Part 18 (1/2)
A. The _hydrogen of the tallow_ combining with the _oxygen of the air_, produce a ”watery vapour,” which is condensed by the _cold gla.s.s_ held above the flame.
Q. _Why does our hand, held ABOVE a candle, suffer from the heat of the flame so much more, than when it is placed BELOW the flame, or on ONE SIDE of it?_
A. Because the hot gases and air (in their ascent) _come in contact_ with the hand placed _above_ the flame: but when the hand is placed _below_ the flame, or on _one side_, it only feels heat from _radiation_.
Q. _Why is a RUSH LIGHT extinguished so much more quickly than a cotton-wicked candle?_
A. As the _rush_ wick is _smooth_ and _hard_, the _mere motion of the air_ (produced by carrying the candle from one place to another,) is sufficient to sever the flame from the rush.
Q. _Why is it more difficult to blow out a COTTON wick?_
A. The _cotton_ wick is _quite full of small threads_ or filaments, which help to _hold the flame on the wick_, like the roots of a tree.
Q. _Why does an EXTINGUISHER put a candle out?_
A. Because the air in the extinguisher _is soon exhausted of its oxygen_ by the flame: and when there is no _oxygen to support it_, the flame goes out.
Q. _Why does not a candle set fire to a PIECE OF PAPER twisted into an extinguisher, and used as such?_
A. 1st--Because the flame very soon _exhausts the little oxygen_ contained in the paper extinguisher: and
2ndly--The flame invests the _inside of the paper extinguisher_ with _carbonic acid gas_, which prevents it from blazing.
Q. _Why is a LONG WICK never upright?_
A. Because it is bent by its own weight.
Q. _Why is a LONG WICK covered with an EFFLORESCENCE at the top?_
A. The knotty or flowery appearance of the top of a wick arises _from an acc.u.mulation of particles partly separated_, but still loosely hanging to the wick.
Q. _Why is not the END of a long wick BURNT OFF, as it hangs over the flames?_
A. Because the length of the wick so diminishes _the heat of the flame_, that it is not _hot_ enough to burn it off.
Q. _Why do PALMER'S METALLIC WICKS never need SNUFFING?_
A. The wick is divided into two parts, each of which _bends outward_ to the outside of the flame; where the _end is intensely heated_, and _separated_ from the wick by the current of air up the candle.
Q. _Why do common CANDLES require to be SNUFFED?_