Bart,
Excellent vintage lamp choice. Will really compliment your build.
Just a couple of weeks back I retro-fitted one of the vintage bicycle lamps from my collection with a rechargeable LED lamp. Everything self-contained within the lamp itself, so no wiring involved. As luck would have it, the new lamp's plastic housing was a snug interference-fit into this particular Powell & Hanmer lamp's shell - so no additional fixings required. Conveniently, the LED lamp's on/off switch is accessible via the flip-up hinged red lens on the lamp's left side. (Yep, stars were aligned for this conversion...). Perhaps if using other vintage lamps, it would be a cinch to stick the LED lamp to the reflector lens inside the back of the lamp using double-sided adhesive tape. The LED lamp is easily removed for charging via its supplied USB cable. Only modification I had to do was to snip off and file flush the LED lamp casing's pair of moulded-on hooks for the rubber securing band. Cheapest and quickest conversion ever. Took no more than 15 minutes tops. Dadcat's little helper gives it the thumbs-up!
LED Lamp cost UK£4 online, and features multiple light modes. Bargain in anyone's language. I've done a couple of vintage to LED lamp conversions in the past but this is by far the simplest and best method in my experience. I plan on adapting all my vintage carbide/kerosene/petroleum lamps using this method because it requires no 'butchering' of the original lamp's shell, nor any additional wiring.
Excellent vintage lamp choice. Will really compliment your build.
Just a couple of weeks back I retro-fitted one of the vintage bicycle lamps from my collection with a rechargeable LED lamp. Everything self-contained within the lamp itself, so no wiring involved. As luck would have it, the new lamp's plastic housing was a snug interference-fit into this particular Powell & Hanmer lamp's shell - so no additional fixings required. Conveniently, the LED lamp's on/off switch is accessible via the flip-up hinged red lens on the lamp's left side. (Yep, stars were aligned for this conversion...). Perhaps if using other vintage lamps, it would be a cinch to stick the LED lamp to the reflector lens inside the back of the lamp using double-sided adhesive tape. The LED lamp is easily removed for charging via its supplied USB cable. Only modification I had to do was to snip off and file flush the LED lamp casing's pair of moulded-on hooks for the rubber securing band. Cheapest and quickest conversion ever. Took no more than 15 minutes tops. Dadcat's little helper gives it the thumbs-up!
LED Lamp cost UK£4 online, and features multiple light modes. Bargain in anyone's language. I've done a couple of vintage to LED lamp conversions in the past but this is by far the simplest and best method in my experience. I plan on adapting all my vintage carbide/kerosene/petroleum lamps using this method because it requires no 'butchering' of the original lamp's shell, nor any additional wiring.