Now what I want to know is what physical difference is there between
R40's and R50's that mean one works and one doesn't in these
fittings .Anyone know?
R40's seem not to be available now.
Well,
The R tells you it's a reflector lamp and the 40 tells you that the
diameter of the lamp is 40 eighths of an inch (i.e. 5"). Ditto R50,
except that the diameter is 6 1/4"
R40 tells you nothing about the voltage, wattage, beam angle, cap size
(ES, SES, etc), colour, frosting or anything else.
Assuming that the physical size of your R50 wasn't a problem, then
either your R50 was duff, or possibly, the fitting needed the tab for
the centre connection to the bulb to be cleaned or bent out a little.
HTH
I think you mebbe got the first bit wrong ..or at least not correct
for what I have ....this one bulb have is 2" across the top which is
about 50mm This the Philips Spotone 30 which ,as I said ,Google says
is an R50 although I believe you do get similar lamps in much larger
sizes. This lamp does work as I said .It just doesn't work in the two
lights I have that takes this type of lamp( or mebbe only R40's)
HOWEVER
Your last suggestion was spoton ( or should that be Spotone) .It was
the contacts in the lampholders that were the problem ..a slight tweak
with a thin screwdriver and the job was done ...
thx very much Dave.:-)
OK, the eighth-inch numbering system is conventional for some lamps
including R, RO, PAR, prefix, etc which are based on American patterns.
For others, the number is the nominal lamp diameter in mm. Sorry I
neglected to mention this.
I confess I didn't look up the Philips Spotone product which would have
brought the inconsistency to light.
>
> HOWEVER
>
> Your last suggestion was spoton ( or should that be Spotone) .It was
> the contacts in the lampholders that were the problem ..a slight tweak
> with a thin screwdriver and the job was done ...
> thx very much Dave.:-)
Glad to be of service.