research
 Patents
 Books
 Literature
 Articles
 Timeline
 Auction Archive

about
 About this site
 Wanted to buy

bulb gallery

Incandescent:
C
carbon
WD
drawn tungsten
WC
coiled tungsten
WM
mini tungsten
WS
pressed tung.
FG
figural bulbs
XL
christmas
XS
christmas sets
T
tantalum

Discharge:
NE
neon lamps
AR
argon lamps
XE
xenon lamps
MA
mercury
MC
fluorescent
MS
special mercury

Hardware:
F
fuses
FX
fixtures
PF
plugs & fittings
SA
sockets
SW
switches

tube gallery

 X-ray
 Geissler
 Crookes
 Radio
 Box art

museum pics

 Dr. Hugh Hicks
 
Fort Myers, FL.
 S.Slabyhoudek

links

 Related links
 Submit a link

 

Author Topic: Star Bulb  (Read 19487 times)

Offline Ron Pond

  • New Member!
  • *
  • Posts: 3
Star Bulb
« on: May 19, 2000, 05:58:00 am »
Hi,
I have a "STAR" bulb,manufactured in Niles Ohio. Last patent date on paper label inside stem is 28 Mar '03. Paper label on bulb is intact as is filament. No carbon shadow,so I imagine little or no use. Bulb has E.S. base with black glass insulation.  Bulb is about size of ordinary modern household bulb,rated at 220 Volts and 24 Candlepower.
Has anyone got info on this item?
Regards,
Ron.

Offline Bob Masters

  • Hero Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 151
Star Bulb
« Reply #1 on: May 20, 2000, 10:40:00 am »
Blimey !
That bulb sure is a long way from where it was made ! I can't tell you anything about it, but the Ohio border is only a one hour drive from where I live !
Sounds like a neat bulb anyway. Good luck !
-Bob-

Offline Tim

  • Administrator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 831
    • http://www.bulbcollector.com
Star Bulb
« Reply #2 on: May 20, 2000, 05:30:00 pm »
Ron,

I can't find much of anything on the "Star" brand name in the reference material I have but I can tell you that Niles, Ohio was home to a large glass plant built by the National Electric Lamp Association (around 1911). I suspect that your bulb may be a "National Star" bulb. National was a company formed from a group of independent lamp manufacturers to compete with GE's lamps. The formation of these smaller companies brought about more research and quality, and if I'm not mistaken Star was probably one of these smaller companies that pooled with the others to form National in 1901.

Hope this helps.....

------------------
-Tim

Offline Ron Pond

  • New Member!
  • *
  • Posts: 3
Star Bulb
« Reply #3 on: May 21, 2000, 07:03:00 am »
Hi,
I've had a closer look at the label on this bulb and it has around the edge; "Standard Elec Man'f'g Co." as well as what I previously described. Does this help?
Thanks Bob and Tim for your help so far.
Regards,
Ron.

Offline Tim

  • Administrator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 831
    • http://www.bulbcollector.com
Star Bulb
« Reply #4 on: June 01, 2000, 10:51:00 pm »
Hi Ron,

The "Star" name is the brand name or trademark for Standard Elec. It would seem that your bulb (from the information thus far) is a rather typical carbon filament type from the early 1900s as the patent label confirms inside of the stem, and can be valued as such, in my opinion $10-$20, perhaps more if a collector is passionate about collecting brand name labels   As for more specific information on this company I'm at a loss - maybe some of the experts out here can continue the history further.

------------------
-Tim

[This message has been edited by tim (edited June 01, 2000).]