Quick, easy, safe, cheap
Fluorescent Inspection Light
© Frank Ford 2004; Photos by FF


I started with one of these little twisty fluorescent lamps:

It's a 13-watt "replacement" for a regular 60 watt incandescent.

 

I sawed the base apart with my fine little X-Acto saw, revealing the wiring inside:


And, I broke the wires loose from the base.

 

Then I soldered a salvaged power cord to the wires, sliding on a couple of pieces of shrink tubing first, of course:


Then I had the lamp hard-wired onto the cord, and the leads nicely insulated:

 

Time to introduce the star of our show, "Friendly Plastic." I poured some of the white pellets into a beaker of hot water:

 

After a couple of minutes, the pellets melted and turned clear:

 

Fishing out the mass, I kneaded it a bit to make it into a rough ball:

 

And squished it into and over the end of my new lamp:

Once it cooled, the plastic returned to its natural white color, and my assembly was complete:

Even after it's been on for an extended time, the lamp never gets warm enough to remelt the Friendly Plastic:

 

And, it gives a LOT of light inside a guitar body with no danger of overheating:



And, this tool was so cheap, quick and easy to make, I can simply toss out the whole thing when it burns out. . .

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