Falks Fulmar 1 after restoration
From decayed, broken, battered and bruised, to factory fresh new condition. The Falks Fulmar 1 has been completed at long last, (3 weeks ago more like) and what a turnaround that's been achieved. 

For those who've followed my posts on Facebook from the beginning already know what has gone into this rebuild, but for those who haven't, I've replicated the plastic skirt and wet dry sanded the refractor plates, replicated the metal cover plate, and replicated the original colour present on the canopy. All nuts and bolts have been replaced with matching types, the lamp holder has been resecured in the correct place, and then everything received treatment with the wire wheel to remove rust, the canopy having a bath in caustic soda to remove all the corrosion. 

Its been a total challenge none the less, but is probably the best restoration I've been able to complete to date. Seeing it light once more as a completed lantern definitely made all the effort and time spent worth it. By restoring it, it means at least one lantern is able to see the future years out, where all others have fallen.

Falks Fulmar 1 after restoration

From decayed, broken, battered and bruised, to factory fresh new condition. The Falks Fulmar 1 has been completed at long last, (3 weeks ago more like) and what a turnaround that's been achieved.

For those who've followed my posts on Facebook from the beginning already know what has gone into this rebuild, but for those who haven't, I've replicated the plastic skirt and wet dry sanded the refractor plates, replicated the metal cover plate, and replicated the original colour present on the canopy. All nuts and bolts have been replaced with matching types, the lamp holder has been resecured in the correct place, and then everything received treatment with the wire wheel to remove rust, the canopy having a bath in caustic soda to remove all the corrosion.

Its been a total challenge none the less, but is probably the best restoration I've been able to complete to date. Seeing it light once more as a completed lantern definitely made all the effort and time spent worth it. By restoring it, it means at least one lantern is able to see the future years out, where all others have fallen.

DSC07530.JPG DSC07835.JPG DSC07837.JPG DSC09188.JPG DSC09246.JPG
File information
Filename:DSC07837.JPG
Album name:Dave / Lanterns
Filesize:3930 KiB
Date added:19 Jun, 2022
Dimensions:2730 x 2048 pixels
Displayed:51 times
URL:http://80.229.24.59:9232/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=18215
Favourites:Add to Favourites

Comment 1 to 5 of 5
Page: 1

AngryHorse   [20 Jun, 2022 at 09:18 AM]
I love how they came up with these!, “let’s just take an upturned bowl, and then bolt a thinner canopy to the bottom of it”!, save’s a bit of weight! Cool
Dave   [20 Jun, 2022 at 08:37 PM]
That is literally all most open refractor SOX lanterns were. This one actually has a dedicated canopy however, its a surprisingly compact lantern as well, as crazy as this sounds its probably the smallest 90w SOX lantern I have.
RobTDCI   [26 Jun, 2022 at 09:10 AM]
You really are the master of restorations Dave! I've done few myself over the years but never to your exceptional standard!
Dave   [29 Jun, 2022 at 07:28 PM]
Practice makes perfect Rob, the best bit about restorations is that those skills are transferrable, definitely something worth keeping at imo.
RobTDCI   [02 Jul, 2022 at 08:23 AM]
I think it's about patience and perseverance aswell, one of the problems I have is that I start to get to the stage where I just want it finished after a while and end up rushing. As an example on my last project, the APT lights, they look good, but if I'd stripped the paint down to the metal and spent a bit more time sanding, they'd look excellant!

Comment 1 to 5 of 5
Page: 1

Add your comment
Anonymous comments are not allowed here. Log in to post your comment