Kids Night Light
Easy make, kid friendly night light, this gives the kiddies independence of turning the light on or off on their own and has a fun appearance. The best bit of the design is the lack of a traditional on/off switch as it is operated by a magnetic reed switch, see the video below.
Cost:
Magnet = £2.50 each set (I used alarm contacts)
Duck = £1.25 each (ebay)
LED's = 4p each (ebay)
Base = free (ofcuts and treasure found in garage)
Cost:
Magnet = £2.50 each set (I used alarm contacts)
Duck = £1.25 each (ebay)
LED's = 4p each (ebay)
Base = free (ofcuts and treasure found in garage)
Magnet in Duck
- Drill a hole the same diameter as the magnetic contact mine required Ø15mm. Place it in the middle of the bottom of the duck. I used a hole saw in a cordless drill.
- You must ensure you use the contact without the wires on.
- The magnet is held in by friction, however if you want a more permanent fixing use hot glue
Base - Cutting the Squares
- Cut MDF into 120 x 120mm squares
- The number of squares depends on the thickness of mdf used and how high you want the pillars
- I used 22mm thick MDF is it means less cutting and glueing of layers
Base - Marking Out
- On three squares use a ruler to cross the corners to find the centre
- Use a compass to create a Ø120mm circle on the three squares
- Put these three squares to one side as they will become the top of the pillars later on.
Base - Cutting the Holes
- Cross the corners to find the centre.
- Using an adjustable hole saw / Fly cutter create a Ø100mm hole in all the layers of MDF
- I used a hand drill, however i would recommend using a pillar drill set to a slow speed as its a bit safer.
- If you do not have the above tools you could use a coping saw or electric jigsaw to create the holes
Base - Glue
- Using PVA wood glue stic the layers together until you reach the desired height
- You must ensure that the holes are aligned and not the outside edges
- Stick the top layer on that you marked out earlier
Base - Bottom Plate
- Cut three pieces of 4mm MDF to 120 x 120mm
- Cross the corners to find the centre
- Using a compass create two circles at Ø100mm and Ø120mm
- Mark three positions of the screws in the layout shown in the photo, the hole positions are a-symmetrical so the bottom plate is easy to re-align when removed
- Drill and countersink the holes to take a standard CSK wood screw (approx 4x20mm)
Base - Attaching the Bottom Plate
- Align the bottom plate onto the stack and drill the pilot holes for the screws
-
Screw on the plate
Base - Making It Round
- Use a band saw to cut as much material away as possible
- If you do not have access to a band saw you could use a hand saw
Base - Making It Round
- Use a disk or belt sander to sand the MDF to the circle you drew earlier
- This could be done by hand with abrasive paper but it will take a very long time
Base - Making It Round
- Use a table router to either add a chamfer or radius to the top edge
- If you do not have this equipment use abrasive paper to round off the edge
Base - Marking LED Holes
- Use the base of the duck to set the diameter of the compass
- Use the centre you marked out earlier and draw a circle
- Where the circle intersects the four lines, it creates the drill position for the LED holes
Base - Drilling the Holes
- Use a Ø15mm drill bit or a hole saw to create the hole in the middle
- Use a Ø6mm drill to create the LED holes
Circuit - Soldering
- See the circuit diagram for component & wiring positions
- Solder all the wires onto the components and test with a battery and the other half of the magnetic switch
-
I used
- white super bright LEDs 5mm
- Magnetic alarm contact
- 9v battery clip
- 9v PP3 battery
- 360Ω resistor
Circuit - Insulating
- Remove the circuit and cover all exposed metal with insulation tape, retest the circuit to ensure it still works
- Reinsert the circuit and glue gun the back of the LED's
- Screw the bottom on
Base - Finishing
-
You can colour the pillars in any way you like, some suggestions are
- Paper mache
- Glitter
- Paint
- Cut out strips of comics
- Cotton wool
- sand + PVA then paint
- Fymo characters
- I used rolled paper to mask the LED's
- I used flock spray paint
- I spray varnished the paintwork to add protection.
- Remember to turn upside down and spray the aerosol cans to clear the nossels
Enjoy
- Make as many pillars as you would like and........ enjoy :)