Khufu1
12-16-2004, 04:18 PM
I know this is way off topic, but I consider this my "home forum" (for lack of a better term), and was hoping you folks would have some input.
I have a pre-lit GE Christmast tree that was not at all cheap. I discovered one string was out. This isn't supposed to happen as on these strings, the lights are supposed to stay lit even if a bulb is pulled. So I pull out my handy light tester (that I still don't quite understand what it means when the light is on) and find the only white bulb on the otherwise colored string. I flick it a few times and the lights come back... for a while.
Then I think, "Let's replace this bulb." And discover that it is different from all the others and won't come out. :huh: After some frustration, I look at the little sheet that comes in the bag of fuses and bulbs and it says there is one clear bulb on every string and it isn't replaceable. They even go so far as to warn not to get crafty and replace it somehow. (My first instinct was to grab my wire cutters, soldering iron, and some heat shrink tubing.)
My question:
Why put a permanent bulb on a string of lights that the rest are replaceable? What is special about the darn thing? Other than the blatant warning on the instructions, anyone see a reason I can't remove it?
Thanks in advance!
Khufu1 :)
I have a pre-lit GE Christmast tree that was not at all cheap. I discovered one string was out. This isn't supposed to happen as on these strings, the lights are supposed to stay lit even if a bulb is pulled. So I pull out my handy light tester (that I still don't quite understand what it means when the light is on) and find the only white bulb on the otherwise colored string. I flick it a few times and the lights come back... for a while.
Then I think, "Let's replace this bulb." And discover that it is different from all the others and won't come out. :huh: After some frustration, I look at the little sheet that comes in the bag of fuses and bulbs and it says there is one clear bulb on every string and it isn't replaceable. They even go so far as to warn not to get crafty and replace it somehow. (My first instinct was to grab my wire cutters, soldering iron, and some heat shrink tubing.)
My question:
Why put a permanent bulb on a string of lights that the rest are replaceable? What is special about the darn thing? Other than the blatant warning on the instructions, anyone see a reason I can't remove it?
Thanks in advance!
Khufu1 :)