Any tricks for retentioning those things? Or do you generally replace the socket? I see it all the time, intermittent bulb syndrome.
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Fender Bulb sockets
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I polish the little center point with my end brush Dremel, or even a pencil eraser. If you look at the sides of the barrel at the slots for the bayonet pins, you will see the slot forms a small tab, I gently bend those small tabs inwards to bear harder against the sides of the bulb base. I find that helps.
Also, the terminals on the end are held together by the center rivet. To refresh the contact surfces there, I grasp the thing and move the terminals side to side some, basically rotating them around the rivet a few degrees.
Most times these things cure the shaky light.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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Sometimes it pays to grab a bunch of Type 47 bulbs and find one that has a slightly longer blob of solder off the end. I think Fender had ordered a bunch of pilot lamp sockets with insufficiently expanded springs when they did the RI hand-wired tweed twin, because these are well known for having 'blinky' pilot lampsBuilding a better world (one tube amp at a time)
"I have never had to invoke a formula to fight oscillation in a guitar amp."- Enzo
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Originally posted by tubeswell View PostSometimes it pays to grab a bunch of Type 47 bulbs and find one that has a slightly longer blob of solder off the end.
Sometimes you get an aging lamp that has an intermittent filament. Can't fix that just change it out.
On occasion I've been able to mend a loose receptacle by adding a fillet of solder to the crevice between solder tab and cylinder, only if the metal is clean enough for the solder to stick. Worse comes to worst, replace the receptacle entirely with either the standard open frame variety, cheap, or the more expensive cylinder type made by Chicago Miniature. There is a cheapo plastic version of the cylinder receptacle, it's crap, avoid it.This isn't the future I signed up for.
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Originally posted by lowell View PostLove this forum. I retentioned the socket...and also added a dab of solder to the bulb. Was a PITA to get the bulb in but it worked.
Great input thanks everyone.Experience is something you get, just after you really needed it.
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Originally posted by nickb View PostMy trick for getting the bulb in and out is to use a bit of heat shrink sleeve. If you get the size right it's just enough to grip the bulb you you can push and turn. You don't need to shrink the tube if the size is right.This isn't the future I signed up for.
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I nearly always find it's the bayonet terminal rather than the one on the end. The bayonet sleeve is zinc plated and needs abrading slightly and then I solder it to the tag. It always struck me what a complicated assembly this is just to hold a bulb. Nice that they kept the old design, though.
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They make official bulb extractors. I have a couple like this one:
506-0073 - DIALIGHT - Installation / Removal Tool, 506 Series Panel Mount Indicators | Newark element14
The small end fits the typical #44 or #47 type, and the fat end fits the larger round bulbs like on some crossovers.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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I haven't seen that tool before. I"ve usually resorted to an appropriate size cable jacket that fits over the bulb.
BTW, the Chicago Minature # CM755 bulb 6.3V/150mA bulb has a 20,000hr life, which far outlasts the type 47 bulb. Direct replacement, similar cost.Logic is an organized way of going wrong with confidence
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I also forgot to ask...does anyone know of a wrench that can actually fit into the sloped Fender panels to get at that huge hex nut? I usually have a proper tool for everything, but this one has baffled me for years.Logic is an organized way of going wrong with confidence
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You can probably make one by bending a thin wrench, or buy one like this:
Mission Amps Hardware PageOriginally posted by EnzoI have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."
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