Archive for August, 2008

Go Green— Electric Bicycle for Business and Pleasure

Sunday, August 17th, 2008

Bike to work or for pleasure and exercise with DIY electric motor assist. Start a business adding electric motor assist to your neighbors bicycles. It’s the kind of business that easily grows through word of mouth, and it’s as Green as they come.

If you are interested in electric bike DIY, check this out.

If you want to start a business converting existing bikes, check this out, as well, for reasons why it’s a great idea.

For an amazing amount of information about electric assist bikes and their components, see this.

See many more DIY projects and ideas at our website.

Your Very Own Photograph and Picture Gallery Wall

Saturday, August 16th, 2008

Feature your photos or hang your framed pictures in a mass display on an entire large wall with the minimum of holes in the wall and the maximum of flexibility. Blog.DoDesignDIY.com gives you three consecutive and different DIY postings, following, that will make this possible at low cost and fairly easily. Each posting has diagrams and complete instructions.

Here’s one of the three different DIY diagrams (#2):

verthang.png

DIY Photo and Picture Gallery Wall #1- Multi-picture Shelf
DIY Photo and Picture Gallery Wall #2- Vertical Hanging Bars
DIY Photo and Picture Gallery Wall #3- Multiple Horizontal Hanging Bars

DIY- Easy and Effective Modular Tool Organizer

Tuesday, August 12th, 2008

Got a workshop? Do crafts? Gotta lotta handtools? Hang them up in pristine order or whatever way you wanna on this simple, highly effective, any-size-you-want organizer. It’s kinda like a DIY pegboard, but better. Minimum tools needed are a small saw, a screwdriver, hammer, one 2 inch nail (as a hole starter), and a pair of wire-cutting pliers.

  fencetools.jpg 

Instructions on the DDD website at DIY Toolrack

Can-Do Organization

Monday, August 11th, 2008

If you have a workshop, or do a lot of crafts work, or just need to organize your hardware and small stuff, you should know about this CAN-DO organizing trick.

Metal cans are yours for the opening, and while perhaps mundane, yours for superb simple ORGANIZED storage. Details HERE

canssidelg0102.png

See DoDesignDIY.com for more DIY projects.

Michael

DIY- Photo Lamp

Sunday, August 10th, 2008

Hold a vivid photo or inkjet print in front of a bright light and you have a basic backlit image display. Notice how the colors become rich and the details come alive. Like to have your favorite art or photo glowing at you when you come home or while you count sheep at night? Here it is. You do not need a $200+ extra-large digital display to make this happen.

digiblue1khi.jpg brassfanwhitebkg10hi_4.jpg peacockfeath1khi.jpg usflaglg_1.jpg

The Acrobat PDF file linked to this page will give you detailed illustrated instructions on making your own simpler version than the ones sold in our Store. Electrical and other skills needed are minimal and the total cost is under $25. It requires one recycled glass jar that is not visible in the finished lamp.

Do not use fine art or valuable photos, as exposure to light can fade them over time. Use inkjet printed or developed photo copies only.

Tags: Photos, Prints, Displays, Frame

DIY Photo and Picture Gallery Wall #1

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

woodshelf.png

Feature your pictures or hang your framed pictures in a mass display on an entire large wall with the minimum of holes in the wall and the maximum of flexibility. The secret is to install a master Main Rail that will support a thin wood picture shelf, held-up in turn by the wall studs. Secret number two is to use an overlooked, very inexpensive but very strong material: Steel EMT electrical conduit.

See the DIY section of our website (http:DoDesignDIY.com/) for more picture/photo and other projects, and our other Blog postings.

Materials and Tools (ID= Interior dimension):
— Electric drill, 1/8 and 1/4 inch bits and screw bits, small hammer, 3-5 heavy 2.5+” nails or a drill punch, wire-cutting pliers, hacksaw, plumb line with plumb bob, level
— One 10 foot length of steel electrical conduit (EMT). This is steel pipe used to protect permanent electrical wiring. It comes in 10 foot lengths at Lowes, Home Depot, etc., and in 1/2″ ID (about $3), 3/4″ ID (about $6), and larger sizes. I will feature more metal conduit potential uses in following posts.
— Optional (See Variations): One 10-foot length of PVC water pipe (about $5+) that will slide onto the size of conduit you are using, as snugly as possible. Remove the printed labeling using nail polish remover on a rag (lightly). Add this to the conduit before drilling holes.
— 3 to 5 PVC 1/2″ (ID) PVC Couplings (not Caps), which will served as standoffs. Use five if your pix are heavy and many.
— 3 to 5 #10 or #12 x 3 inch+ long round-head wood screws.
— One 10-foot piece of 1×4 (3/4×3.5″ Actual)
— One 10-foot piece of decorative molding.
— Five #8 x 1.25′ flat-head metal self-tapping screws
— Framed pictures, or stiff picture mats, or Dollar Store frames, etc.

Steps in order:
— Determine where your structural conduit bar is to go on the wall— it will support the Wood Shelf.
— Mark the horizontal screw line on the wall using LIGHT pencil or a color chalk line using a string line and level.
— Find (the centers of) the wall studs along the line— This is ESSENTIAL: Wall studs are generally spaced at 16 inches on centers from the stud at the corner of the room. You can use a magnetic stud finder that detects the nails/screws holding on the wallboard. Or you can tap THIN 1-1.5 inch brads or nails into the wallboard very near the top of baseboard to find the studs with minimal damage, then use a string plumb line to mark the locations for your Main Rail screws on the pencil/chalk line.
— Cut the conduit, and PVC ‘cover’, if any, to the width of the wall or space you are using, minus 1/4 to 1/2 inch. Keep the Hacksaw blade vertical. Flip the cut end(s) to the corner (to be least visible).
— Transfer 3 to 5 of the stud locations to the Conduit (or its PVC cover, if any). These must be more or less equidistantly spaced, and about 3 to 6 inches from the pipe ends. Tape the ends of the nested pipes on the end to temporarily keep them aligned with each other.
— Use a hammer and nail to dimple/mark the metal or PVC before you drill, to position the drill bit, and put a block of wood under the wood to protect your floor. Drill 3 to 5 1/4-inch holes in the Conduit (with PVC cover, if any), completely thru the pipe. Keep the drill vertical so the holes are aligned (|) thru the pipe. As you drill each hole, insert the 3″ screw thru the holes to keep the pipes in alignment.
— Put the 3 inch screws into the structural hang pipe and thru the PVC Couplings.
— Using the 1/8th inch drill bit, partially predrill the wall stud (about 1/2″ deep) just before you screw them into the wall in the following steps.
— Get some help. Screw the Conduit (and PVC) into the first mark. Make sure the screw enters 90 degrees to the wall and that it bites into the stud. Leave it just a little loose for now.
— Move to the other end of the Conduit (and PVC), and set the screw point on that mark. Have your helper tell you if the pipe VISUALLY looks level compared to the corner wall, ceiling, etc. (the ceiling or walls could be ‘off’). THIS IS CRITICAL! When you’re SURE, screw it in and tighten it, then tighten the first screw.
— Move to the middle, have your helper visually check that to make sure the pipe is not sagging, screw it in tightly. Ditto for screws 4&5, if used. Test the Conduit; it should be very rigid. If not, add more 3″ screws into other wall studs.
— Now you are ready to add the shelf atop the conduit. Drill 5 vertical 1/8″ holes thru the conduit, evenly spaced. Put the wood shelf on the conduit, and screw the self-tapping screws upwards thru the the conduit into the bottom of the shelf.
— See the diagrams for further details.

Cautions:
— Do NOT try this using butterfly or expanding wall fasteners— you will need screws securely fastened into the actual wall studs.
— It would be safer to use plastic glazing in the frames, not glass.
— Do not use for valuable frames unless/until you are SURE of the strength of your wall supports.
— If you need to remove the Shelf assembly to move, etc. use a small container of premixed wall spackle (white) and a putty knife (Lowes, Home Depot) to fill the screw holes. Touch up the paint it if needed, after its dry.

Questions, comments, suggestions? Comment on this posting.

DIY Photo and Picture Gallery Wall #2

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

verthang.png

Feature your pictures or hang your framed pictures in a mass display on an entire large wall with the minimum of holes in the wall and the maximum of flexibility. The secret is to install a master Main Rail that will support all of the vertical slats and pictures, held-up in turn by the wall studs. Secret number two is to use an overlooked, very inexpensive but very strong material: Steel EMT electrical conduit.

See the DIY section of our website (http:DoDesignDIY.com/) for more picture/photo and other projects, and view our other Blog postings.

Materials and Tools (ID= Interior dimension):
— Electric drill, 1/8 and 1/4 inch bits (and screwdriver bits), small hammer, saw, 3-5 heavy 2.5+” nails or a drill punch, wire-cutting pliers, hacksaw, plumb line with plumb bob, level
— One length of steel electrical conduit (EMT). This is steel pipe used to protect permanent electrical wiring. It comes in 10 foot lengths at Lowes, Home Depot, etc., and in 1/2″ ID (about $3), 3/4″ ID (about $6), and larger sizes. For this, use 3/4″ ID.
— Optional: One 10-foot length of PVC water pipe (about $5+) that will slide onto the size of conduit you are using, as snugly as possible. Remove the printed labeling using nail polish remover on a rag (lightly). Add this before drilling the screw holes.
— Vertical hang bars— These can be wood lattice strip (at least 1/2″thick x 1.5″wide). Buy as many as you plan to use, upto 8 feet long each.
— Scraps of 1.5×3 or 4″ wood (for hanger and spacer blocks), and of the lattice strip (See diagram)
— 3 to 5 PVC 1/2″ (ID) PVC pipe caps, which will served as standoffs. Use five if your pix are heavy and many.
— 3 to 5 #10 x 3 inch+ long round-head wood screws.
— One 1-inch x #8 round or pan head screw for each framed picture to be hung (See Cautions)
— Framed pictures, or stiff picture mats, or Dollar Store frames, etc.

Steps in order:
— Your structural Horizontal Rail conduit bar is to go 9 to 12 inches below the ceiling.
— Mark the horizontal Rail screw line on the wall using LIGHT pencil or a color chalk line using a string line and level.
— Find (the centers of) the wall studs along the line— This is ESSENTIAL: Wall studs are generally spaced at 16 inches on centers from the stud at the corner of the room. You can use a magnetic stud finder that detects the nails/screws holding on the wallboard. Or you can tap THIN 1-1.5 inch brads or nails into the wallboard very near the top of baseboard to find the studs with minimal damage, then use a string plumb line to mark the locations for your Horizontal Rail screws on the pencil/chalk line.
— Cut the Horizontal Rail conduit to the width of the wall or space you are using, minus 1/4 to 1/2 inch. Keep the Hacksaw blade vertical. Flip the cut end to the corner (to be least visible).
— Transfer 3 to 5 of the stud locations to the Horizontal Rail conduit (or to its PVC cover, if any). These must be more or less equidistantly spaced, starting about 3 to 6 inches from the pipe ends. Keep the two pipes in alignment by taping the ends together temporarily.

— Use a hammer and nail to dimple/mark the metal or PVC before you drill, to position the drill bit. Put a block of wood under the wood to protect your floor. Drill 3 to 5 1/4-inch holes in the Horizontal Rail conduit (with PVC cover on, if any), completely thru the pipe (and PVC). Keep the drill vertical so the holes are aligned (|) thru the pipe. Slide a #10×3″ screw thru each hole to keep all in alignment.
— Drill a 1/4″ hole thru the center of the end of each PVC cap.
— Put the 3 inch screws into the structural hang pipe and thru the drilled PVC cap (closed end to the wall), with about 1/4 inch of the screw point extending out of the cap.
— Using the 1/8th inch drill bit, partially predrill the wall stud (about 1/2″ deep) for each Horizontal Rail conduit screw hole just before you screw them into the wall in the following steps.
— Get some help. Screw the conduit into the first mark. Make sure the screw enters 90 degrees to the wall and that it bites into the stud. Leave it just a little loose for now.
— Move to the other end of the pipe, and set the screw point on that mark. Have your helper tell you if the pipe VISUALLY looks level compared to the corner wall, ceiling, etc. (the ceiling or walls could be ‘off’). THIS IS CRITICAL! When you’re SURE, screw it in and tighten it, then tighten the first screw.
— Move to the middle, have your helper visually check that to make sure the pipe is not sagging, screw it in tightly. Ditto for screws 4&5 if used. Test the Horizontal Rail; it should be very rigid. If not, add more 3″ screws into other wall studs.
— Now you are ready to hang the vertical bars. See the diagram and use wood blocks nailed and Elmers glued to the back of the Lattice Strip The verticals hang from the Horizontal Rail conduit and are not otherwise fastened to the wall.
— Hang each picture from a small round head screw driven partly into the Vertical Slats.
— See the diagram for further details.

Variations and Refinements:
— Instead of the PVC piper, cover the conduit with wide vinyl or cloth tape, by carefully painting it. Or sew a snuggish fitting tube of cloth as a pipe cover. Do this BEFORE you mount the conduit to the wall. Do NOT drill thru fabric— just ‘bunch it’ mid-pipe and expand/alter it after the screws are in tightly.

Cautions:
— Do NOT try this using butterfly or expanding wall fasteners— you will need screws securely fastened into the actual wall studs.
— It would be safer to use plastic glazing in the frames, not glass.
— Do not hang valuable frames unless/until you are SURE of the strength of your wall screw supports.
— If you need to remove the Horizontal Rail conduit to move, etc. use a small container of premixed wall spackle (white) and a putty knife (Lowes, Home Depot) to fill the screw holes. Touch up the paint it if needed, after its dry.

Questions, comments, suggestions? Comment on this posting.

DIY Photo and Picture Gallery Wall #3

Monday, August 4th, 2008

Feature your pictures or hang your framed pictures in a mass display on an entire large wall with the minimum of holes in the wall and the maximum of flexibility. The secret is to install a master Main Rail that will support all of the pictures and SubBars, held-up in turn by the wall studs. Secret number two is to use an overlooked, very inexpensive but very strong material: Steel EMT electrical conduit.

multihang.png

mainrail.png

Feature your pictures or hang your framed pictures in a mass display on an entire large wall with the minimum of holes in the wall and the maximum of flexibility. The secret is to install a master Main Rail that will support all of the pictures and SubBars, held-up in turn by the wall studs. Secret number two is to use an overlooked, very inexpensive but very strong material: Steel EMT electrical conduit.

See the DIY section of our website (http:DoDesignDIY.com/) for more picture/photo and other projects, and our other Blog postings.

Materials and Tools (ID= Interior dimension):
— Electric drill, 1/8 and 1/4 inch bits and screw bits, small hammer, 3-5 heavy 2.5+” nails or a drill punch, wire-cutting pliers, hacksaw, plumb line with plumb bob, level
— One 10 foot length of steel electrical conduit (EMT). This is steel pipe used to protect permanent electrical wiring. It comes in 10 foot lengths at Lowes, Home Depot, etc., and in 1/2″ ID (about $3), 3/4″ ID (about $6), and larger sizes. For one line of lightly matted pix, use 1/2″. For an entire wall of pix or for more heavily framed pix, use 3/4 or as much as 1 inch conduit. I will feature more metal conduit potential uses in following posts.
— Optional (See Variations): 10-foot length of PVC water pipe (about $5+) that will slide onto the size of conduit you are using, as snugly as possible. Remove the printed labeling using nail polish remover on a rag (lightly). Add this before drilling holes.
— If you want to gang your pictures in aligned horizontal rows, get additional lengths of 1/2 ID conduit ( and appropriate PVC cover pipe) for the SubBars. Add one to the bottom as well, for visual balance. These will all hang from the main structural bar. Also get some strong multi-strand approx. 1/8″ steel cable (3 pieces 1.5 times as long as the wall height). You will also need some machine screws— see the diagram.
— 3 to 5 PVC 1/2″ (ID) PVC pipe caps, which will served as standoffs. Use five if your pix are heavy and many.
— 3 to 5 #10 x 3 inch+ long round-head wood screws.
— Picture hanging material- one or two of the following: Braided picture wire, 25+ pound clear fishline, Strong fabric cloth stripping, Decorative rope or string (1/6 to 1/4 inch in diameter. These loop over/hang on the Main or SubBars and fasten to the back of the frame or picture mat. Or make large wire elongated hooks for hanging.
— Framed pictures, or stiff picture mats, or Dollar Store frames, etc.

Steps in order:
— The main structural conduit bar is to go near the ceiling. Keep it about 9 to 12 inches below the ceiling.
— Mark the horizontal Main Rail screw line on the wall using LIGHT pencil or a color chalk line using a string line and level.
— Find (the centers of) the wall studs along the line— This is essential: Wall studs are generally spaced at 16 inches on centers from the stud at the corner of the room. You can use a magnetic stud finder that detects the nails/screws holding on the wallboard. Or you can tap THIN 1-1.5 inch brads or nails into the wallboard very near the top of the baseboard to find the studs with minimal damage, then use a string plumb line to mark the locations for your Main Rail screws on the pencil/chalk line.
— Cut the structural Main Rail (and the SubBars, and PVC ‘covers’, if any) to the width of the wall or space you are using, minus 1/4 to 1/2 inch. Keep the Hacksaw blade vertical. Flip the cut end(s) toward the corner (to be least visible).
— Transfer 3 to 5 of the stud locations to the structural MAIN RAIL (and its PVC cover, if any). These must be more or less equidistantly spaced, about 3 to 6 inches from the pipe ends. Nest each conduit/PVC cover pipe and temporarily fasten each set together on the ends with tape, to keep them in alignment.
— Use a hammer and nail to dimple/mark the metal before you drill, to position the drill bit, and put a block of wood under the wood to protect your floor. Drill 3 to 5 1/4-inch holes in the structural Main Rail (with PVC cover, if any), completely thru the pipe. Keep the drill vertical so the holes are aligned (|) thru the pipe. If you are using SubBars too, you will need 1/4″ vertical holes in the Main Rail and SubBars (see the Cabling diagram). Put a 3″ screw thru each hole to keep the PVC cover and conduit in alignment.
— Drill a 1/4″ hole thru the center of the end of each PVC cap.
— Put the 3 inch screws into the structural hang pipe and thru the drilled PVC cap (closed end to the wall), with about 1/4 inch of the screw point extending out of the cap; see diagram.
— Using the 1/8th inch drill bit, partially predrill the wall stud (about 1/2″ deep) just before you screw them into the wall in the following steps.
— Get some help. Screw the pipe into the first mark. Make sure the screw enters 90 degrees to the wall and that it bites into the stud. Leave it just a little loose for now.
— Move to the other end of the pipe, and set the screw point on that mark. Have your helper tell you if the pipe VISUALLY looks level compared to the corner wall, ceiling, etc. (the ceiling or walls could be ‘off’). THIS IS CRITICAL! When you’re SURE, screw it in and tighten it, then tighten the first screw.
— Move to the middle, have your helper visually check that to make sure the pipe is not sagging, screw it in tightly. Ditto for screws 4&5 if used. Test the Main Rail; it should be very rigid. If not, add more 3″ screws into other wall studs.
— Now you are ready to hang the SubBars (or your one line of pix, etc.) To hang the SubBars, see the Cabling diagram. It is elegantly simple, and adjustable. They hang from the Main Rail and are not otherwise fastened to the wall.
— See the diagrams for further details.

Variations and Refinements:
— In place of the PVC pipe cover, you can cover the conduit with wide vinyl or cloth tape, by carefully painting it. Or sew a snuggish fitting tube of cloth as a pipe cover. Do this BEFORE you mount it to the wall or hang the SubBars. Do NOT drill thru fabric— just ‘bunch it’ mid-pipe and expand/alter it after the screws are in tightly.
— Clip LED picture lights to the hang bars where desired.
— Devise your own variations and let us know (Comments)

Cautions:
— Do NOT try this using butterfly or expanding wall fasteners— you will need screws securely fastened into the actual wall studs.
— It would be safer to use plastic glazing, not glass, in the frames.
— Do not hang valuable frames unless/until you are SURE of the strength of your wall screw supports.
— If you need to remove the Main Rail to move, etc. use a small container of premixed wall spackle (white) and a putty knife (Lowes, Home Depot) to fill the screw holes. Touch up the paint it if needed, after its dry.

Questions, comments, suggestions? Comment on this posting.