Still nothing out of this one.I have removed the rechargeable batteries and replaced them with standard batteries and had no success.I pulled the LED bulb and replaced it with the incandescent bulb that was in the tail cap, although there is no telling how old that bulb is, or whether it's intact. I'm going to assume that it isn't.My next step is to take it apart as much as I can and clean up as many of the contact points as I can.I'd also like to try and find a way to test the LED bulb. Just because it's new doesn't mean it's good. Def
Is it possible that the polarity is wrong ? LEDs are fussy about that stuff, so maybe try the batteries the "wrong" way round ? To test the batteries and the LED "globe" just use a short length of wire to test them all, if it illuminates then dig deeper into the connection inside the body of the flashlight.
I realize that this is not as bright or as efficient, as lightweight or as tough as a modern one, but let's see if the OLight (or Streamlight or Fenix or Nextorch etc) is still around and able to be made serviceable in 50+ years.The internal, proprietary battery in many of these units is unlikely to make it five decades like this beast has, and sure as heck won't be as serviceable as this one is!Def