Koolarticles.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
Koolarticles.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Home::Vikas Paruchuri

It's Fun To Make Useful Homemade Gizmos

Author : Alan Detwiler

It's fun and satisfying to design and then make simple items that serve some purpose. I find it very rewarding to conjure up designs out of my imagination and then build them using common tools and cheap or free materials. I've made all kinds of things. Most of them performed some function that no readily available, store-bought device offered.



I do a lot of text keying at a computer keyboard. After many hours of keying, day after day, my hands and fingers tell me (as in pain) that they're pushing too hard, too many times. After going from store to store looking for a keyboard with easy to press keys, I realized that I needed something to measure the force needed to press the keys on a particular keyboard. Trying to judge the force by typing a little with each keyboard wasn't separating the Tylenol endorsed keyboards from the more finger friendly keyboards. So I rigged up a plastic tube taped to a vertical wire a few inches long. Pennies could be put in the tube. The lower end of the wire is rested on a key. The number of pennies needed to push a key down is a measure of the key's required press force.


Then there was the see through, wall hung beehive that I put on my bedroom wall. My father used to keep bees to harvest honey. One cold day in March, I discovered an abandoned hive that had fallen over exposing the bees to the elements. There was only several hundred bees left out of what was once thousands. I put a sheet of glass, about 2-foot by 2-foot, onto a wooden frame that I attached to my bedroom wall. Then I carefully transported the faltering bee colony to their new home. A tunnel made of metal window screening provided a path for the bees to come and go under a slightly raised window. The colony's queen had not survived being exposed to the weather, so I knew no new bees would be reared. This colony would only last as long as the lifespans of its currant members. But it was interesting to watch the bees doing what bees do throughout the next several months. And the bragging rights for having a bee colony on ones bedroom wall was something to envy.



Both the keyboard force-o-meter and the wall-mounted beehive were inspired by circumstances. I just saw the possibility of what could be done and wanted to do it. I try to be open to possibilites for other gadgets and gizmos that would be of value. It is well worth the effort: It is fun to make improvised gizmos, and you get a valued item. The item may suit your needs better than a purchased item because you make it the way you want it. The item can inspire wonder and delight. And it feels good to prove that your ingenuity and imagination can produce things of value.


Below is a description of an item you may like to make.



Wall display cubby box:



Small cardboard boxes can be fastened together and hung on the wall. Small and valued objects can be placed there to be displayed and admired.



Save boxes from muffin mix, artificial sweetener, rice or other often used food items. When you have enough, cut each box to an appropriate size. I started with boxes 4-inches wide, 2-inches deep, and 6-inches tall. I cut each box to half height, so that each box was 3-inches tall. Boxes that are twice as wide as they are deep can be arranged as shown in the diagrams of this article. If you use boxes with other ratios of width to height, use a different arrangement or use pieces of corrigated cardboard to fill any gaps between boxes.



Lay a piece of plastic sheeting such as a plastic grocery bag on a flat surface. The plastic will keep excess glue from sticking to your work surface. You can use white glue to fasten the boxes together. To help keep the glue from running down the side of the boxes, use a method similar to that used by bricklayers applying mortar to bricks. Before putting a box into position, put glue on each side of that box that will be against a box already in place. That way, while applying glue, you can turn the box in any way that makes it easy to apply the glue. And the glue will quickly be between two surfaces. That helps keep the glue in place. A good glue pattern is shown by the red lines below.



image at www.leisureideas.com/makegizmos/graphics/c13b.png



As you assemble the boxes together, use a straight edge such as a wall or a large box as a guide to align the boxes in straight rows. Set something heavy against the boxes to hold them together while the glue dries. Bricks or large books work well. Use the plastic sheeting to keep oozing glue from sticking the boxes to the books or bricks. You can use paper clips to hold the edges of the boxes together where gaps occur.



image at www.leisureideas.com/makegizmos/graphics/c13a.png



When all the boxes are in place, let the glue dry for about 12 hours. Then use a nail to punch holes for a string that will go around the group of boxes. Two holes near each corner will keep the string in place. Tie the two ends of the string together. Hang the box display from a small nail.



image at www.leisureideas.com/makegizmos/graphics/c13c.png



About the author:



Alan Detwiler is the author of the ebook "Homemade Devices For Inventive Teens" available at
www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000231WF2/leisureideas-20
He has a web site about homemade items at
www.makegizmos.com





Related articles


  1. Motorbikes Rental Services.
  2. Top 10 Accessories for the beginning cyclist
  3. Injuries During Exercise : What Causes It?
  4. Oakland Raiders Offense
  5. Steroids and Palmeiro - Why Rafael Palmeiro Should Be Allowed In The Hall of Fame
  6. Ski New England Mountains and Ski Resorts in Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Maine for 1 L
  7. Buick Invitational: Tiger Returns!
  8. The Truth about Karate for Kids - Part 1
  9. The Truth about Karate for Kids - Part 2
  10. The 16 Motors of the Golf Swing: Part 1 - Harry Vardon's Secret
  11. Welcome to my World
  12. The 16 Motors of the Golf Swing: Part 2 - Hitting Power
  13. Burns' Super Bowl Scoring Trends
  14. Gab Session: Artest's Bomb Ticks
  15. How to get Tickets
  16. The Legends of Baseball keep on Swinging...With a Little Help from Their Fans
  17. Ness Notes (Jan 25)
  18. Betting besides the Bowl
  19. North Carolina Skiing and Snowboarding: Know What to Expect!
  20. More Distance off the Tee - The Truth!
  21. Get More Distance Off Your Golf Tee shots - The Truth!
  22. Fix your Blocked Golf Shots with the Wall Drill
  23. Boxing Gloves - How To Choose The Right Ones
  24. Vancouver Canucks - 25 games into the season
  25. Frequently Asked Questions about Tennis Technique
More related feeds
 

 

© 2007 koolarticles.com - All Rights Reserved

eXTReMe Tracker

Nursing Jobs | best way to stop snoring | homework science | Control Anxiety | control anxiety attacks |