trrdster2000
Luke Skywalker
Offline
The rear lights have always had trouble with the grounds and this was no exception. For those who do not know, the ground ring with the little feelers are aluminum and the little copper spring that sets on the outside of the bulb giving the connection are two different and troublesome materials. Over the years they oxidize and the connection is broken. You can heat the plastic with a heat gun, pull back the holding edge and clean the aluminum on a bit of sandpaper and also the copper, put some de electric grease on it, stick it back together and heat the edge and fold it over. This will give you a almost good connection. Now, use a solder gun and get a small drop between them, make sure the metal melts the solder or you will be just laying the solder on top of the metal, not good, and that is as good as it will get. You can add a small wire at the solder and make a ground to frame, I did that on the TR6 and I think someone was selling those a few years back.
I had mentioned in a early post about BPNW having them for less than $5 each for single or double filiment holders. I don't know if they are the same as VB or Moss, but let me tell you not to waste your time, just rebuild your old ones. The BPNW did not work on half of the set and the other half fell apart when pulling them out tring to get a ground. The feeler cage for the ground is chromed, so that was a good thing for the solder project. I'm sorry for bad mouthing BPNW but felt the members here should be warned of a bad product.
They are better than the old ones when rebuilt but a big problem was the locating tit, it was larger than the bracket that it was surposed to fit over and didn't let the ring set down on the copper connection. If you have these and go through the process I decribed, be sure to dremell the little tit down a bit.
The new ones did not even require heat to get them apart, but after I got them back together and soldered a drop between the metals, I used the solder gun to melt a few places around the edge and then it was sealed for good.
Hope this will give you a fun project for the winter months you can do on the kitchen table.
Wayne
I had mentioned in a early post about BPNW having them for less than $5 each for single or double filiment holders. I don't know if they are the same as VB or Moss, but let me tell you not to waste your time, just rebuild your old ones. The BPNW did not work on half of the set and the other half fell apart when pulling them out tring to get a ground. The feeler cage for the ground is chromed, so that was a good thing for the solder project. I'm sorry for bad mouthing BPNW but felt the members here should be warned of a bad product.
They are better than the old ones when rebuilt but a big problem was the locating tit, it was larger than the bracket that it was surposed to fit over and didn't let the ring set down on the copper connection. If you have these and go through the process I decribed, be sure to dremell the little tit down a bit.
The new ones did not even require heat to get them apart, but after I got them back together and soldered a drop between the metals, I used the solder gun to melt a few places around the edge and then it was sealed for good.
Hope this will give you a fun project for the winter months you can do on the kitchen table.
Wayne
Hi Guest!
smilie in place of the real @
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