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Jack Harry Teesdale June 1st 21 04:19 PM

Outside light problem
 
I have a series of 8 mains voltage outside bulkhead type lights. (fixed
under the soffits).

One stopped working so i duly had the cover off and replaced the
lamp. The light did not come on. Tested the lamp in another source and
it works OK, so not that.

I changed the lamp holder and tried again, still not working.

I have tested with my multimeter and get approx 240v at the lampholder,
so not a broken neutral.

All the other 7 lights are working OK.

Any suggestions/solutions to try?

Dave Plowman (News) June 1st 21 04:39 PM

Outside light problem
 
In article ,
Jack Harry Teesdale wrote:
I have a series of 8 mains voltage outside bulkhead type lights. (fixed
under the soffits).


One stopped working so i duly had the cover off and replaced the
lamp. The light did not come on. Tested the lamp in another source and
it works OK, so not that.


I changed the lamp holder and tried again, still not working.


I have tested with my multimeter and get approx 240v at the lampholder,
so not a broken neutral.


All the other 7 lights are working OK.


Any suggestions/solutions to try?


Isolate the circuit, then check for continuity between the broken one and
a good one, on both L&N individually. Are they looped in and out? A
multimeter might still show 240v with a slightly iffy connection.

--
*Never miss a good chance to shut up *

Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.

williamwright June 1st 21 04:54 PM

Outside light problem
 
On 01/06/2021 16:19, Jack Harry Teesdale wrote:

I have tested with my multimeter and get approx 240v at the lampholder,
so not a broken neutral.


I bet that 240V drops almost to zero when there's a load (such as a bulb).

Bill

[email protected] June 1st 21 06:27 PM

Outside light problem
 
On 01/06/2021 16:19, Jack Harry Teesdale wrote:
I have a series of 8 mains voltage outside bulkhead type lights. (fixed
under the soffits).

One stopped working so i duly had the cover off and replaced the
lamp. The light did not come on. Tested the lamp in another source and
it works OK, so not that.

I changed the lamp holder and tried again, still not working.

I have tested with my multimeter and get approx 240v at the lampholder,
so not a broken neutral.

All the other 7 lights are working OK.

Any suggestions/solutions to try?

Corrosion on a contact or junction

Rod Speed June 1st 21 08:30 PM

Outside light problem
 


"Jack Harry Teesdale" wrote in message
...
I have a series of 8 mains voltage outside bulkhead type lights. (fixed
under the soffits).

One stopped working so i duly had the cover off and replaced the
lamp. The light did not come on. Tested the lamp in another source and it
works OK, so not that.

I changed the lamp holder and tried again, still not working.

I have tested with my multimeter and get approx 240v at the lampholder, so
not a broken neutral.

All the other 7 lights are working OK.

Any suggestions/solutions to try?


Its a bad joint somewhere. It will deliver the very
low current the multimeter needs but not the full
current the bulb needs.


Peeler[_4_] June 1st 21 09:00 PM

Lonely Obnoxious Cantankerous Auto-contradicting Senile Ozzie Troll Alert!
 
On Wed, 2 Jun 2021 05:30:49 +1000, cantankerous trolling geezer Rodent
Speed, the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again:

FLUSH the trolling senile asshole's latest troll**** unread


--
"Who or What is Rod Speed?

Rod Speed is an entirely modern phenomenon. Essentially, Rod Speed
is an insecure and worthless individual who has discovered he can
enhance his own self-esteem in his own eyes by playing "the big, hard
man" on the InterNet."
https://www.pcreview.co.uk/threads/r...d-faq.2973853/

Dave W[_2_] June 1st 21 11:47 PM

Outside light problem
 
On Tue, 01 Jun 2021 16:39:45 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote:


In article ,
Jack Harry Teesdale wrote:

I have a series of 8 mains voltage outside bulkhead type lights. (fixed
under the soffits).



One stopped working so i duly had the cover off and replaced the
lamp. The light did not come on. Tested the lamp in another source and
it works OK, so not that.



I changed the lamp holder and tried again, still not working.



I have tested with my multimeter and get approx 240v at the lampholder,
so not a broken neutral.



All the other 7 lights are working OK.



Any suggestions/solutions to try?


Isolate the circuit, then check for continuity between the broken one and
a good one, on both L&N individually. Are they looped in and out? A
multimeter might still show 240v with a slightly iffy connection.


I've found that modern bulbs sometimes have contacts that are not as
tall, so when inserted they don't reach the ones in the socket.
--
Dave W

Rod Speed June 2nd 21 01:07 AM

Outside light problem
 


"Dave W" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 01 Jun 2021 16:39:45 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote:

In article ,
Jack Harry Teesdale wrote:
I have a series of 8 mains voltage outside bulkhead type lights. (fixed
under the soffits).


One stopped working so i duly had the cover off and replaced the
lamp. The light did not come on. Tested the lamp in another source and
it works OK, so not that.


I changed the lamp holder and tried again, still not working.


I have tested with my multimeter and get approx 240v at the lampholder,
so not a broken neutral.


All the other 7 lights are working OK.


Any suggestions/solutions to try?


Isolate the circuit, then check for continuity between the broken one and
a good one, on both L&N individually. Are they looped in and out? A
multimeter might still show 240v with a slightly iffy connection.


I've found that modern bulbs sometimes have contacts that are not as
tall, so when inserted they don't reach the ones in the socket.


Doesn't explain why that bulb STOPPED WORKING
but still works fine in other sockets.


Fredxx[_4_] June 2nd 21 03:05 AM

Outside light problem
 
On 01/06/2021 16:54, williamwright wrote:
On 01/06/2021 16:19, Jack Harry Teesdale wrote:

I have tested with my multimeter and get approx 240v at the
lampholder, so not a broken neutral.


I bet that 240V drops almost to zero when there's a load (such as a bulb).


That was my thought, perhaps a poor connection through corrosion.

Brian Gaff \(Sofa\) June 2nd 21 08:39 AM

Outside light problem
 
Is this voltage there when the bulb that is good is in? I'd suspect not.
Then its just a case of looking backwards to find where it goes away. Rodent
damage perhaps? Loose Connection block somewhere?. If that does turn out to
be the case, check any others to save time later on.

Brian

--

This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from...
The Sofa of Brian Gaff...

Blind user, so no pictures please
Note this Signature is meaningless.!
"Jack Harry Teesdale" wrote in message
...
I have a series of 8 mains voltage outside bulkhead type lights. (fixed
under the soffits).

One stopped working so i duly had the cover off and replaced the
lamp. The light did not come on. Tested the lamp in another source and it
works OK, so not that.

I changed the lamp holder and tried again, still not working.

I have tested with my multimeter and get approx 240v at the lampholder, so
not a broken neutral.

All the other 7 lights are working OK.

Any suggestions/solutions to try?




Brian Gaff \(Sofa\) June 2nd 21 08:41 AM

Outside light problem
 
Yes , but this one had been working fine had it not?
Brian

--

This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from...
The Sofa of Brian Gaff...

Blind user, so no pictures please
Note this Signature is meaningless.!
"Dave W" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 01 Jun 2021 16:39:45 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote:

In article ,
Jack Harry Teesdale wrote:
I have a series of 8 mains voltage outside bulkhead type lights. (fixed
under the soffits).


One stopped working so i duly had the cover off and replaced the
lamp. The light did not come on. Tested the lamp in another source and
it works OK, so not that.


I changed the lamp holder and tried again, still not working.


I have tested with my multimeter and get approx 240v at the lampholder,
so not a broken neutral.


All the other 7 lights are working OK.


Any suggestions/solutions to try?


Isolate the circuit, then check for continuity between the broken one and
a good one, on both L&N individually. Are they looped in and out? A
multimeter might still show 240v with a slightly iffy connection.


I've found that modern bulbs sometimes have contacts that are not as
tall, so when inserted they don't reach the ones in the socket.
--
Dave W




SH[_4_] June 2nd 21 08:52 AM

Outside light problem
 
On 02/06/2021 01:07, Rod Speed wrote:


"Dave W" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 01 Jun 2021 16:39:45 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote:

In article ,
Â* Jack Harry Teesdale wrote:
I have a series of 8 mains voltage outside bulkhead type lights. (fixed
under the soffits).

One stopped working so i duly had the cover off and replaced the
lamp. The light did not come on. Tested the lamp in another source and
it works OK, so not that.

I changed the lamp holder and tried again, still not working.

I have tested with my multimeter and get approx 240v at the lampholder,
so not a broken neutral.

All the other 7 lights are working OK.

Any suggestions/solutions to try?

Isolate the circuit, then check for continuity between the broken one
and
a good one, on both L&N individually. Are they looped in and out? A
multimeter might still show 240v with a slightly iffy connection.


I've found that modern bulbs sometimes have contacts that are not as
tall, so when inserted they don't reach the ones in the socket.


Doesn't explain why that bulb STOPPED WORKING
but still works fine in other sockets.



What bulb connector type is it? i.e. MR16? SBC? BC? GU10? ES? SES?



Peeler[_4_] June 2nd 21 09:59 AM

Lonely Obnoxious Cantankerous Auto-contradicting Senile Ozzie Troll Alert!
 
On Wed, 2 Jun 2021 10:07:31 +1000, cantankerous trolling geezer Rodent
Speed, the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again:

I've found that modern bulbs sometimes have contacts that are not as
tall, so when inserted they don't reach the ones in the socket.


Doesn't explain why that bulb STOPPED WORKING
but still works fine in other sockets.


It WOULD explain it, if for some (not yet known) reason the contacts didn't
reach the ones in the specific socket. Actually that's what sometimes
happens and can sometimes (and sometimes not) be corrected by screwing in
the lamp with extreme force, you pathological senile know-it-all.

--
Richard about senile Rodent:
"Rod Speed, a bare faced pig and ignorant ****."
MID:

Jack Harry Teesdale June 2nd 21 11:24 AM

Outside light problem
 
On 02/06/2021 08:52, SH wrote:
On 02/06/2021 01:07, Rod Speed wrote:


"Dave W" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 01 Jun 2021 16:39:45 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote:

In article ,
Â* Jack Harry Teesdale wrote:
I have a series of 8 mains voltage outside bulkhead type lights.
(fixed
under the soffits).

One stopped working so i duly had the cover off and replaced the
lamp. The light did not come on. Tested the lamp in another source and
it works OK, so not that.

I changed the lamp holder and tried again, still not working.

I have tested with my multimeter and get approx 240v at the
lampholder,
so not a broken neutral.

All the other 7 lights are working OK.

Any suggestions/solutions to try?

Isolate the circuit, then check for continuity between the broken
one and
a good one, on both L&N individually. Are they looped in and out? A
multimeter might still show 240v with a slightly iffy connection.

I've found that modern bulbs sometimes have contacts that are not as
tall, so when inserted they don't reach the ones in the socket.


Doesn't explain why that bulb STOPPED WORKING
but still works fine in other sockets.



What bulb connector type is it? i.e. MR16? SBC? BC? GU10? ES? SES?


BC and i've tried several 'good' bulbs of differing wattages but no light!

I'll be checking for circuit continuity today.

Jack Harry Teesdale June 2nd 21 11:27 AM

Outside light problem
 
On 02/06/2021 08:41, Brian Gaff (Sofa) wrote:
Yes , but this one had been working fine had it not?
Brian

Previously, yes and the same bulb still works in a different fitting.

It's looking like the problem is with the circuit continuity to the fitting.

SH[_4_] June 2nd 21 11:39 AM

Outside light problem
 
On 02/06/2021 11:24, Jack Harry Teesdale wrote:
On 02/06/2021 08:52, SH wrote:
On 02/06/2021 01:07, Rod Speed wrote:


"Dave W" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 01 Jun 2021 16:39:45 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote:

In article ,
Â* Jack Harry Teesdale wrote:
I have a series of 8 mains voltage outside bulkhead type lights.
(fixed
under the soffits).

One stopped working so i duly had the cover off and replaced the
lamp. The light did not come on. Tested the lamp in another source
and
it works OK, so not that.

I changed the lamp holder and tried again, still not working.

I have tested with my multimeter and get approx 240v at the
lampholder,
so not a broken neutral.

All the other 7 lights are working OK.

Any suggestions/solutions to try?

Isolate the circuit, then check for continuity between the broken
one and
a good one, on both L&N individually. Are they looped in and out? A
multimeter might still show 240v with a slightly iffy connection.

I've found that modern bulbs sometimes have contacts that are not as
tall, so when inserted they don't reach the ones in the socket.

Doesn't explain why that bulb STOPPED WORKING
but still works fine in other sockets.



What bulb connector type is it? i.e. MR16? SBC? BC? GU10? ES? SES?


BC and i've tried several 'good' bulbs of differing wattages but no light!

I'll be checking for circuit continuity today.



Aha....... I think I know what the problem is.......

The BC pins in the bulb holder are spring loaded and comprises of a top
cylinder sitting within a slightly larger bottom cylinder.

When you insert a bulb, the two cylinders are then compressed and is
under spring tension.

Sometimes the two cylinders on one of the pins corrode and stick in a
closed position. So when you insert a bulb, the stick pin no longer
touches the bottom of the bulb but there is 220V present on the pins itself.

Turn the power off and and try working loose the stuck pin, and
lubricate with WD40 or replace with a new BC fitting.

BC pin corrosion is common in outdoor light fittings.... :-)

S.

Jack Harry Teesdale June 2nd 21 11:59 AM

Outside light problem
 
On 02/06/2021 11:39, SH wrote:
On 02/06/2021 11:24, Jack Harry Teesdale wrote:
On 02/06/2021 08:52, SH wrote:
On 02/06/2021 01:07, Rod Speed wrote:


"Dave W" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 01 Jun 2021 16:39:45 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote:

In article ,
Â* Jack Harry Teesdale wrote:
I have a series of 8 mains voltage outside bulkhead type lights.
(fixed
under the soffits).

One stopped working so i duly had the cover off and replaced the
lamp. The light did not come on. Tested the lamp in another
source and
it works OK, so not that.

I changed the lamp holder and tried again, still not working.

I have tested with my multimeter and get approx 240v at the
lampholder,
so not a broken neutral.

All the other 7 lights are working OK.

Any suggestions/solutions to try?

Isolate the circuit, then check for continuity between the broken
one and
a good one, on both L&N individually. Are they looped in and out? A
multimeter might still show 240v with a slightly iffy connection.

I've found that modern bulbs sometimes have contacts that are not as
tall, so when inserted they don't reach the ones in the socket.

Doesn't explain why that bulb STOPPED WORKING
but still works fine in other sockets.


What bulb connector type is it? i.e. MR16? SBC? BC? GU10? ES? SES?


BC and i've tried several 'good' bulbs of differing wattages but no
light!

I'll be checking for circuit continuity today.



Aha....... I think I know what the problem is.......

The BC pins in the bulb holder are spring loaded and comprises of a top
cylinder sitting within a slightly larger bottom cylinder.

When you insert a bulb, the two cylinders are then compressed and is
under spring tension.

Sometimes the two cylinders on one of the pins corrode and stick in a
closed position. So when you insert a bulb, the stick pin no longer
touches the bottom of the bulb but there is 220V present on the pins
itself.

Turn the power off and and try working loose the stuck pin, and
lubricate with WD40 or replace with a new BC fitting.

BC pin corrosion is common in outdoor light fittings.... :-)

S.

Thanks but i've already fitted a brand new lamp holder (as mentioned in
my original post) but the light still doesn't work.

I think it's a circuit continuity problem which i am checking.

SH[_4_] June 2nd 21 12:38 PM

Outside light problem
 
On 02/06/2021 11:59, Jack Harry Teesdale wrote:
On 02/06/2021 11:39, SH wrote:
On 02/06/2021 11:24, Jack Harry Teesdale wrote:
On 02/06/2021 08:52, SH wrote:
On 02/06/2021 01:07, Rod Speed wrote:


"Dave W" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 01 Jun 2021 16:39:45 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote:

In article ,
Â* Jack Harry Teesdale wrote:
I have a series of 8 mains voltage outside bulkhead type lights.
(fixed
under the soffits).

One stopped working so i duly had the cover off and replaced the
lamp. The light did not come on. Tested the lamp in another
source and
it works OK, so not that.

I changed the lamp holder and tried again, still not working.

I have tested with my multimeter and get approx 240v at the
lampholder,
so not a broken neutral.

All the other 7 lights are working OK.

Any suggestions/solutions to try?

Isolate the circuit, then check for continuity between the broken
one and
a good one, on both L&N individually. Are they looped in and out? A
multimeter might still show 240v with a slightly iffy connection.

I've found that modern bulbs sometimes have contacts that are not as
tall, so when inserted they don't reach the ones in the socket.

Doesn't explain why that bulb STOPPED WORKING
but still works fine in other sockets.


What bulb connector type is it? i.e. MR16? SBC? BC? GU10? ES? SES?


BC and i've tried several 'good' bulbs of differing wattages but no
light!

I'll be checking for circuit continuity today.



Aha....... I think I know what the problem is.......

The BC pins in the bulb holder are spring loaded and comprises of a
top cylinder sitting within a slightly larger bottom cylinder.

When you insert a bulb, the two cylinders are then compressed and is
under spring tension.

Sometimes the two cylinders on one of the pins corrode and stick in a
closed position. So when you insert a bulb, the stick pin no longer
touches the bottom of the bulb but there is 220V present on the pins
itself.

Turn the power off and and try working loose the stuck pin, and
lubricate with WD40 or replace with a new BC fitting.

BC pin corrosion is common in outdoor light fittings.... :-)

S.

Thanks but i've already fitted a brand new lamp holder (as mentioned in
my original post) but the light still doesn't work.

I think it's a circuit continuity problem which i am checking.



have you checked the pins of the new lamp holder AND also the two
captive catches on the circuference? occasionally one side chips off
resulting in the bulb leaning at an angle in the holder being held by
only one side pin instead of both pins.

You could also create a dummy load tester by copnnecting a pair of test
leads to a knwon good bulb holder and known good bulb.

Test this on a known good lamp holder and then text sgain on the lamp
holder you wish to test.

Jack Harry Teesdale June 2nd 21 01:49 PM

Outside light problem
 
On 02/06/2021 12:38, SH wrote:
On 02/06/2021 11:59, Jack Harry Teesdale wrote:
On 02/06/2021 11:39, SH wrote:
On 02/06/2021 11:24, Jack Harry Teesdale wrote:
On 02/06/2021 08:52, SH wrote:
On 02/06/2021 01:07, Rod Speed wrote:


"Dave W" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 01 Jun 2021 16:39:45 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote:

In article ,
Â* Jack Harry Teesdale wrote:
I have a series of 8 mains voltage outside bulkhead type
lights. (fixed
under the soffits).

One stopped working so i duly had the cover off and replaced the
lamp. The light did not come on. Tested the lamp in another
source and
it works OK, so not that.

I changed the lamp holder and tried again, still not working.

I have tested with my multimeter and get approx 240v at the
lampholder,
so not a broken neutral.

All the other 7 lights are working OK.

Any suggestions/solutions to try?

Isolate the circuit, then check for continuity between the
broken one and
a good one, on both L&N individually. Are they looped in and out? A
multimeter might still show 240v with a slightly iffy connection.

I've found that modern bulbs sometimes have contacts that are not as
tall, so when inserted they don't reach the ones in the socket.

Doesn't explain why that bulb STOPPED WORKING
but still works fine in other sockets.


What bulb connector type is it? i.e. MR16? SBC? BC? GU10? ES? SES?


BC and i've tried several 'good' bulbs of differing wattages but no
light!

I'll be checking for circuit continuity today.


Aha....... I think I know what the problem is.......

The BC pins in the bulb holder are spring loaded and comprises of a
top cylinder sitting within a slightly larger bottom cylinder.

When you insert a bulb, the two cylinders are then compressed and is
under spring tension.

Sometimes the two cylinders on one of the pins corrode and stick in a
closed position. So when you insert a bulb, the stick pin no longer
touches the bottom of the bulb but there is 220V present on the pins
itself.

Turn the power off and and try working loose the stuck pin, and
lubricate with WD40 or replace with a new BC fitting.

BC pin corrosion is common in outdoor light fittings.... :-)

S.

Thanks but i've already fitted a brand new lamp holder (as mentioned
in my original post) but the light still doesn't work.

I think it's a circuit continuity problem which i am checking.



have you checked the pins of the new lamp holder AND also the two
captive catches on the circuference? occasionally one side chips off
resulting in the bulb leaning at an angle in the holder being held by
only one side pin instead of both pins.

You could also create a dummy load tester by copnnecting a pair of test
leads to a knwon good bulb holder and known good bulb.

Test this on a known good lamp holder and then text sgain on the lamp
holder you wish to test.


Done all that thanks.

Jack Harry Teesdale June 13th 21 02:53 PM

Outside light problem
 
On 02/06/2021 08:39, Brian Gaff (Sofa) wrote:
Is this voltage there when the bulb that is good is in? I'd suspect not.
Then its just a case of looking backwards to find where it goes away. Rodent
damage perhaps? Loose Connection block somewhere?. If that does turn out to
be the case, check any others to save time later on.

Brian


I couldn't find what the fault was so i bypassed that section of cable
and hey presto the light is now working again.

Thanks to all for your suggestions.

Jack Harry


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