Eleco GR102 - internals
The Eleco GR range is by far Elecos most successful range of lanterns. It came with a massive array of options, such as semi cutoff, full cutoff and the lesser seen geared lanterns. An example of one is featured here, the GR102. This was kindly swapped with another collector, and entered the collection with its original and absolutely destroyed bowl. Owing to the rarity of the lantern, I knew another original would not show up, so sourced a GR150 bowl with the intentions of making it into the correct bowl for this. the original bowl features 90w refractor plates and a frosted out back panel to mask the control gear out, whilst still allowing light through.

Replicating such a bowl was a very delicate and drawn out task, one slip would mean the replicated bowl would be good for nothing. I had to remove the plates from the new bowl, and remove them from the original to transfer them over. Using tape, I then marked out where I would sand to remove the marks left from the original plates. Once the original plates were stuck on, I then masked off the plates and the front section so the now defined gear area could be sprayed with a frost paint to bring it to how it should be as original.

The lantern is now once again intact and sporting a very close to original bowl, and will soon be restored.

Eleco GR102 - internals

The Eleco GR range is by far Elecos most successful range of lanterns. It came with a massive array of options, such as semi cutoff, full cutoff and the lesser seen geared lanterns. An example of one is featured here, the GR102. This was kindly swapped with another collector, and entered the collection with its original and absolutely destroyed bowl. Owing to the rarity of the lantern, I knew another original would not show up, so sourced a GR150 bowl with the intentions of making it into the correct bowl for this. the original bowl features 90w refractor plates and a frosted out back panel to mask the control gear out, whilst still allowing light through.

Replicating such a bowl was a very delicate and drawn out task, one slip would mean the replicated bowl would be good for nothing. I had to remove the plates from the new bowl, and remove them from the original to transfer them over. Using tape, I then marked out where I would sand to remove the marks left from the original plates. Once the original plates were stuck on, I then masked off the plates and the front section so the now defined gear area could be sprayed with a frost paint to bring it to how it should be as original.

The lantern is now once again intact and sporting a very close to original bowl, and will soon be restored.

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Comment 1 to 5 of 5
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BC5-80   [28 Apr, 2019 at 06:30 PM]
What a superb job that is. Well done, Dave.
thorncollector   [28 Apr, 2019 at 09:34 PM]
looks in nice condition there were never any of these here there was some philips ma5c and philips ma9c there was some gr152s in glasgow
lampy   [29 Apr, 2019 at 10:17 PM]
what an odd contraption this lantern is, never seen a gear in head version of one of these before, seen hundreds of Gr100's and GR150s over the years, but never one of these, couldent of been popular, you recon this was the original leak transformer or has it been changed for this PARMAR one?
AngryHorse   [30 Apr, 2019 at 02:02 AM]
Shocked stunning rare lanterns, there’s still a few of these in service in Northwich, Cheshire, but I’ve also never seen a geared version either ???
Dave   [14 May, 2019 at 11:02 PM]
These things were crazy rare from the beginning, I think the fact the gear was mostly on show was a huge turnoff point for most engineers, seeing as day and night time appearance was everything to them over the cheapest way out, as is whats happening today. I strongly believe it was these that led to the modern geared MA90's and MA50's design.

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