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- Dietz #80 "Blizzard" Lantern
Dietz #80 "Blizzard" Lantern
The Dietz #2 Blizzard, now known as the #80 Blizzard, was originally billed as the “King of the Cold Blast Lanterns,” and was in fact one of the first Cold Blast Lanterns produced. This workhorse of a lantern is still used as a primary source of light in many parts of the world, as well as still a favorite here in the U.S.
- 15″ High, 7 3/4″ Base Diameter
- Average 12-14 Candle Power, (Maximum 20 c.p.)
- 7/8″ Wick
- 31 oz. Fount Capacity, 27 Hour Burning Time
- Apprx. Thermal Output: 1400 BTU per Hour
- Operates on Average at 6 to 10 Cents per hour worth of fuel, (at $7 to $11 per gallon.)
History of R.E. Dietz Lanterns:
Robert Edwin Dietz first began selling whale oil and camphene lamps and lanterns in 1840 at the age of 22. Robert and his brother Michael patented the first practical flat wick burner especially designed for the then new fuel oil, kerosene, in 1859. The following decade Robert sold his interest in “Dietz & Company” to begin manufacturing “Irwin Patent” tubular lanterns after buying the defunct Archer and Pancoast Company from a receiver in 1868. Since that time the R.E. Dietz Company manufactured hundreds of lantern models, and pioneered the automotive lighting industry.
These lanterns are not reproductions, but are a continuation of production on original tooling and presses, with some models now over 100 years old. Unfortunately, the lantern division of the R. E. Dietz Company moved to Hong Kong in 1956, and all Dietz lantern production ceased in the U.S.A. in 1970. In 1982 the Dietz lantern factory was moved from Hong Kong into China. The R.E. Dietz Company was closed in the United States in 1992. For nearly 150 years, Dietz lanterns have been known around the world as “The Old Reliable.”