NOS Relite Horizon
3 years ago I found this Horizon on eBay listed as a large bulkhead light. Knowing what it was, and for how insanely cheap it was (postage was high though) I asked my aunt to help me get it. I then asked to send a message to the seller to make sure its very well packed. Well a week later it arrived and its packaging was nothing short of disastrous, just two egg crates each end and some beer crates flattened over the bowl, which unfortunately resulted in its glass bowl being smashed. I taped what was left together, and just threw it in a corner in the loft and never really bothered with it since.

Following a conversation with a fellow collector, I was told he may have a spare bowl for it. A few days later, a deal was sorted and it was with me a few days after in what has to be the best packaging I've ever seen. 

Closer inspection of the lantern revealed it to be Relite made and also brand new unused condition, which to me is simply incredible given how rare these lanterns are to begin with. Naturally the gasket makes me weary, I'm unsure if its just rope or asbestos, but if it is I'll put something over it to seal it.

The refractors differ in this bowl to the broken one, however I personally prefer this one being that there's a matching disused example down the road from where I live. Once fitted, I placed the lantern on a bracket on my column, the first time I've done so since getting it. I've always loved these lanterns, they're so simple there's nothing that can go wrong with them, and now this matches the local one, its yet another childhood example added to my collection.

NOS Relite Horizon

3 years ago I found this Horizon on eBay listed as a large bulkhead light. Knowing what it was, and for how insanely cheap it was (postage was high though) I asked my aunt to help me get it. I then asked to send a message to the seller to make sure its very well packed. Well a week later it arrived and its packaging was nothing short of disastrous, just two egg crates each end and some beer crates flattened over the bowl, which unfortunately resulted in its glass bowl being smashed. I taped what was left together, and just threw it in a corner in the loft and never really bothered with it since.

Following a conversation with a fellow collector, I was told he may have a spare bowl for it. A few days later, a deal was sorted and it was with me a few days after in what has to be the best packaging I've ever seen.

Closer inspection of the lantern revealed it to be Relite made and also brand new unused condition, which to me is simply incredible given how rare these lanterns are to begin with. Naturally the gasket makes me weary, I'm unsure if its just rope or asbestos, but if it is I'll put something over it to seal it.

The refractors differ in this bowl to the broken one, however I personally prefer this one being that there's a matching disused example down the road from where I live. Once fitted, I placed the lantern on a bracket on my column, the first time I've done so since getting it. I've always loved these lanterns, they're so simple there's nothing that can go wrong with them, and now this matches the local one, its yet another childhood example added to my collection.

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Filename:DSC05536.JPG
Album name:Dave / Lanterns
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Date added:04 Jun, 2020
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Slyspark   [04 Jun, 2020 at 10:55 PM]
Had the exact same thing happen on a lantern with a glass bowl. One from Bob Cookson. Packaging was excellent, but Royal Fail still managed to smash it.
lampy   [06 Jun, 2020 at 09:01 PM]
yeh, i posted a glass bowl fitting once and the bowl broke, seems no matter how well you pack them haveing a drop shock on the box smashes them, best to post the bowl seperate inacased in bubble wrap
Ash   [06 Jun, 2020 at 10:17 PM]
Bubbl;e wrap alone is not some magic material. You could pack it well even with just newspapers. The important part is that there will be enough filling material thickness between the box wall and the bowl, that it will first compress, and by when it reaches to the bowl, the impact would already be uniformly spread over the entire bowl and not applied to only one side of it
Oliver   [06 Jun, 2020 at 10:21 PM]
Packing peanuts are probably the best. I've seen those air bags used which seem okay but a few good drops and they pop so they offer no cushion after that.
Ash   [06 Jun, 2020 at 10:28 PM]
The filling material must be compressed enough, that it doesn't let the bowl move towards the impact from inside the box. But it still must be able to compress more from the impact. The air bags would not sustain a sharp punch, so they are only good in combination with other materials
Dave   [07 Jun, 2020 at 12:30 AM]
The packaging for this comprised of a layer or two of hair packing, surrounded by bubble wrap, then packed into a box which was then surrounded by even more bubblewrap, airbag packing, and then put inside another box. It was bulletproof.

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