Grrr- trick to getting stubborn twisty switches to engage?

GarageBoy

Flashlight Enthusiast
Joined
Jun 12, 2004
Messages
3,975
Location
Brooklyn NY
I have this issue on 3 lights, my Muyshondt Mako, the CMG Infinity Ultra and a DS Fire~fly
I try to screw on the head only to have the sound and disgusting feeling of the threads skipping, rather than engaging. Does this mean I have to break in the threads or is there a technique to get them to go in the first time. I never had this problem with large diameter lights...
Thanks
 

SARLights

Newly Enlightened
Joined
Aug 6, 2010
Messages
28
Try pressing down on the head as you twist it, sometimes the threads don't engage if they aren't in position exactly right. A little(very little) amount of lubricant might help as well.

Cheers

-SARLights
 

carrot

Flashaholic
Joined
Dec 6, 2005
Messages
9,241
Location
New York City
Is this when you screw the heads back on after a battery swap?

If so how I screw the head back on is I spin it in the opposite direction while pressing down. When you feel the click of the thread ends slipping off each other, spin the head the right way to screw it down.
 

John_Galt

Flashlight Enthusiast
Joined
Feb 20, 2009
Messages
1,836
Location
SW, PA
Is this when you screw the heads back on after a battery swap?

If so how I screw the head back on is I spin it in the opposite direction while pressing down. When you feel the click of the thread ends slipping off each other, spin the head the right way to screw it down.


This.

I've made this a habit, so I don't accidentally cross-thread the threads on a light.
 

UnderTheWeepingMoon

Enlightened
Joined
Dec 10, 2006
Messages
530
Location
Middle of nowhere, Western Queensland
I had this same issue with the Mako, while I owned it, and found the method that Carrot described as an easy way around it.

It's a problem in lights whose O-ring becomes compressed before the threads engage. I find Surefire's two-stage tailcaps from lights like the A2 and the L1 equally frustrating to screw on.
 
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