A while back I wrote a paper in this blog that was, named :why I believe them even when they're lying. It was trying to state that people even when they're wrong sometimes give you good ideas for future projects, the inventor below is such an inventor, not seeing that his project doesn't work we haven't tried it so we don't know but we're following up on all that we know to use them in other projects, like the steel rod that travels up the pipe and reaches insane level to break down other types of materials in a usable fuel, one thing to keep in mind all combustible engines Maine power source is hydrogen. All biological materials contain this hydrogen so scientifically it sounds reasonable to keep going and do the information, plus the story is incredible. I know of only one other story out of probably hundreds of stories like this and that was the match King and I'm not talking about this story
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The Match King is a 1932 the rise and fall of Swedish safety match tycoon
this is the story they give you when you mentioned the name the match King, it's a story to hide another the true story of the match King the one they locked up in the crazy house foreseen he can relight a match over and over and they thought that it would damage there the match company, instead of having a competitor they just simply said he was crazy
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These are the particular lighters that I am talking about you can try but it will be hard to find the story and the inventor of this device I'll give you more history about lighters at the bottom of this story if you want to know but I thought I'd throw this interesting story in with this inventor letting you know it is not the only conspiracy out there to keep you away from prominent inventions which day Dean disrupted to their major corporations. Like GM in the trolley car Monopoly; these are for those who don't believe in conspiracy the facts only do your research and find the truth, for those who are looking for it.
Those who believe in conspiracies have a pretty strong point here. Inventor Paul Pantone was jailed after making this video. Paul developed a small engine that runs on 80% water plus a variety of other things (and yes, it works).
Paul was offered money from some big oil groups for his patent. Paul’s stipulation was that the invention be used to help man.
Each time the prospective buyers turned him down. Allegedly Paul was taken to court and it was argued that he was insane for turning down an offer for such a large sum of money.
Paul was thinking principles, over profit. Paul was eventually placed in a mental hospital and was pressured, and tortured to try and force him to sign over his patent.
Paul Pantone knew that he would never be able to market his invention so he put together some do it yourself plans to modify your own engines. Links to those plans follow the video. The info is free.
The story of Paul Pantone is one that needs to be told. The following video does quite a good job of this. Watch the video now, and read the “Persecution” story below the video.
Here is the link to the small engine plans http://geetinternational.com/GEET%20-…
We suggest that you check out the entire site: http://geetinternational.com/
The history of these lighters you probably wouldn't know or don't want to know but it is a very interesting story and not all of its towed because it's shrouded in a cover-up
Today, lighting a fire is not a problem. Lighters are ubiquitous, inexpensive, dependable, and available in myriad sizes, types, and styles. Everyone knows what a lighter is. This was not always the case, by any means. Here is a timeline in the development of lighters. Now, loosely speaking, lighters, a method of producing fire, were around in various forms long before this timeline starts; this timeline is an attempt to trace the roots of the modern cigarette / cigar / pipe lighter, so it doesn't start with the Cave Man, but it does include matches.
circa 1823:
circa 1826:
The friction match is invented by English chemist John Walker. This is the first truly portable, easily used, readily available source of "instant fire". It did have drawbacks as it was ignited by friction rubbing on any surface, occasionally would almost explode when lit, and could throw sparks off with the potential of lighting any surrounding combustible material.
circa 1836:
Hungarian chemistry student Janos Irinyi invents the "Noiseless Match". This is an improvement because the match lights more smoothly. It is still dangerous because, again, friction will ignite the match; its greatest convenience is also its greatest weakness and danger.
circa 1844:
circa 1880:
The first 'fusee' lighter is introduced. A fusee (comes from 'fuse' as used on early cannons) is a cord impregnated with chemicals to assist it in burning - not quickly where a flame would be produced, but slowly and without an open flame. In the early versions a gear system was used to turn a fire steel to produce sparks and ignite the fusee. Later versions used the fusee as a wick immersed in gasoline in a tank - the beginnings of the more modern flint and petrol lighter. The fusee was extinguished by covering it with a cap, denying the oxygen necessary to burn.
circa 1889:
circa 1898:
1903:
Carl Auer von Welsbach, an Austrian chemist, discovered that ferro cerium (an amalgam of iron and cerium) produces powerful sparks when scratched. The alloy became known as Auer metal / Auermetal and was adopted for use as the 'flint' in cigarette lighters - the same flints we still use and that made possible the modern lighter. In 1907 the first factory to make Auermetal was opened and the rest is history!
And then...
Over the ensuing years many styles and mechanisms were developed, but all used the same basic method and materials - flint and petrol. There was a flint and striking wheel to produce a spark; a wick soaked with fuel to carry the flame, and a fuel storage tank, most typically packed with sawdust (very infrequent) or fiber (e.g. wool, cotton) and this was a lighter with the variance being in the casement and striking mechanism. It should be noted that what we use in lighters now, known as lighter fluid, was historically very different. Early lighters used gasoline, kerosene, and naphtha.
Catalytic lighters were in widespread but sporadic use from the early 1900s through the 1950s but safety problems and the lethal nature of the fuel (methanol) meant they never enjoyed the widespread and ongoing use that conventional flint and petrol lighters did.
1926:
Late 1920s:
At this point in time there were four basic types of lighters: the manual striking type (lift arm lighters, wheel lighters, and Zippo types - though this is before Zippo's time), the semi-automatic type (push button lighters), the automatic lighters (e.g. Ronson 'Banjo'), and striker lighters (which used a pull out wand to strike against a flint strip - basically a 'permanent match'.
The semi-automatic lighter began showing up in the very beginning with such lighters as the Hahway, Nassau, and others. Lift arm type lighters also got springs and release mechanisms making them semi-automatic in the early 1920s.
1947:
The first gas fueled lighter, the Gentry - a table lighter, is introduced by the Quercia family owned Flaminaire Company and is shortly followed by a pocket model called the Crillion. An identical lighter was marketed under license in the USA by the Parker Pen Company - the Parker Flaminaire in the 1950s. The early butane lighters all used
proprietary single use gas tanks. When the tank was empty, you bought another one - a good revenue stream for the manufacturers. Later this evolved to a system of refillable tanks that used proprietary cylinders to fill them - you had to buy the right gas cylinder for your lighter. A little further on butane gas could be bought from third party manufacturers - who often included adapters so you could refill any of several brands of lighters. Eventually almost all butane lighters used standardized filler mechanisms. In some cases, it is possible to still get the old lighters and work on the tanks to make them refillable and end up with a working lighter.
1961:
1962:
Electric Lighters
The Tassel-Liter (circa 1935) which was made in Chicago, IL and was designed with a socket that screwed into a light bulb fixture. In turn the light bulb was screwed into the socket so you didn't lose a light fixture! Wires from the socket then went to the lighter element, which has a tassel over it. The lighter was operational whether the light bulb was turned on or off.
A button was pushed to bring current to the heating element in the tassel-Liter so a cigar or cigarette could be lit.
A table model electrical lighter by the Tarrson Company of Chicago has a cigarette box built into it so one could get a cigarette out of the box, push the button on the lighter, and get a light. All of these units used a heating element that would get hot enough to ignite a cigar or cigarette.
In conclusion...
Lighters developed along several lines and the basics have not changed.
Flint and petrol lighters, dating from about 1908, are still made and easily available today.
There are books and more information available on the development and history of lighters if you want to know more. One of the best books at presenting the whole story is The Legend of the Lighter by Ad van Wert - out of print, but not too difficult to find - it is a beautiful, hard cover, coffee-table size book with wonderful pictures of lighters from the Dutch Lighter Museum Foundation's collection
We thought we would add a little bonus in on this rare lighter since we were talking about it has nothing to do with the previous story, and was never a big ticket item even though it was a item we thought was very ingenious. Since lighters were made before matches this lighter you see below was made to not only guard against matches being stroke accidentally but the spring that sprung up the match lit the match when the button was pushed.
We at media library don't know when and where this lighter was made on who made it, but we did find some similar pictures to it in World War II going through the archives. This proves nothing the internet is full of tricks and Treats.
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