Donate SIGN UP

Dull Torchlight

Avatar Image
shivvy | 17:27 Sat 29th Oct 2016 | How it Works
22 Answers
The light coming out of my torch is dull. I assumed that the battery was running low so I replaced it however the light is still dull.
I checked the battery in another torch and it works properly so I can rule out the problem being with the battery.
Can a bulb run low? I always thought that bulbs either worked or didnt?
None of the connections look damaged.
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 20 of 22rss feed

1 2 Next Last

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by shivvy. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
If it's an old torch with a tunsten bulb the inside of the glass may have become coated with tungsten. Have a look at the bulb to see if it looks blackened.
tungsten bulbs dont run low (that you'd notice anyway)
if the contacts are clean dont know whats wrong with your torch
Another possibility is that the old battery leaked and the torch terminals have got a bit corroded. A rub with one of your emery boards could be in order.
Personally, I'd upgrade to an LED torch/spotlight/lantern....so much brighter and less trouble. Rechargeable ones are brilliant (literally!)
Something like this.....

http://www.screwfix.com/p/gsuf023-rechargable-led-spotlight-torch-integrated-li-ion/7456k
Question Author
No sign of corrosion bhg.
It isn't an expensive torch and I'm happy to replace it but I was just intrigued why the light would be dull if the problem isn't the battery.
I'm only really asking out of interest rather than necessity!
Thanks for your suggestions.
Go with gingebee's suggestion, or similar.
Maybe bulb is not connecting well with battery....try inserting tinfoil where bulb meets battery
Question Author
Tanbo - if it wasn't connecting then surely the bulb would be out or intermittant, not dull?
Check the bulb. Low power = dim light.
Question Author
I replaced the bulb but the replacement wasn't working so that told me nothing!
Final thought - is the reflector as shiny as it should be? If it's aged the bulb might be bright but it won't produce a good beam.
Probably the wrong voltage bulb, a 6 volt torch should have a 4.5 volt bulb.
The slightly lower voltage means the bulb is brighter.
( A 6 volt battery is really just over 5 volts so a 4.5 volt bulb is fine)
Question Author
Thanks again bhg but the reflector is shiny.
The bulb is a reddish/orangy colour instead of white.
Eddie - it is the same bulb and battery that used to work ie a 6 volt battery and a 4.5 bulb.
Get rid of your torch and go and get a LED one !

Available everywhere, but have a look in Tesco.
If the bulb is glowing red then there is certainly a voltage problem. Options are - battery going flat; wrong battery, wrong bulb; poor contacts somewhere along the line. Incidentally, rechargeable cells are lower voltage than alkaline cells (1.2volts instead of 1.5volts), so using rechargables might be the problem. The simple solution is a new LED torch.
Only the old Zinc Carbon batteries are a full 1.5v each, rechargeables and alkaline are about 1.35 volt. Some things work better on the old batteries, even if you need to replace them more often. I had a clock which just would not work on alkaline or rechargeables but was fine on the old Zinc Carbon ones.
I don't know which batteries you use Eddie but my Duracells say 1.5V on them and my rechargables say 1.2v (2 different makes).
Question Author
New torch has been purchased!

Just seems a shame that I couldn't work out what was wrong with the other one. Thanks for all your help everyone.
Shivvy...but did you get a LED one ?

Much brighter and much kinder on batteries !

1 to 20 of 22rss feed

1 2 Next Last

Do you know the answer?

Dull Torchlight

Answer Question >>

Related Questions

Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.