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This lamp is representative of one of the Tungsten filament models, made in 1909 by General Electric. GE operated a near monopoly of the American lamp business until 1905, when its carbon lamps with an efficacy of 3.4 lumens per Watt, and metallised carbons of 4.25 lm/W were threatened by the invention of the 6 lm/W Tantalum lamp by Siemens of Berlin. In 1906 GE secured rights to the tantalum lamp for a very high price, and thereafter redoubled its efforts to take a leading role in the development of future lamps.
Once again the key developments were taking place in Europe, and in 1906 GE sent two of its leading engineers, John Howell and Willis Whitney to Austria, Hungary and Germany to secure American rights with all four of the tungsten researchers - a huge $1.5 million deal. Alexander Just & Franz Hanaman, a pair of lab assistants at Vienna's Technische Höchschule were recognised as achieving the first practical lamp, and their design is employed here.
Finely powdered tungsten was mixed into a gum arabic and sugar solution, and squirted through diamond dies at high pressure to yield a fine wire. The wires were cut and bent into U-shaped hairpins before being sintered to remove binders and yield pure metal. The filaments are very fragile and have been fixed to the support wires by arc welding instead of the usual clamping technique. Lamp efficacy almost doubled to 7.85 lm/W, and incidentally the reason for the frosted bulb is to diffuse the glare of the brilliant tungsten filament. Its high cost made it unable to supersede tantalum immediately, and production continued until 1910 when it was abruptly made obsolete by Coolidge's much stronger and cheaper drawn tungsten wires. |