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Fairway beacon

Part of the collection: Equipment of watercrafts

Popularization note

Carbide beacons, powered by acetylene gas, were used in difficult or dangerous waters as floating beacons, marking a fairway that provides a path for ships of a certain depth. Equipped with the Daléna system, acetylene beacons were manufactured by the Swedish company AGA since 1905. They varied from ordinary carbide lamps in their use of two inventions by Gustaf Dalén (1869-1937), a special substrate called agamassan, which ensured the safe use of unstable acetylene, and the so-called solar valve (sw. solventil), which enabled the lamps to be operated cost-effectively by means of a sensor that responded to sunlight and automatically switched the gas supply off or on depending on the time of day. Gustav Dalén was awarded the Nobel Prize for this invention in 1912, and carbide lamps became the main way to illuminate lighthouses and fairways until the mid-20th century. The featured unit was also fitted with a special lenticular glass, directing the beam of light at a specific angle and color, which improved visibility and made it easier for vessels to navigate the waterway. Leszek Kocela



Signatures and inscriptions:

Inscription: AGA system DALEN Gasaccumulator Stockholm

Information about the object

Information about this object

Author / creator

AGA AB, Sztokholm (1904-2000)

Object type

signal lantern, navigational aid

Technique

batch production

Material

metal, brass

Origin / acquisition method

purchase

Creation time / dating

1950 — 1959

Creation / finding place

powstanie: Sztokholm (Szwecja)

Owner

Muzeum Narodowe Szczecin

Identification number

MNS/M/1305

Location / status

object is not displayed now

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