This Disappearing filament optical pyrometer was kindly lent me by Francis CARLIER, Hot End Engineer of the AGC Boussois plant. It has been used by several generations of glassworkers, since the sixties.
The optical pyrometer makes it possible to measure the temperature of an incandescent object, by simple optical aiming.
Measurement consists in comparing, in red monochromatic light, the brightness of the object with that of the pyrometer lamp filament.
The pyrometer is focused on the incandescent object. It gives an image of the object where the filament is standing out. The filament
appears darker or lighter, depending on whether its brightness is less than or greater than that of the object.
The two photographs of the filament of the device, below, give an idea of what we observe in the pyrometer in operation.
The E rheostat allows to vary the intensity in the filament of the measure lamp. The measure is obtained at the disappearance of the filament whose hue is confused
with that of the incandescent object, giving the impression of a clear cut filament.
The intensity in the filament is then the measure of temperature. This measure is obtained by direct reading on the galvanometer dial with two scales of
measurement: 700 to 1500 °C and 1200 to 2000 °C. As with any measuring device, the best accuracy is obtained in the last third of the dial: select
the measurement scale accordingly.
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The dial is labeled : H&B (Hartmann & Braun) N° 1-3038957 int. 1948. On the right of the dial, the 3 symbols indicate: