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At 107, still a real live wire

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Times Staff Writer

Five years after his retirement, ex-firefighter Tom Bramell still likes to visit Station No. 6 for old times’ sake, whistling in amazement at all the changes -- the strange faces and slick high-tech engines.

But one thing remains exactly the same, and it’s what Bramell misses the most about his firefighting days. The sturdy little object hangs from the ceiling in the firehouse’s engine bay, emitting its familiar faint orange glow.

He calls it the long-lived lightbulb of Livermore.

That’s actually something of an understatement.

At 107 years and counting, the low-watt wonder with the curlicue carbon filament has been named the planet’s longest continuously burning bulb by both Guinness World Records and Ripley’s Believe It Or Not.

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As objet d’art and enduring symbol of American reliability and ingenuity, it’s been lauded by senators and presidents.

It boasts a website -- www.centennialbulb.org, drawing a million hits a year -- a historical society and even a webcam that allows curious fans to check on it 24 hours a day.

The Livermore lightbulb, you see, never gets turned off, which many suspect is the secret to its longevity.

Hanging 18 feet above the floor at the end of a black cloth-covered cord, the little light with the filament the width of a No. 2 pencil lead is unprotected by any lampshade.

Firefighters won’t even dust it. Touch it, jokes one captain, and “you get your fingers chopped off.”

They guard their light with a surge protector and have a diesel generator and a battery as backups. To them, the bulb is the embodiment of their always-on-duty ethic.

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For years, Bramell was known around the Livermore-Pleasanton Fire Department as the keeper of the bulb, the unofficial curator and caretaker who fielded queries from the public and visits from tourists. Over time, he developed a boyish wonder at its craftsmanship and spunk. From a vantage point directly beneath the bulb, Bramell says, its filament even spells the word “on.”

Livermore’s bulb has burned for nearly a million hours. Even now, in its old age, Bramell will stack it against any New Age fluorescent, halogen or high-pressure sodium bulb out there.

“That bulb predates the atomic bomb and the birth of the automobile,” said the onetime deputy chief. “I thought that for sure it was going to go out 35 years ago, but it fooled me. It fooled everyone.”

Bramell said there are numerous theories on the bulb’s longevity. “Most people just consider it a freak of engineering,” he said. “But I believe the bulb has stayed alive so many years because the makers gave it a perfect seal, so no air gets inside the bulb to help disintegrate the carbon filament. This bulb operates in a vacuum and it doesn’t burn hot. That’s the secret.”

In 1901, when the tiny bulb was first screwed into place inside a so-called hose cart house, it cast its light on a simpler era.

Back then, horse-pulled carts carried water to fires. The bulb burned day and night, hanging at eye level from a 20-foot cord. Its job: to break the darkness so firefighters responding to calls wouldn’t have to fumble to light the wicks of their kerosene lanterns. Manufactured by the Shelby Electric Co. of Shelby, Ohio, the bulb soon outlived its maker, which closed in 1914.

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Later, in the main firehouse, it illuminated more modern rigs as horses were replaced by gas-fed engines.

It didn’t always receive kid-glove treatment.

Climbing atop their engines, firefighters returning from World War II and Korea often would give the bulb a playful swat for good luck. The next generation -- the Vietnam veterans and the younger kids -- used it as a target for Nerf basketball practice.

Then, in 1972, a local reporter checked records and interviewed old-timers to trace its history. Firefighters suddenly realized they had a treasure.

“The good-luck slaps and target practice stopped,” Bramell recalls. “We figured, ‘Wow, maybe we should take care of this bulb.’ ”

The bulb was soon featured in the book “On the Road with Charles Kuralt.” “In a time when gadgets are forever falling apart or burning out or breaking up, it was kind of nice spending a day watching a dusty, 71-year-old lightbulb just go on and on,” the newsman wrote. “If you’re ever in Livermore and need reassurance, we recommend it.”

Thousands took his advice, traveling to the East Bay community of 80,000 to see the bulb and sign its guest book. “Beats Vegas!” wrote one. And another: “How many firemen does it take to change a lightbulb in Livermore? None, it never needs changing.”

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Bramell has heard from ministers who sermonized about the bulb’s enduring reliability and residents who say they use it as a litmus test for new friends: Those who “get” the light’s significance show the wisdom and good judgment for lasting ties.

“This fragile thing that wasn’t meant to last has outlived the company that made it, people who first screwed it in, people who have written about it and who have kept watch over it,” said Edward Meyer, vice president of exhibits and archives for Ripley Entertainment. “They made this bulb right.”

Several times, the last a few years ago, Ripley’s offered to buy the bulb. The city’s answer is a no-brainer: “Fat chance.”

In July 1976, Livermore held its collective breath when it moved the bulb a short two miles from the old Fire Department headquarters to Station No. 6. There was a police escort -- sirens blaring, lights flashing.

Most nervous was the city electrician, faced with the delicate task of actually handling the bulb. For the trip, he built a wooden bulb box lined with cotton, Bramell said.

They moved the bulb, socket and all, cutting the cord to 4 feet. At the new site, as dozens looked on, the electrician made the connection and said a prayer.

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Nothing happened.

“There was a gasp,” Bramell said. “Folks said, ‘What on earth have we done?’ Then the electrician jiggled a switch and the bulb came on. And it’s stayed on ever since.”

In all, the bulb was out for 22 minutes -- a short period, the Ripley’s folks say, that does not mar its continuous-use record.

There are doubters who question its pedigree, competitors who wait patiently for the light to flicker and die. There’s Bud Kennedy, for example, a columnist for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Before Livermore’s light was documented, the Texas bulb known as the Palace Theater Light was considered the world’s oldest. It even received annual birthday wishes from radio host Paul Harvey.

Then Livermore and a “smart-aleck” reporter went and ruined things, Kennedy wrote in a 2001 column. So Fort Worth residents watched and waited -- ready, as one resident said, to yell “yee-hah!” when Livermore’s light went dark.

“As far as I’m concerned, those bulb brains in Livermore can take their Centennial Light and go straight to . . . “ Kennedy wrote. “Wait. They’re already in California.”

Kennedy visited the bulb last year, planning “to kick the wall and see if I could jiggle it out of its socket.”

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But being in its presence softened him. “The guys there consider the bulb a point of pride, as a symbol of firefighters everywhere,” he said. “Who can argue with that?”

When the bulb turned 100 in 2001, Livermore officials threw a birthday party that drew 600 celebrators, many in turn-of-the-century attire.

Now they look forward to a 200th birthday bash.

“You want that light on,” said Deputy Fire Chief Jeff Zolfarelli, the new bulb keeper. “As long as it doesn’t go out on your watch. Nobody wants to be onboard when that happens.”

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john.glionna@latimes.com

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