The J.K. Dey & Sons carbide cap lamp is a traditional mining lamp design that’s been in continuous production for over a century. Solid brass construction, simple two-chamber operation: water in the top chamber drips slowly onto carbide fuel in the lower chamber, which produces acetylene gas. The gas builds slight pressure and pushes through an orifice in the 4-1/4 inch outer diameter chrome reflector, where the flint striker on the reflector lights the flame.
Brightness is controlled by a valve that regulates how fast water drips between chambers — slower drip means smaller flame, faster drip means larger flame. The lamp burns surprisingly bright for its size, which is why coal miners and cave explorers used these lamps as their primary headlamps for generations. A clip on the back allows mounting on a cap, belt, or strap for hands-free use.
For cave explorers, mining historians, off-grid emergency lighting, vintage tools collectors, and anyone interested in pre-electric lighting technology, this is the kind of working historical artifact that’s still genuinely useful today. Note: carbide fuel sold separately. Lehman’s catalog selection for serious traditional lighting households.






