Bulletin 131 Approved Electric Lamps For Miners

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 75
- File Size:
- 3235 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1917
Abstract
In various publications relating to safety in mining the Bureau of
Mines has called attention to the hazards attending the use of openBame
lamps. An open-flame lamp is a potential source of danger
in any coal mine. It may start a fire in a dry mine or an explosion
in a gaseous mine.
The type of open-flame oil lamp now used in mines is the product
of long evolution; its principal merit is simplicity. That such a
light is unsafe in an atmosphere containing gas (methane) is evident,
and Sir Humphrey Davy immeasurably increased safety in
coal mines when he found means of protecting a lamp flame so that
it would not readily ignite gas. The safety lamp, however, gives
less light than the open-flame lamp, is not as simple in construction,
is more cumbersome, and must De carried in the hand .. Consequently,
some miners are reluctant to abandon the open-flame lamp for the
safety lamp, and risk their own lives and the lives of their fellow
workers with the one rather than to be hampered by the other.
When small electric bulbs, with their clear, white light, and small
electric storage batteries became available, the advantage of combining
these elements for a miner's lamp seemed manifest. The combination
looked simple and safe, but was soon found to have elements
of danger and weakness peculiar to itself.
The Bureau of Mines showed, in 1911, that the breaking of a
miniature electric bulb in an inflammable mixture of gas and air
might ignite the mixture, so that only the fragile glass of the lamp
bulb might stand between the miner and injury or death. There
Was also a possibility that sparks from the small battery would ignite
gas, and the accidental spilling of the contents of a battery on the
miner's clothing or skin was a possible source of injury.
The first portable electric miner's lamps that were carried in the
hand, or with the battery strapped to the back and the light carried
on the head, were exceedingly crude and were designed without
appreciation of the sources of danger. The possibility, however, of producing a safe and practical miner's lamp by the proper combination
and design of the elements available promised to increase
safety so greatly that the Bureau of Mines attemr>ted to stimulate
better design and construction by careful investigations and the
establishment of an approval system that would be an assurance to
the miner and an advantage to the maker of the lamp. As a result
various manufacturers submitted types of lamps, cords, and bulbs
for test and cooperated with the bureau in efforts to so improve the
safety features of these devices that the lamps would P&$ specific
tests for approval.
Citation
APA:
(1917) Bulletin 131 Approved Electric Lamps For MinersMLA: Bulletin 131 Approved Electric Lamps For Miners. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1917.