blueline
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I found this cool bulb in a dresser I bought at a thrift store. It appears the filament is continuous. From what I could find, it was made between 1915 - 1920? Are these rare? Can I screw it into a lamp to see if it works or would that break it? I was thinking I could put it on a dimmer with dimmer dialed down to not break the filament? Thanks!
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DetroitTwoStroke
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Luke
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That does look like an old one - neat find! Generally, it is a good idea to test old incandescent bulbs on a dimmer to reduce the thermal shock to the filament.
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Pride and quality workmanship should lie behind manufacturing, not greed.
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funkybulb
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I have one a bit older than this but it made before 1920s I think. This is a good piece to hang on to for sure. A variac is the best. But a dimmer will do but dont run a dimmer to max as these vintage lamps rated 110 volts As our line voltage is near 120 volts, my line voltage can reach as high as 128 volts.
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No LED gadgets, spins too slowly. Gotta love preheat and MV. let the lights keep my meter spinning.
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nicksfans
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Down with lamp bans!
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I have one that is very similar to this, if not the same. Mine still lights.
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I like my lamps thick, my ballasts heavy, and my fixtures tough.
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