Hello:
At the top of the stairs in our house, there is a light fitting that continually gives trouble. The trouble is that the connection between the lead terminal, at the base of one of the two bulbs, and the sprung brass, live terminal pin(s) keeps getting broken. I do not believe that there is anything wrong with the wiring to this fitting, since, until putting in two long-life bulbs, several weeks ago, it never gave any trouble. I am forced to assume that, through vibration, the bulb must move — only slightly, but enough for it to break the connection for one of the bulbs. (Opening and closing the nearby loft trapdoor, on its hinges, and pulling down and pushing back up the sprung loft ladder, may cause enough disturbance to move the bulb off its connection-pins. After all, the corner of this large trapdoor is only about six inches from the glass globe of the fitting).
Before taking off the globe and trying to put things right, I should like to know of a certain way to get this bulb to stay connected. At nearly 82, for me to climb a tall pair of steps (placed right at the edge of the top stair — the only place to reach the three securing screws around the edge of the globe) is a nightmare of a job, and would be difficult for anyone.
I am aware that one way of attempting to cure this recurring failure of the bulb would be to replace it, but that may not work for long, and I have no desire to duplicate the ordeal of taking off the globe and putting it back on. It may be that there is something not quite right about the bayonet fitting in which the bulb is pushed. I should like to have a strategy that will deal with that possibility.
Can anyone suggest anything that an ordinarily savvy householder might do, if the bulb itself is not the cause of the trouble (it could be a one-off, badly-made bulb)? By the way, to get the light-bulb to come on, every couple of days or so, I take a light aluminium tube (the one used for operating the loft trapdoor), and give the glass globe of the light fitting a couple of taps with it. It always comes back on, but, as stated, this must be repeated.
With grateful thanks to anyone with a useful comment,
A.W.
At the top of the stairs in our house, there is a light fitting that continually gives trouble. The trouble is that the connection between the lead terminal, at the base of one of the two bulbs, and the sprung brass, live terminal pin(s) keeps getting broken. I do not believe that there is anything wrong with the wiring to this fitting, since, until putting in two long-life bulbs, several weeks ago, it never gave any trouble. I am forced to assume that, through vibration, the bulb must move — only slightly, but enough for it to break the connection for one of the bulbs. (Opening and closing the nearby loft trapdoor, on its hinges, and pulling down and pushing back up the sprung loft ladder, may cause enough disturbance to move the bulb off its connection-pins. After all, the corner of this large trapdoor is only about six inches from the glass globe of the fitting).
Before taking off the globe and trying to put things right, I should like to know of a certain way to get this bulb to stay connected. At nearly 82, for me to climb a tall pair of steps (placed right at the edge of the top stair — the only place to reach the three securing screws around the edge of the globe) is a nightmare of a job, and would be difficult for anyone.
I am aware that one way of attempting to cure this recurring failure of the bulb would be to replace it, but that may not work for long, and I have no desire to duplicate the ordeal of taking off the globe and putting it back on. It may be that there is something not quite right about the bayonet fitting in which the bulb is pushed. I should like to have a strategy that will deal with that possibility.
Can anyone suggest anything that an ordinarily savvy householder might do, if the bulb itself is not the cause of the trouble (it could be a one-off, badly-made bulb)? By the way, to get the light-bulb to come on, every couple of days or so, I take a light aluminium tube (the one used for operating the loft trapdoor), and give the glass globe of the light fitting a couple of taps with it. It always comes back on, but, as stated, this must be repeated.
With grateful thanks to anyone with a useful comment,
A.W.