pinkus
New Member
This works easy for CFLs 2. I used part of some extra ducting sections we have in our reuse pile. It's pretty simple and straight forward.
Part 1. The metal.
I used tin snips to cut out a piece around 7" or 8" long (I cut off the "connecting ridge" or whatever it's called and measuered there along that straight edge. Then cut perpendicular to the curve. I cut it a little wider than a half of a circle so I could cut away some to leave and bend tabs. Bending the tabs back is probably the hardest part of this whole project. I cut the tabs and scratched a bending line with an awl, clamped it to a workbench. Now clamp a straight piece of firm metal or hardwood so that the tab is clamped flat to the bench, table or even another piece of wood or metal, but the reflector itself is loose. Then all you have to do is carefully push the reflector up until the tab is @ a 90deg angle to the reflector. Repeate this on the other tab.
Part 2. The wood.
You need three pieces. 2 "arms" that hold the tabs. 1 to attach to the socket and the arms to.
First: Cut the Socket piece to fit the tabs, it should be long enough so that you can drill a hole or holes at the ends to attach the arms. They need to run ON TOP OF THE TABS so the lamp ends up inside the curve of the reflector.
Drill holes to fit the socket on the middle of the piece. ( i did need longer attachment screws)
Second: Cut the arm pieces. I used some straight wood trim (I think it's 1/2" X 1/4") I made them longer than the tab length so I could put in some hooks at the open end (no socket or wood).
Part three: fit and fudge. Make sure the thing fits and makes sense to you. If you only drill one hole in socket piece at each end to fit the arms, they can rotate on their axis in case things don't match perfectly. Once you are happy with how it fits drill holes for the tabs in the metal and the arms ( this is easiest if you clamp them together). Assemble and put in the screws. Then Paint the whole thing with Hightemp white paint.
Yeah, I know, no pictures! WTF! Can't show it right now;the ladies are sleeping.
No worries, I've got another one on the way, so i'll repeating all this myself.
Part 1. The metal.
I used tin snips to cut out a piece around 7" or 8" long (I cut off the "connecting ridge" or whatever it's called and measuered there along that straight edge. Then cut perpendicular to the curve. I cut it a little wider than a half of a circle so I could cut away some to leave and bend tabs. Bending the tabs back is probably the hardest part of this whole project. I cut the tabs and scratched a bending line with an awl, clamped it to a workbench. Now clamp a straight piece of firm metal or hardwood so that the tab is clamped flat to the bench, table or even another piece of wood or metal, but the reflector itself is loose. Then all you have to do is carefully push the reflector up until the tab is @ a 90deg angle to the reflector. Repeate this on the other tab.
Part 2. The wood.
You need three pieces. 2 "arms" that hold the tabs. 1 to attach to the socket and the arms to.
First: Cut the Socket piece to fit the tabs, it should be long enough so that you can drill a hole or holes at the ends to attach the arms. They need to run ON TOP OF THE TABS so the lamp ends up inside the curve of the reflector.
Drill holes to fit the socket on the middle of the piece. ( i did need longer attachment screws)
Second: Cut the arm pieces. I used some straight wood trim (I think it's 1/2" X 1/4") I made them longer than the tab length so I could put in some hooks at the open end (no socket or wood).
Part three: fit and fudge. Make sure the thing fits and makes sense to you. If you only drill one hole in socket piece at each end to fit the arms, they can rotate on their axis in case things don't match perfectly. Once you are happy with how it fits drill holes for the tabs in the metal and the arms ( this is easiest if you clamp them together). Assemble and put in the screws. Then Paint the whole thing with Hightemp white paint.
Yeah, I know, no pictures! WTF! Can't show it right now;the ladies are sleeping.
No worries, I've got another one on the way, so i'll repeating all this myself.