Lux lamps are in general rare, and the ones with a ring shaped tank (do-nut tank) are even rarer since most Lux lamps used a separate tank with a...
A bright (ish) lantern in the bathroom!?:shock: That will not be very cozy, and nothing I would use it for. Lanterns are normally way too bright...
Yes, I have sand blasted some glasses. Well, not actually sand blasted, but rather glass bead blasted, which is a bit "nicer" to the material...
Yes, you are remembering correctly.:lol: The former years goat was made with straws still containing grains, and that's not very clever...
It might actually be :lol: But I doubt it. Many manufacturer use this hole in the globe for lighting. Ditmar and Phoebus, just to mention some.
Conny got it right. If your lamp is stamped "Typ5", it should be a lamp from Erik Sörberg. Not a lamp made by Skultuna. Skultuna was never heavy...
It's a spitting image of Standard 3515M1. What's the connection?
Said and done, Jeff! Terry, pressure or not... still a nice heater!
Cheers! I edited my post while you were typing, so you may have missed the direct link to the page with the control wheels since that was the link...
Main page Control wheels
I altered the title from floodlight to searchlight a while after my comment on the matter, which pretty much was confirmed later by the shot of...
Fantastic find! I wouldn't call it a floodlight, though. The housing is to deep, and the burner mounted at the back so probably more of a...
If the lamp was made like that from a factory, the spheres and other stuff may be part of the safety system since you obviously have a positive...
It is already in the Reference Gallery, so it's just to continue to post here! Knix, it is of course OK to start a new one under fettling if...
Sorry, Neil. I did just correct myself and removed the posts about it possibly being an FL4 before you made your post. Still good with the...
Added the "P" in the title.
Well, it is presented in both a catalogue from 1937 and another from 1949 that I have copies of, but it is also seen as late as 1958 in a price...
It uses gasoline (petrol). What's URP?
Good luck!
The glass is exactly 200 mm in diameter, and the height is 30 mm. Thickness around 2 mm, but it's not easy to measure exactly since the edge is...
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