RI 5162 A Comparison Of The Smokescope And The Ringelmann Chart ? Introduction And Summary

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
L. R. Burdick
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
16
File Size:
5559 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1955

Abstract

The Smokescope is an instrument recently developed for determining the density of smoke by shade comparison. The instrument is designed so that the smoke is seen adjacent to two shades of gray corresponding to Nos. 2 and 3 on the Ringelmann chart. Data on smoke density are important in the smoke-abatement field. The method that is specified and accepted as standard for smoke-density determination by the majority of city smoke regulations involves comparing the smoke shade with the four shades on the Ringelmann chart as published by the Bureau of Mines.2/ This investigation was made to determine the accuracy and convenience of the Smokescope. It was conducted as a part of the Bureau I s air-pollution work, which includes the study of techniques that will promote smoke abatement. The accuracy of the Smokescope was arbitrarily defined as the difference between the Smokescope determinations and the determinations by the accepted, standard method and was expressed as Smokescope correction. Although the corrections obtained were strictly correct only for the two observers and the Smokescope of the investigation, they indicate what might be expected from any observer who uses a Smokescope with reference shades that duplicate those of the test instrument. The report is devoted largely to the data on Smokescope correction, which were taken from a single stack under controlled smoke conditions. Field work, which was done at various locations with different stacks, is mentioned briefly in connection with the comparison of the convenience of the two methods. The data for estimating Smokescope correction were taken for the three variables that were expected to affect the results, namely, the density of the smoke, the amount of light, and the color of the sky behind the smoke.
Citation

APA: L. R. Burdick  (1955)  RI 5162 A Comparison Of The Smokescope And The Ringelmann Chart ? Introduction And Summary

MLA: L. R. Burdick RI 5162 A Comparison Of The Smokescope And The Ringelmann Chart ? Introduction And Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1955.

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