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Old 01-01-13, 05:02 PM   #11
Daox
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Thats what I figured, thanks for clearing it up.

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Old 01-02-13, 12:11 AM   #12
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Either people need to quit posting such good info or I need to quit reading them. My project lists keeps growing - how to you folks find the time to do all this stuff?

Great info. Thanks.
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Old 01-02-13, 12:21 AM   #13
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Haha - primarily weekends when I have them :P

The holidays have been a good opportunity to take on some of this stuff. Now that my heating system is in place, I can concentrate on moving more of the house to LED lighting - the kitchen is next!

I hear ya though - in addition to the lighting all over the house, I've still got crawlspace insulation, office shelving, and a fireplace renovation on my short list. Sometime over the next four years or so is also hydronic heating and new floors upstairs, staircase refinishing, a complete kitchen overhaul, and a patio renovation. Seems like once you own a place, the renovating and tinkering never stops...
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Old 01-04-13, 09:06 PM   #14
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Very nice project and write-up! Looks like I will do the same to light up my hallway and dining. Thanks for sharing this with us
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Old 01-04-13, 09:15 PM   #15
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Glad my tinkering is of use to others
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Old 01-07-13, 05:22 AM   #16
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Daox View Post
Those look really nice! Sounds like you came up with a great way for a good looking fixture that is also quite inexpensive.

Where did you get your transformers?

I just ordered some parts yesterday for my first LED project. I have a staircase that I want to light up at night. I'd like to mount my LEDs under the handrail and have them illuminate the stairs. I'm also going to get a little fancy and use some PIR (passive infrared) motion sensors on each end so there won't be a need for any switches. I still have no idea what LEDs I'm going to use though.
Yes these lights looks very impressive. How expensive these lights are?
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Old 01-07-13, 12:36 PM   #17
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Economies of scale play a role here. Since you're unlikely to be able to buy a single strip of acrylic and plywood of the right size at a good price, building a single one is nearly as expensive as building 5 or 6 of them (not taking the price for th LEDs into account

The writeup lists rough prices for the materials. All in all, it should be less than $20 for one fixture if you buy 24"x48" sheets of plywood and acrylic and just build as many fixtures as you can make out of that. That's also assuming you've got the power supply already taken care of - needing only one transformer for multiple lights keeps the cost down.
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Old 01-07-13, 12:46 PM   #18
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By the way, I've got some really cool new transformers:



I'm going to use one of these for my kitchen lighting - these go for on the order of $15 a piece. 75W, and they're small enough they could conceivably fit inside a light switch!
If it does fit, I won't have to make another hole in my drywall, and I'll always have easy access to the transformer in case one does go out over the years
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Old 01-07-13, 03:18 PM   #19
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I believe it against any electrical code I have ever seen to enclose junction boxes, transformers and splices inside of a wall. Just something to think about.
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Old 01-07-13, 03:27 PM   #20
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Interesting... What do you mean by enclosed in a wall? I mean, junction boxes and switches by definition have to be enclosed in a wall - what am I misunderstanding?

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