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PHILCO PHORUM

Rewiring Philco Pilot Lamps

The information presented on this page is for 1937-42 Philcos; however, it can also be used for other applications as well.

PARTS NEEDED:
One #6 nylon washer (Mouser Electronics part number 561-D662, also available at some hardware stores)
Heat-shrink tubing, 1/4" diameter
About ten minutes' worth of time
This is a pilot lamp from a 1940 Philco Model 40-185. The insulator used in this lamp socket is made of rubber, inside the spring which holds the bulb in place.

When pulled apart, you will find that the rubber has melted into the spring in Philco lamp sockets made between 1937 and 1942. You will need to remove the rubber from the spring before proceeding.


After the old rubber insulation is removed from the spring, move the spring back out of the way. What you have left is a rivet, to which the wire is soldered, and a thin metal washer behind the rivet, as shown here.

Unsolder the wire and keep the rivet. The thin metal washer may be discarded as it will no longer be needed. Set the spring and the pilot lamp shell aside for now.

Cut a length of new wire to the same length as the old wire, then discard the old, rubber-covered wire.


Here is a close-up of the new nylon washer which we will use. This will insulate the spring from the rivet.

Strip about 1/16" of insulation from one end of the new wire, and insert this into the rivet from the back (narrow end), as shown. Solder the wire to the rivet at the front (wide end) of the rivet.

DO NOT allow a large solder blob to form on the wide end of the rivet; this will not allow the lamp to be inserted into the socket when we are finished.

You may need to smooth off the wide end of the rivet with a file to obtain a smooth, rounded surface. This end will make contact with the end of the lamp.

Cut a 1/2" length of heat-shrink tubing, and get your nylon washer ready.

 
Slip the heat-shrink tubing over the other end of the wire, and slide it up to the rivet. Using a heat source such as a lighter, match or heat gun, carefully heat the tubing until it shrinks to cover the narrow end of the rivet, as shown.

It is important that your joint look like this at this point, as we do not want the spring to contact the end of the rivet or any part of the wire where the insulation has been stripped off, else a short will result.

 
Now slip the new nylon washer over the new wire from the opposite end, and slide it up to the end with the rivet and heat-shrink tubing. Slide the washer up to where it makes contact with the rivet, as shown here.

At this point we are nearly finished.

 
Slide the other end of the wire through the spring, and through the pilot lamp shell. Your lamp socket should now look like this.

We are finished! Strip a small length of insulation from the other end of the wire, solder it back into the radio where the old wire had been soldered to, push everything back into the shell, and install a new lamp.

 
The finished product! This repair should last for many years.

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© 1997-2006, Ron Ramirez. All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication prohibited. Top of page