp, emitting 80 c.p (candlepower).
The use of candle term candlepower was originally defined in England by the Metropolitan Gas Act 1860 as the light produced by a pure spermaceti candle weighing one sixth of a pound and burning at a rate of 120 grains per hour. Spermaceti is found in the heads of sperm whales, and was once used to make high-quality candles. 80 c.p makes for a strong light.
There was furthermore the Siemens lamp, emitting a mighty 120-400 c.p!
And then there was the mightiest of them all, the lamp alluded to out here as a flickering, dim light: the Bray lamp. It produced 500 c.p.
Light 500 candles inside a room and it will get VERY bright!
However, the Bray lamp was too expensive, and so the London authorities did not invest in it. So, the lamps that were left to shine on the East End streets were of poorer quality. They did, however, produce enough light for the PC:s to make notes under them.
At any rate, claiming that the light produced was very low and exemplifying with a Bray lamp does not bring any correct light at all to the discussion, just as it is equally incorrect to say that there were no bright gas lamps available in 1888.
Once again, we have a poster linking to a film of a Bray lamp and telling us that it was a lamp that emitted very little light.
That is as untrue as it was the last time over this was claimed.
The Bray lamp was produced to meet the threat of the new electric lamps. And it was manufactured years before 1888, so claiming that there were no bright gas lamps available at that time is false.
There were a number of manufacturers producing competitive gas lamps. There was the Sugg lamp, emitting 80 c.p (candlepower).
The use of candle term candlepower was originally defined in England by the Metropolitan Gas Act 1860 as the light produced by a pure spermaceti candle weighing one sixth of a pound and burning at a rate of 120 grains per hour. Spermaceti is found in the heads of sperm whales, and was once used to make high-quality candles. 80 c.p makes for a strong light.
There was furthermore the Siemens lamp, emitting a mighty 120-400 c.p!
And then there was the mightiest of them all, the lamp alluded to out here as a flickering, dim light: the Bray lamp. It produced 500 c.p.
Light 500 candles inside a room and it will get VERY bright!
However, the Bray lamp was too expensive, and so the London authorities did not invest in it. So, the lamps that were left to shine on the East End streets were of poorer quality. They did, however, produce enough light for the PC:s to make notes under them.
At any rate, claiming that the light produced was very low and exemplifying with a Bray lamp does not bring any correct light at all to the discussion, just as it is equally incorrect to say that there were no bright gas lamps available in 1888.
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