This section is from the book "Mechanics Of The Household", by E. S. Keene. Also available from Amazon: Mechanics Of The Household.
Fig. 199 shows the general construction and arrangement of the parts of the inverted-mantle-lamp used with the central-generator system. In outward appearance the lamp is much like any other inverted-mantle gas lamp, but in arrangement of parts it is markedly different. The gas-cock C is larger than that used with the ordinary fixture, because the opening 0 must carry a larger volume of gas than that for supplying gas to lamps using the Bunsen tube. In the use of lamps with the Bunsen tube, the gas from the mains is mixed with approximately twenty times its volume of air;

Fig. 199. - Gas lamp for use with the central-generator or tube system of gasoline lighting.
with a lamp like that of Fig. 199, where the mixture has already been made in the generator, the conducting tubes and the gas-cock must be relatively very large.
The screen S, which corresponds to the screen S in Fig. 192, is quite as necessary as in the other lamp. It not only assures a uniform distribution of the gas in the tube but it prevents the mantle from being broken when the burner is lighted. If this screen is punctured, the explosion which takes place when the burner is lighted will be sufficient to blow out the bottom of the mantle. The burner tip T is practically the same as that used with other mantle lamps.
 
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