dgadee
Well-Known Member
From the 1980s I remember the old whistling and moaning buoys. I think they were lit with acetylene. Did they flash or was there a continuous low level of light?
What controlled the flash? Battery and timer?They flashed as well. I remember one of the NLHB boats with a gas tank on deck.
A pilot light was alight all the time. The gas for the main light filled a small reservoir for each flash sequence which when full was released in stages to make the sequence. A quick release burnt rapidly to make a short flash and a slow release to make a long flash. Things got complicated with multiple mixed length flashes. Then the sequence repeated.What controlled the flash? Battery and timer?
I don’t know, but google AI suggests it was a diaphragm that inflated, then released the gas, ignited, burnt for a period, then the diagram retracted and repeated. No doubt there was a sequence of ports that allowed metered gas at a certain flow rate, and of course springs. It suggests the light was extinguished and relit each time.What controlled the flash? Battery and timer?
In my childhood I just about remember playing with carbide to make (wetted with water) to make rather dirty acetylene. This was how, e.g., bicycle lamps would work using a dripping water tank. So no acetylene tank as is used for clean gas for a blow-torch! I suppose on/off patterns could be done by clockwork; not as complex as a real striking/chiming clock...They did hiss when up close.
From what i remember, the lune horn buoy in the lune deeps, had a solar powered light, but the horn/whistle was produced by swell action, air was forced up the buoy making the noise, it could be heard from a couple of miles away.
As said by others, the lights had an acetylene pilot light that ignited pulses of gas to produce the visible light. The mechanism that produced the pulses of gas in the correct time sequence and durations was powered by the pressure of the gas. They were very reliable and, obviously, worked constantly day and night. However, despite some research, I have not been able to find an actual mechanism in a museum or managed to find a drawing, cross section or explored view that illustrates how the mechanism worked.From the 1980s I remember the old whistling and moaning buoys. I think they were lit with acetylene. Did they flash or was there a continuous low level of light?
I did the same last week!Just reading Maurice Griffiths again which led to my question.
You are right, just found this but still no explanation of how the mechanism works Gustaf Dalén - WikipediaIRRC the gas firing mechanism was invented by the same chap as AGA cookers. He was blinded by an explosion and whilst sitting around in his kitchen he understood that the work involved in a coal range needed a re-think. this explains the the lack of controls or indicators on an AGA.
It seems he won the Nobel Prize for Physics for his 'sun valve' which switched off the light in daylight.IRRC the gas firing mechanism was invented by the same chap as AGA cookers. He was blinded by an explosion and whilst sitting around in his kitchen he understood that the work involved in a coal range needed a re-think. this explains the the lack of controls or indicators on an AGA.