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Eek. Sorry to bust up this article, but there are some serious trademark issues here. First and foremost, there is no such thing (officially) as a "lava lamp". Actually, this page will explain better than I: http://www.lavaworld.com/cfm/legal/legal.cfm
Unless there's opposition, I'll move this page to 'Motion lamp' and fill in information from the page above. The picture should be fine; I can't believe they'd hold a copyright that extended that far, but what do I know? -- Spikey 19:01, 6 Jan 2004 (UTC)
Do not move the page. Lava World International who bought the rights to the sell lava lamps in the United States from the original English company unwittingly trademarked the term Lava Brand Motion Lamp. This type of lamp has become known popularly as a lava lamp. There is no trademark on the phrase lava lamp. Lava World has tried and succeeded to protect the use of the word lava as related to other manufacturers, but can not control the popular use of the word lava; basically, they patented the wrong name. For more on the history see this site, http://oozinggoo.com (I'm the author.) -- user:fleabitten
Other places claim that they invented the lava lamp. eg [1]. Secretlondon 19:09, Jan 6, 2004 (UTC)
(I have no kind of legal knowledge of anything at all, whatsoever, nor even any interest in legal issues) "Lava" is a common english word. So is "lamp". The page appears to me to claim ownership of the term "LAVA", not the combination of "lava" and "lamp". "Lava lamp" means a lamp somehow related to lava, the word "lava" not used as if it's a brand name. I assume use of the word "lava" as a noun predates the creation of the company. (Volcanoes existed before the company was formed...) I find the claim that there is no such thing as a "lava lamp" about as sensible as I would find a claim that there is no such thing as a "frog lamp", if someone first showed me a lamp that looks like a frog. Κσυπ Cyp 00:26, 8 Jan 2004 (UTC)
Just mentioning the original subject, I think the title "Lava Lamp" should be kept. This is what they are most widely known as, and the legal page of "Lavaworld" is getting a bit beyond a joke, even in todays crazy, overactive legal world. Where will it stop? Besides, their legal bits would only be valid where they have trademarks & IP on their Lava name (& can try to ban the non-existant "lava lamp" phrase), which may not neccessarily be everywhere. -- Chooky78 13:17, 7 October 2006 (UTC)
Please restore the article. There are no trademark issues here. Trademark does NOT prevent you from talking ABOUT someone or something. See http://www.tabberone.com/Trademarks/folder/NewKids.shtml
Even though his question doesn't belong here I feel Bradley deserves an answer: http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A641224 It is not water.
Why are we calling the clear liquid "water"? It is not water and that is clear to anyone who has ever opened one up. There is information about this at Oozing Goo. This should be called "solution" or "matrix" or something more accurate than water.
The article, in contradiction to a patent it reffers to, states that the liquid in lava lamp is oil, while the solid that gets melted is wax. Oil and melted wax are miscible at any proportion when heated, and would not stay separated. The patent clearly states the device is based on immiscibility of the two liquids, and describes a combination of water as filling and oil as material for BLOBS - the part that stays down when cool. Also, it mentions that carbon tetrachloride - a heavy organic solvent immiscible with water but miscible with oil and wax, is used for tuning the blobs for right density, just a bit higher that the density of water. Please, if anybody wishes to revert the water filling back to oil filling, read first the patent [1] reffered by the article. -- 213.98.70.46 ( talk · contribs · logs) 22:17, 9 July 2007 (UTC)
The word 'subsbums' used in the article appears to be a typo. Is it 'subsumes' or something else? If any one has an idea, please correct it. Gjnyasa ( talk) 14:33, 10 January 2008 (UTC)
Links to sites that simply sell lava lamps should not be here - they are endless. Often someone will come and remove links to the patent and to Oozing Goo and replace those links with their shop (like Nichler lamps, etc.)
- I removed the USB-Lavalamp link as wiki is not here to promote your shop!
- I removed the lik to lavalamp.org because the contents on that site were removed.
- I think the link to the site about the giant lavalamp should be removed too as many sources call this project a hoax, which makes their collecting donations at least questionable. That shouldn't be supported through wiki and sure doesn't add to either the purpose of wikipedia or that of the article.
The Googie architecture article says Lava lamps are an example for Googie design or Populuxe design. Do you think it is correct, so it can be added to the article? -- Abdull 11:19, 26 March 2006 (UTC)
I own a glitter lamp, which uses the same technology that lava lamps use. The only difference is instead of wax being in it, there is peices of colored metallic confetti, as well as some glitter in the liquid itself. I noticed that there is a article here glitter lamp, about glitter lamps. Perhaps that article should be changed from a stub, and instead mentioned in this article about lava-lamps as a spin-off product. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.13.219.137 ( talk • contribs)
"Chaotic behaviour makes the movement of the wax unpredictable—hence lava lamps can aid in the generation of one-time pads for cryptographic use." How exactly? I'd love to see a link addressing this.Sorry, forgot to sign this.-- {{SUBST:User:Coryma}} 08:57, 31 August 2006 (UTC)
Hi. The third paragraph "The light bulb heats the container at the bottom, and due to heat exchange with the atmosphere, the container eventually dissipates the introduced heat. This method of heat transfer is called convection." doesn't really make much sense, and isn't very well written. It also isn't technically correct, and is out of place in the page.
I've replaced it with "When the lava lamp is turned on, the light bulb heats the bottom of the glass bottle and the metallic wire coil, which in turn heats the contents of the glass bottle in this vicinity.", and made a few minor updates. I've also added a bit on "Convection" in the liquid phases in a later section, as this where convection really is related to lava lamps. -- Chooky78 13:31, 7 October 2006 (UTC)
"Lava lamps were also featured in an episode of the TV show MythBusters, in which it was proven that heating a lava lamp on a stove could cause the lamp to explode and injuries sustained from such an explosion could be fatal."
Couple of comments: 1) To use the word "proven" here implies that it was a conclusive scientific experiment, which it wasn't. I recommend "demonstrated" instead. 2) I don't think this is a core part of the history of the lava lamp, and therefore should go in a different section...perhaps one dealing with popular culture, for instance. Slayte1 17:58, 29 March 2007 (UTC)Slayte1
The claim in the article: "If too low or too high a wattage bulb is used in the base, the "lava" ceases to circulate, either remaining quiescent at the bottom (too cold) or all rising to the top (too hot)." is likely wrong. When the MythBusters overheated a lava lamp (yellowish blobs in blue/green liquid) until explosion, the blobs did non stay at the top, but some shredded into many smaller blobs and droplets those were rapidly(!) swirling up and down within the bottle before it blew up. (I have it on video.) A blue glitter(?) lamp in the test did not explode, but suddenly the plug popped off and then the entire superheated liquid rapidly steamed out of the bottle like an explosive volcano eruption, making the now empty bottle crack on the hotplate. (May it be that this was the genuine reason why the thing got its name "lava" lamp?) 89.51.23.16 22:02, 26 July 2007 (UTC) (=CO=Windler)
A re-drafted article should also include reference to Mathmos as the UK manufacturer of lava lamps (non-capitalised). One of the issues here, I feel, is that the title "lava lamp" has become a semi-generic in the way 'Hoover', 'Biro', et al have done in the past, and any article needs to clarify this. -- AlisonW 18:23, 18 June 2007 (UTC)
We at Mathmos want to weigh in here. We think it a mistake to move the Lava-lamp page as it is the name these lamps are popularly known as. The history of the trademark “Lava lamp” and who invented this type of lamp is a messy one. We would like to try and set the record straight.
What is commonly known as the “Lava lamp” was invented by Edward Craven-Walker in 1963. He adapted the design from an earlier invention for an egg timer invented by another Englishman Mr. Dunnet. Mr. Craven-Walker formed a company in Poole, Dorset UK called “Crestworth Ltd.” This company originally marketed the lamp under the name “Astro lamp”.
In 1966 Mr. Craven-Walker sold the rights for the USA and Canada to Haggerty Enterprises who marketed his invention under the name “Lava Lite”.
In 1989 I and my business partner David Mulley took over the day to day running of Mr. Craven-Walkers business. Initially we changed the company name to “Crestworth Trading” and later to “Mathmos”. Although the name changed the premises, machinery, staff, intellectual property rights etc were all the same. We in fact still manufacture the lamps on the same factory site today.
When we re-launched the lamps we retained the name “Astro Lamp” but as just the name for the original model. We used the name “Lava lamp” for the range as it seemed to us that this was the generic name for the products.
Haggerty disagreed and we fought a trademark battle with them in Germany on this issue. The result of that legal battle is that both Mathmos and Haggerty can use the trademark “Lava lamp” in the UK and Germany. In some other parts of the world Haggerty has trademark on the word “Lava” or “Motion Lamp” as far as I am aware.
So the long and short of this “Lava lamp” is the popular term. Haggerty in the US market themselves as The Original Lava Motion Lamp. They are aggressive about protecting this as the only thing they invented was the word “Lava” not the lamp itself.
Mathmos is the name of the company that makes these lamps on the original site in Poole, UK to a formula and design given by Mr. Walker and refined by him until his death in 2000.
-- Thanks, Cressida Granger (CEO and owner of Mathmos Ltd.)
The lava lamp was certainly not invented in 1963. I remember a form of Christmas tree lighting in the 1950s consisting of glass tubes about 8mm across and 12 cm long mounted at one end in plastic shells each containing one of the bulbs in the string. Globs of coloured oil (or wax, but it was clear, as I remember) inside rose and fell just like the wax in a lava lamp. (I think they didn't catch on because they didn't stay upright on a tree.)-- Hugh7 21:57, 7 July 2007 (UTC)
those were bubblelights turkey —Preceding unsigned comment added by 195.195.66.97 ( talk) 15:04, 17 October 2007 (UTC)
Correct. The lava lamp was developed over a number of years from the late 1950s until its release in 1963. It was based on a simple egg timer, consisting of a blob of colored oil in a bottle of clear liquid, which was placed in the pot with the egg(s). When the water heated the liquid, the oil slowly lost density and rose as a single blob. When it reached the top, it indicated that your eggs were done. Supposedly, it had been fitted with an electric light so the blob rose and fell continually, and was on display in a pub Mr. Walker visited. Hugh7, what you are remembering are indeed a separate thing, known as bubble lights, which consist of a sealed glass tube containing a liquid (such as methylene chloride) with a low evaporation point. The tube has an air gap at the top. When heated, the fluid evaporates, and the pressure rising in the air gap forces air to suffuse into the fluid. It reforms at the base of the tube, where a glass pellet, salt granules, glass wool etc. has been placed to facilitate this, and the bubbles rise in the liquid. This technology was used for Christmas lights, signs, beer advertisements, and as decoration on Wurlitzer brand jukeboxes. NOMA held the bubble Christmas light patents. Trying to circumvent them, Peerless came up with what I think you're remembering, Hugh7: the Shooting Star. It contained two fluids, one floating atop the other, and the bubbles were lighter than the lower fluid and heavier than the upper, so they rose AND fell. But they were still only bubbles of gas. There were eventually some lava lamp-like bubble lights made, but they simply had colored oil at the bottom. The rising gas bubbles tossed bubbles of oil upwards as they went. But these, too, were not using the operating principle of the lava lamp. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.217.119.240 ( talk) 02:07, 4 December 2007 (UTC)
To further complicate the matter and as an interesting info on the side (also presented in the german WP article): You may want to look into the patent granted to Mr. Dunnet in the 1950ies. The text of which can be found here http://www.wikipatents.com/gb/703924.html or here (! including a drawing of the device!!!) http://v3.espacenet.com/textdoc?DB=EPODOC&IDX=GB703924&F=0 —Preceding unsigned comment added by 80.135.166.49 ( talk) 13:29, 14 February 2008 (UTC)
Since I can't possibly read the OTRS ticket, could someone explain whether or not the interwiki links are controversial? (I can't believe I just needed to ask that. Someone please stop the planet, I want to hop to a bus going to the nearest sane universe.) -- wwwwolf ( barks/ growls) 18:29, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
Apparently Wiki's OTRS are somewhat controversial, and TheRegister uses the LavaLamp page as an example [2] cojoco 00:01, 7 July 2007 (UTC)
The Register article was perfectly clear about the actual complaint, and it had nothing to do with the lamp, or this article specifically. The complaint is that OTRS operates outside of public view and does not explain its actions.
I believe Agamemnon2 seriously mischaracterizes the article; there is no doubt that frivolous legal actions are a problem, but the question is whether or not OTRS is a reasonable solution. Would it have been too much to ask for a post explaining the issue here on the talk page? Apparently so.
Suggestion: how about a template that states this article is under review by OTRS, please see the talk page. On the talk page there would be a concise description of the concern being investigated. That would have avoided all of this.
Maury 14:37, 9 July 2007 (UTC)
Lava World's problem, it seems, is not that they own the trademark 'lava lamp', but rather that in their opinion there is not, and cannot, be any such thing. There is ONLY the 'Lava brand Motion Lamp'. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.217.119.240 ( talk) 02:09, 4 December 2007 (UTC)
This image comes from a user who has uploaded at least three other pictures which were copyright violations. While it could well be that this one (and its identical copy Image:200px-LavaLampDark1.JPG) are indeed self-created as claimed, there are enough other free lava lamp pictures available and there is no need to take a legal chances (especially considering the fact that the company who made the lamp on these photos has already intervened with regard to other legal issues in this article). Regards, High on a tree 23:10, 7 September 2007 (UTC)
I've gone ahead and deleted the 200px one under CSD I1. hbdragon88 06:23, 1 December 2007 (UTC)
I think it is smart to strinclty control external links here. But, I think I should speak about the background of OG in relation to the lava lamp page here. OG has been the primary lava lamp website dating back to '96 or '97. When it was started there was virtually no lava lamp information on the web. Actually, much of its content was used in the original lava lamp page here. After reviewing the WP:EL page, I think the external link is completely valid. OG is longstanding and noteworthy - with subject-specific content. It is recognized as the leading lava lamp website with tens of thousands of users and over 400 community members. Please reconsider its relevance for the article and its helpfulness to article readers. Thank you, fleabitten
You have yet to show consensus exists that including this link is such a valuable addition to the article that it over rides our external link guidelines. We can request community imput if you wish. -- The Red Pen of Doom 14:12, 21 October 2008 (UTC)
Actually Oozinggoo is perhaps one of the largest archives of information regarding the lava lamp and has discussions and factual information dating back to the early 1990s. As for factual accuracy, your page on lava lamps is factually incorrect from the dates, to the ingredients fished from older patents that date from years ago, that are no longer relevant.
I love the way "admins" from wikipedia like to censor anything from outsiders and think they can create articles on things they know absolutely nothing about. It is shame as wikipedia used to a great place for information, I guess too many rotten apples are here. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 91.125.217.11 ( talk) 14:14, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
I removed an incomplete list of Mathmos lava lamp models in the UK. Completing and globalizing such a list would take over the article, and would require constant upkeep. Without being complete or global, the list is not fair or neutral. The list also offered unsourced conjecture about which models were popular.
I also removed a few external links to Mathmos commercial pages where lava lamps are sold by model. The photos on these pages are not accompanied by encyclopedic text describing the history or importance of the image, so the links do not meet WP:EL for reasons of photo value, and they fail as commercial links. Binksternet ( talk) 18:19, 3 July 2009 (UTC)
The current image affixed to the articledoes not show the original item that is described in the article. Instead it shows a third party product, which might infringe a copyright itself. That's like having the image of a fake "Polex"-Wristwatch for a "Rolex" article! I would be willing to make and donate a picture of one of my original lava lamps to replace the current image. What do I have to do? Thanks in advance - 80.135.159.128 ( talk) 16:56, 15 August 2009 (UTC)
After 20 years of use, I was considering throwing it out as it is now very cloudy and the wax has a white coating (I assume emulsified wax). But I wondered whether it might be possible to just (heat up the contents or just) dispose of the liguid or both contents.
Any chance of a section on this? 79.79.247.76 ( talk) 10:36, 17 August 2009 (UTC)
I'm going to change this part: "Glitter lamps with sparkly confetti (rather than wax) in the liquid have a similar motion to lava lamps but they rely on convection rather than density changes and are not considered true lava lamps."
I am changing it because "density change" IS convection. For example, a hot surface heats the air above it. This air expands because it's heated and as such is less dense than the air around it, and because it is less dense it rises. This is convection, and it is about change in density. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 67.169.181.77 ( talk) 19:02, 28 December 2009 (UTC)
step 1 firts you fill up a plastic bottle up to the top. step 2 then you put one food colouring in the bottle. step 3 next you put a little bit of oil on top of the water. step 4 then you can put glitter in. step 5 next you close the lid tight. step 6 then you shake it sloly and see your lava lamps glimmer. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 78.146.93.232 ( talk) 18:54, 21 March 2010 (UTC)
There are two historical websites that document the history of Lava Lamp in great detail with factual references to the legacy of the lamp.
www.flowoflava.com | The History of the British Lava Lamp Invented in 1963 by Edward Craven Walker and Still Manufactured in the UK to the present day.
www.hippielight.com | The History of the American Lava Lite that was manufactured in Chicago and founded by Hyman Milton Spector. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 46.208.134.167 ( talk) 02:20, 7 Jul 2012 (UTC)
Does anyone know if there has been a change in the contents of either the lava blobs, the liquid or both, in the newer lamps? I just bought 2 new ones and they are both stuck in perpetual colums, extending all the way to the top of the lamp. I have never had this happen with my 25 year old lamp. Thanks. Lisa Ann. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2602:306:330e:b310:9cc0:c8d4:8a06:36d3 ( talk) 02:58, 29 Dec 2016 (UTC)
Is light producein lava lamp 105.112.27.205 ( talk) 20:47, 13 February 2022 (UTC)
publisher: 136.158.79.148 ( talk) 11:12, 29 March 2023 (UTC)
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Eek. Sorry to bust up this article, but there are some serious trademark issues here. First and foremost, there is no such thing (officially) as a "lava lamp". Actually, this page will explain better than I: http://www.lavaworld.com/cfm/legal/legal.cfm
Unless there's opposition, I'll move this page to 'Motion lamp' and fill in information from the page above. The picture should be fine; I can't believe they'd hold a copyright that extended that far, but what do I know? -- Spikey 19:01, 6 Jan 2004 (UTC)
Do not move the page. Lava World International who bought the rights to the sell lava lamps in the United States from the original English company unwittingly trademarked the term Lava Brand Motion Lamp. This type of lamp has become known popularly as a lava lamp. There is no trademark on the phrase lava lamp. Lava World has tried and succeeded to protect the use of the word lava as related to other manufacturers, but can not control the popular use of the word lava; basically, they patented the wrong name. For more on the history see this site, http://oozinggoo.com (I'm the author.) -- user:fleabitten
Other places claim that they invented the lava lamp. eg [1]. Secretlondon 19:09, Jan 6, 2004 (UTC)
(I have no kind of legal knowledge of anything at all, whatsoever, nor even any interest in legal issues) "Lava" is a common english word. So is "lamp". The page appears to me to claim ownership of the term "LAVA", not the combination of "lava" and "lamp". "Lava lamp" means a lamp somehow related to lava, the word "lava" not used as if it's a brand name. I assume use of the word "lava" as a noun predates the creation of the company. (Volcanoes existed before the company was formed...) I find the claim that there is no such thing as a "lava lamp" about as sensible as I would find a claim that there is no such thing as a "frog lamp", if someone first showed me a lamp that looks like a frog. Κσυπ Cyp 00:26, 8 Jan 2004 (UTC)
Just mentioning the original subject, I think the title "Lava Lamp" should be kept. This is what they are most widely known as, and the legal page of "Lavaworld" is getting a bit beyond a joke, even in todays crazy, overactive legal world. Where will it stop? Besides, their legal bits would only be valid where they have trademarks & IP on their Lava name (& can try to ban the non-existant "lava lamp" phrase), which may not neccessarily be everywhere. -- Chooky78 13:17, 7 October 2006 (UTC)
Please restore the article. There are no trademark issues here. Trademark does NOT prevent you from talking ABOUT someone or something. See http://www.tabberone.com/Trademarks/folder/NewKids.shtml
Even though his question doesn't belong here I feel Bradley deserves an answer: http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A641224 It is not water.
Why are we calling the clear liquid "water"? It is not water and that is clear to anyone who has ever opened one up. There is information about this at Oozing Goo. This should be called "solution" or "matrix" or something more accurate than water.
The article, in contradiction to a patent it reffers to, states that the liquid in lava lamp is oil, while the solid that gets melted is wax. Oil and melted wax are miscible at any proportion when heated, and would not stay separated. The patent clearly states the device is based on immiscibility of the two liquids, and describes a combination of water as filling and oil as material for BLOBS - the part that stays down when cool. Also, it mentions that carbon tetrachloride - a heavy organic solvent immiscible with water but miscible with oil and wax, is used for tuning the blobs for right density, just a bit higher that the density of water. Please, if anybody wishes to revert the water filling back to oil filling, read first the patent [1] reffered by the article. -- 213.98.70.46 ( talk · contribs · logs) 22:17, 9 July 2007 (UTC)
The word 'subsbums' used in the article appears to be a typo. Is it 'subsumes' or something else? If any one has an idea, please correct it. Gjnyasa ( talk) 14:33, 10 January 2008 (UTC)
Links to sites that simply sell lava lamps should not be here - they are endless. Often someone will come and remove links to the patent and to Oozing Goo and replace those links with their shop (like Nichler lamps, etc.)
- I removed the USB-Lavalamp link as wiki is not here to promote your shop!
- I removed the lik to lavalamp.org because the contents on that site were removed.
- I think the link to the site about the giant lavalamp should be removed too as many sources call this project a hoax, which makes their collecting donations at least questionable. That shouldn't be supported through wiki and sure doesn't add to either the purpose of wikipedia or that of the article.
The Googie architecture article says Lava lamps are an example for Googie design or Populuxe design. Do you think it is correct, so it can be added to the article? -- Abdull 11:19, 26 March 2006 (UTC)
I own a glitter lamp, which uses the same technology that lava lamps use. The only difference is instead of wax being in it, there is peices of colored metallic confetti, as well as some glitter in the liquid itself. I noticed that there is a article here glitter lamp, about glitter lamps. Perhaps that article should be changed from a stub, and instead mentioned in this article about lava-lamps as a spin-off product. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.13.219.137 ( talk • contribs)
"Chaotic behaviour makes the movement of the wax unpredictable—hence lava lamps can aid in the generation of one-time pads for cryptographic use." How exactly? I'd love to see a link addressing this.Sorry, forgot to sign this.-- {{SUBST:User:Coryma}} 08:57, 31 August 2006 (UTC)
Hi. The third paragraph "The light bulb heats the container at the bottom, and due to heat exchange with the atmosphere, the container eventually dissipates the introduced heat. This method of heat transfer is called convection." doesn't really make much sense, and isn't very well written. It also isn't technically correct, and is out of place in the page.
I've replaced it with "When the lava lamp is turned on, the light bulb heats the bottom of the glass bottle and the metallic wire coil, which in turn heats the contents of the glass bottle in this vicinity.", and made a few minor updates. I've also added a bit on "Convection" in the liquid phases in a later section, as this where convection really is related to lava lamps. -- Chooky78 13:31, 7 October 2006 (UTC)
"Lava lamps were also featured in an episode of the TV show MythBusters, in which it was proven that heating a lava lamp on a stove could cause the lamp to explode and injuries sustained from such an explosion could be fatal."
Couple of comments: 1) To use the word "proven" here implies that it was a conclusive scientific experiment, which it wasn't. I recommend "demonstrated" instead. 2) I don't think this is a core part of the history of the lava lamp, and therefore should go in a different section...perhaps one dealing with popular culture, for instance. Slayte1 17:58, 29 March 2007 (UTC)Slayte1
The claim in the article: "If too low or too high a wattage bulb is used in the base, the "lava" ceases to circulate, either remaining quiescent at the bottom (too cold) or all rising to the top (too hot)." is likely wrong. When the MythBusters overheated a lava lamp (yellowish blobs in blue/green liquid) until explosion, the blobs did non stay at the top, but some shredded into many smaller blobs and droplets those were rapidly(!) swirling up and down within the bottle before it blew up. (I have it on video.) A blue glitter(?) lamp in the test did not explode, but suddenly the plug popped off and then the entire superheated liquid rapidly steamed out of the bottle like an explosive volcano eruption, making the now empty bottle crack on the hotplate. (May it be that this was the genuine reason why the thing got its name "lava" lamp?) 89.51.23.16 22:02, 26 July 2007 (UTC) (=CO=Windler)
A re-drafted article should also include reference to Mathmos as the UK manufacturer of lava lamps (non-capitalised). One of the issues here, I feel, is that the title "lava lamp" has become a semi-generic in the way 'Hoover', 'Biro', et al have done in the past, and any article needs to clarify this. -- AlisonW 18:23, 18 June 2007 (UTC)
We at Mathmos want to weigh in here. We think it a mistake to move the Lava-lamp page as it is the name these lamps are popularly known as. The history of the trademark “Lava lamp” and who invented this type of lamp is a messy one. We would like to try and set the record straight.
What is commonly known as the “Lava lamp” was invented by Edward Craven-Walker in 1963. He adapted the design from an earlier invention for an egg timer invented by another Englishman Mr. Dunnet. Mr. Craven-Walker formed a company in Poole, Dorset UK called “Crestworth Ltd.” This company originally marketed the lamp under the name “Astro lamp”.
In 1966 Mr. Craven-Walker sold the rights for the USA and Canada to Haggerty Enterprises who marketed his invention under the name “Lava Lite”.
In 1989 I and my business partner David Mulley took over the day to day running of Mr. Craven-Walkers business. Initially we changed the company name to “Crestworth Trading” and later to “Mathmos”. Although the name changed the premises, machinery, staff, intellectual property rights etc were all the same. We in fact still manufacture the lamps on the same factory site today.
When we re-launched the lamps we retained the name “Astro Lamp” but as just the name for the original model. We used the name “Lava lamp” for the range as it seemed to us that this was the generic name for the products.
Haggerty disagreed and we fought a trademark battle with them in Germany on this issue. The result of that legal battle is that both Mathmos and Haggerty can use the trademark “Lava lamp” in the UK and Germany. In some other parts of the world Haggerty has trademark on the word “Lava” or “Motion Lamp” as far as I am aware.
So the long and short of this “Lava lamp” is the popular term. Haggerty in the US market themselves as The Original Lava Motion Lamp. They are aggressive about protecting this as the only thing they invented was the word “Lava” not the lamp itself.
Mathmos is the name of the company that makes these lamps on the original site in Poole, UK to a formula and design given by Mr. Walker and refined by him until his death in 2000.
-- Thanks, Cressida Granger (CEO and owner of Mathmos Ltd.)
The lava lamp was certainly not invented in 1963. I remember a form of Christmas tree lighting in the 1950s consisting of glass tubes about 8mm across and 12 cm long mounted at one end in plastic shells each containing one of the bulbs in the string. Globs of coloured oil (or wax, but it was clear, as I remember) inside rose and fell just like the wax in a lava lamp. (I think they didn't catch on because they didn't stay upright on a tree.)-- Hugh7 21:57, 7 July 2007 (UTC)
those were bubblelights turkey —Preceding unsigned comment added by 195.195.66.97 ( talk) 15:04, 17 October 2007 (UTC)
Correct. The lava lamp was developed over a number of years from the late 1950s until its release in 1963. It was based on a simple egg timer, consisting of a blob of colored oil in a bottle of clear liquid, which was placed in the pot with the egg(s). When the water heated the liquid, the oil slowly lost density and rose as a single blob. When it reached the top, it indicated that your eggs were done. Supposedly, it had been fitted with an electric light so the blob rose and fell continually, and was on display in a pub Mr. Walker visited. Hugh7, what you are remembering are indeed a separate thing, known as bubble lights, which consist of a sealed glass tube containing a liquid (such as methylene chloride) with a low evaporation point. The tube has an air gap at the top. When heated, the fluid evaporates, and the pressure rising in the air gap forces air to suffuse into the fluid. It reforms at the base of the tube, where a glass pellet, salt granules, glass wool etc. has been placed to facilitate this, and the bubbles rise in the liquid. This technology was used for Christmas lights, signs, beer advertisements, and as decoration on Wurlitzer brand jukeboxes. NOMA held the bubble Christmas light patents. Trying to circumvent them, Peerless came up with what I think you're remembering, Hugh7: the Shooting Star. It contained two fluids, one floating atop the other, and the bubbles were lighter than the lower fluid and heavier than the upper, so they rose AND fell. But they were still only bubbles of gas. There were eventually some lava lamp-like bubble lights made, but they simply had colored oil at the bottom. The rising gas bubbles tossed bubbles of oil upwards as they went. But these, too, were not using the operating principle of the lava lamp. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.217.119.240 ( talk) 02:07, 4 December 2007 (UTC)
To further complicate the matter and as an interesting info on the side (also presented in the german WP article): You may want to look into the patent granted to Mr. Dunnet in the 1950ies. The text of which can be found here http://www.wikipatents.com/gb/703924.html or here (! including a drawing of the device!!!) http://v3.espacenet.com/textdoc?DB=EPODOC&IDX=GB703924&F=0 —Preceding unsigned comment added by 80.135.166.49 ( talk) 13:29, 14 February 2008 (UTC)
Since I can't possibly read the OTRS ticket, could someone explain whether or not the interwiki links are controversial? (I can't believe I just needed to ask that. Someone please stop the planet, I want to hop to a bus going to the nearest sane universe.) -- wwwwolf ( barks/ growls) 18:29, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
Apparently Wiki's OTRS are somewhat controversial, and TheRegister uses the LavaLamp page as an example [2] cojoco 00:01, 7 July 2007 (UTC)
The Register article was perfectly clear about the actual complaint, and it had nothing to do with the lamp, or this article specifically. The complaint is that OTRS operates outside of public view and does not explain its actions.
I believe Agamemnon2 seriously mischaracterizes the article; there is no doubt that frivolous legal actions are a problem, but the question is whether or not OTRS is a reasonable solution. Would it have been too much to ask for a post explaining the issue here on the talk page? Apparently so.
Suggestion: how about a template that states this article is under review by OTRS, please see the talk page. On the talk page there would be a concise description of the concern being investigated. That would have avoided all of this.
Maury 14:37, 9 July 2007 (UTC)
Lava World's problem, it seems, is not that they own the trademark 'lava lamp', but rather that in their opinion there is not, and cannot, be any such thing. There is ONLY the 'Lava brand Motion Lamp'. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.217.119.240 ( talk) 02:09, 4 December 2007 (UTC)
This image comes from a user who has uploaded at least three other pictures which were copyright violations. While it could well be that this one (and its identical copy Image:200px-LavaLampDark1.JPG) are indeed self-created as claimed, there are enough other free lava lamp pictures available and there is no need to take a legal chances (especially considering the fact that the company who made the lamp on these photos has already intervened with regard to other legal issues in this article). Regards, High on a tree 23:10, 7 September 2007 (UTC)
I've gone ahead and deleted the 200px one under CSD I1. hbdragon88 06:23, 1 December 2007 (UTC)
I think it is smart to strinclty control external links here. But, I think I should speak about the background of OG in relation to the lava lamp page here. OG has been the primary lava lamp website dating back to '96 or '97. When it was started there was virtually no lava lamp information on the web. Actually, much of its content was used in the original lava lamp page here. After reviewing the WP:EL page, I think the external link is completely valid. OG is longstanding and noteworthy - with subject-specific content. It is recognized as the leading lava lamp website with tens of thousands of users and over 400 community members. Please reconsider its relevance for the article and its helpfulness to article readers. Thank you, fleabitten
You have yet to show consensus exists that including this link is such a valuable addition to the article that it over rides our external link guidelines. We can request community imput if you wish. -- The Red Pen of Doom 14:12, 21 October 2008 (UTC)
Actually Oozinggoo is perhaps one of the largest archives of information regarding the lava lamp and has discussions and factual information dating back to the early 1990s. As for factual accuracy, your page on lava lamps is factually incorrect from the dates, to the ingredients fished from older patents that date from years ago, that are no longer relevant.
I love the way "admins" from wikipedia like to censor anything from outsiders and think they can create articles on things they know absolutely nothing about. It is shame as wikipedia used to a great place for information, I guess too many rotten apples are here. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 91.125.217.11 ( talk) 14:14, 27 December 2009 (UTC)
I removed an incomplete list of Mathmos lava lamp models in the UK. Completing and globalizing such a list would take over the article, and would require constant upkeep. Without being complete or global, the list is not fair or neutral. The list also offered unsourced conjecture about which models were popular.
I also removed a few external links to Mathmos commercial pages where lava lamps are sold by model. The photos on these pages are not accompanied by encyclopedic text describing the history or importance of the image, so the links do not meet WP:EL for reasons of photo value, and they fail as commercial links. Binksternet ( talk) 18:19, 3 July 2009 (UTC)
The current image affixed to the articledoes not show the original item that is described in the article. Instead it shows a third party product, which might infringe a copyright itself. That's like having the image of a fake "Polex"-Wristwatch for a "Rolex" article! I would be willing to make and donate a picture of one of my original lava lamps to replace the current image. What do I have to do? Thanks in advance - 80.135.159.128 ( talk) 16:56, 15 August 2009 (UTC)
After 20 years of use, I was considering throwing it out as it is now very cloudy and the wax has a white coating (I assume emulsified wax). But I wondered whether it might be possible to just (heat up the contents or just) dispose of the liguid or both contents.
Any chance of a section on this? 79.79.247.76 ( talk) 10:36, 17 August 2009 (UTC)
I'm going to change this part: "Glitter lamps with sparkly confetti (rather than wax) in the liquid have a similar motion to lava lamps but they rely on convection rather than density changes and are not considered true lava lamps."
I am changing it because "density change" IS convection. For example, a hot surface heats the air above it. This air expands because it's heated and as such is less dense than the air around it, and because it is less dense it rises. This is convection, and it is about change in density. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 67.169.181.77 ( talk) 19:02, 28 December 2009 (UTC)
step 1 firts you fill up a plastic bottle up to the top. step 2 then you put one food colouring in the bottle. step 3 next you put a little bit of oil on top of the water. step 4 then you can put glitter in. step 5 next you close the lid tight. step 6 then you shake it sloly and see your lava lamps glimmer. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 78.146.93.232 ( talk) 18:54, 21 March 2010 (UTC)
There are two historical websites that document the history of Lava Lamp in great detail with factual references to the legacy of the lamp.
www.flowoflava.com | The History of the British Lava Lamp Invented in 1963 by Edward Craven Walker and Still Manufactured in the UK to the present day.
www.hippielight.com | The History of the American Lava Lite that was manufactured in Chicago and founded by Hyman Milton Spector. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 46.208.134.167 ( talk) 02:20, 7 Jul 2012 (UTC)
Does anyone know if there has been a change in the contents of either the lava blobs, the liquid or both, in the newer lamps? I just bought 2 new ones and they are both stuck in perpetual colums, extending all the way to the top of the lamp. I have never had this happen with my 25 year old lamp. Thanks. Lisa Ann. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2602:306:330e:b310:9cc0:c8d4:8a06:36d3 ( talk) 02:58, 29 Dec 2016 (UTC)
Is light producein lava lamp 105.112.27.205 ( talk) 20:47, 13 February 2022 (UTC)
publisher: 136.158.79.148 ( talk) 11:12, 29 March 2023 (UTC)