This Project Almost Broke Me
Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль
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Want To Make this Project?
xTool P2 Laser: www.xtool.com/products/ultima...
Maple: amzn.to/3UzACnV
Chicago Screws: amzn.to/3u6vNrh
Evolution Miter Saw: amzn.to/3UicLc3
Threadlocker: amzn.to/42i9paN
Wood Glue: amzn.to/49ddOxZ
Pendant Sockets: amzn.to/4ba3etv
Antique Cord: amzn.to/3SceVY9
Rubber Gloves: amzn.to/3jQUobg
Wipe On Poly: amzn.to/3OkYc3P
Copper Paint: amzn.to/3SxzI9W
Panic Clamps: amzn.to/3vPkAfg
open to drill press recommendations
Filming Gear:
Canon T5i amzn.to/2GeNLuj
Rode Mic: amzn.to/2DjlBLq
Joby Tripod: amzn.to/2Djv5Gr
LED Lightbox: amzn.to/36snyDQ
Turntable: amzn.to/3ocGmQn
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music by Jason Shaw@ audionautix.com
Пікірлер: 442
I don't care that you said you're bad at math. I don't care that you put copper paint on hardwood. I don't care that you used a laser cutter. What bothers me is that Loctite puts their blue product in a red bottle and their red product in a blue bottle!
@SuperLifestream
4 ай бұрын
Really? The red one I have is in a red bottle
@andrewledford3865
4 ай бұрын
Loctite uses little blue tubes for ALL of their products, be it the red, green or blue variety of loctite. They also use red bottles for the 2 bigger sizes, regardless of which formula it is as well.
@SansSanity
4 ай бұрын
Loctite is red. permatex is blue.
@candymatek3
4 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂 too funny.
@KnightsWithoutATable
4 ай бұрын
That way you can see when the bottle has a leak! (yes, I know this is of no comfort)
I really love how you show how many tries it took you to get something right, as well as you taking months off in between things.
I have two ideas about cord management: 1. Most kitchen faucets that have a pull-out head retract by hanging a weight that moves up and down under and behind your sink. 2. Old school coil cord that they used to put on landline telephones.
@markvader
4 ай бұрын
Also came to leave the "hidden" hanging counter weight, might be harder to hide on the lamp though.
@scootersfrog
4 ай бұрын
ill add to the counterweight idea and also like to add maybe run the cord thru eyelets in the center of the mechanism
@clifsportland
4 ай бұрын
The coil telephone cord won't work with full power, but is big enough to support low voltage LED.
@clarewillison9379
4 ай бұрын
9:30 with captions using the table saw is translated as “music” and “applause” and I think that’s perfect. 😂
@a.mathis9454
4 ай бұрын
Low tension bungee cord.
The Drill Press chuck is stalling likely because the belt is either worn out and needs replacement and/or the belt is loose and the tensioner needs adjustment... It's possible the pulleys are also worn out (run your finger on the inside where the belt sits, if you feel a ridge or an uneven slope, it's trash and needs replacement)...
this came out really cool!! the copper colour paint was definitely the right way to go with that, so it might be worth knowing that metallic paint goes soooo much easier over a black base, and that's true for any colour metallic! it'll look smoother and need less coats!
For cable management, I would suggest a couple of small eye bolts that the cable can freely slide through at the top of the extending part, one in the wall and a small weight a the bottom to keep the cable slightly taught as to not bunch up when you collapse the lamp
@Aleph-Noll
4 ай бұрын
this sounds like a good idea
@ThisIsNotMyYouTubeHandle
4 ай бұрын
It sounds like the cable would still get bunched up when retracting, you'd also have to find a balance between a weight that would keep it taught but prevent pulling the lamp in on it's own. I think he needs to attach the cable to the arm itself, following each diagonal. If you really want a clean look, you could do it internally but would be a lot more work.
@tomarnd8724
4 ай бұрын
@@ThisIsNotMyKZreadHandle snaking it along the zigzag members is a good idea, mine was based on some commercial lamps I've seen that have some kind of pulley and weight arrangement
@chrisfab1525
4 ай бұрын
For the cable management I would go zigzag from the middle-screws to the outer screws, bottom or top, what you like more.
@seigeengine
4 ай бұрын
Tensioning the cord is definitely the right method imo.
I feel like nearly everyone that ever tried any crafts projects had a situation at one point where a project just becomes irritating in all ways possible but you've spent so much time on it that you just push through out of contempt and even when it ends up decent you look at it with knives in your eyes and you are just glad its over. As a perfectionist it happens to me far too much and it kills my motivation for any sort of handcrafts projects.
@ShintogaDeathAngel
4 ай бұрын
😂 can confirm I’ve been through this!
Looks good. Perhaps, run the cord up and down along the scissor arms. That way the length stays the same.
@chrissutton6235
4 ай бұрын
Came here to suggest this also. Need a long cord, but simple and elegant solution
@MrDmorgan52
4 ай бұрын
Loosely tie strap it to the framework
@Shad0wS0urc3
4 ай бұрын
Use laser cutter to make little wooden clips or eyeholes to run the cord through. Could maybe use some more of the scrap pieces if there are any left...those had holes.
@babooskii5710
4 ай бұрын
Came here to say the same thing lol
@ArturBrzozowski444
4 ай бұрын
Yessss!
Peter, you have an amazing way with words. I'm actually a therapist in my day to day, and in all the training, I've never heard someone articulate so well why people drop their resolutions like you just did here. Poignant, touching, but powerful. Thank you.
@theJonnymac
4 ай бұрын
I came here to say something similar.
@Sandux930
4 ай бұрын
Thoughts on betterhelp?
@capnskustomworks
4 ай бұрын
Indeed!!!
@Sharpless2
4 ай бұрын
this is exactly why this is my comfort channel.
I go through phases of what i like to watch on yt and this is one of the few channels that i still get super excited when the notification comes up after watching for years.
The project turned out great and the perseverance shows. After seeing the rubber bands, I knew I would not be able to try this. My cat hunts them. I don't mean chases and plays, anything that smells like one will be dragged out of drawers and bins and chewed to pieces if not swallowed whole. How something without opposable thumbs can open a file cabinet is beyond me.
@KainYusanagi
4 ай бұрын
Won't need them if you aren't bad at math and are willing to glue them one corner at a time to get two pieces at an L angle first, then join those two pieces. ;P
Love the look of this lamp. For a cable management you could get brass and cut small washers that are shaped like the number 8 and then bend the loops 90°. add them to the bottom of the scissor mechanism via the already existing Chicago Screws. then thread the lap wire thru the lower loop. It would hold the cord out of the way and it would match the copper inside the shade. You could also go crazy and attach some sort of retracking reel to gather the slack on the cord. Great video showing that sometimes you just need to put a project down and revisit it.
Peter, you are awesome. Also thank you for sanding off the burnt edge of the laser cut wood. It’s my pet peeve when I see unfinished burnt edges!
Need a coiled cord kind of like an old telephone cord but for electricity and secure it at the top of the pole and the lamp so it will “spring” back and forth.
Command sells "Round Cord Clip" Just little adhesive clear clips you could stick to the arm. Just one or two, just enough to keep the cords from getting in the way.
I’m glad your not broken!
I think one of the charms of your channel is seeing what goes wrong along with what goes right, thanks for including the bloopers.
For cable management, have the cable zig-zag along one set of the scissors
I just started setting up my P2 today -- pretty nervous to get started, but maybe good nervous. So glad you have one as well so I can start getting project inspo.!
Always love it when it does that thing. And I do love a good lamp project. Thanks for sharing!
For cord management I think something similar to how a retractable cord works on a vacuum cleaner, it would have to be governed down for your application. You would pull the fixture out to any distance and cord would stop at the perfect length then push a button and the cord retracts and folds the lamp at the same time. Some sort of eyelet on the top of each arm would keep it tidy when extended. Love your videos. Hello for western 🇨🇦
Thank you for pushing through after falling our of love for this project.
I have had a few projects like this; Where I am trying to make a thing and I tell myself "people have been making these things since the iron age, and companies make millions of them every day - why doesn't mine do the thing?" After the project ends (either successfully or not) I can let the frustration go and allow the reflection period to wash over me. When I can look back and say "well now I know how not to do it" or "Next time I think I know a better method to try." Peter Brown your channel gives me that feeling in a similar way - getting to watch your journey allows me to have that same period of reflection and I thank you for that. I will always celebrate your victories with you and share in the burden of your sorrows too, we are all makers and our shared experience is how we reach our potential. Thank you for reading my comment and for making these videos.
The end smile with the "and look. it does that thing" makes it all worth it :D
Peter, you're wonderful! This is exactly the same kind of chaos that happens every single time I step into the workshop. This was so relatable to me and I absolutely loved it! It turned out really well!!
I am loving the whole No Damns Given and Making it up as you go along feel to this project. And it turned out well too!
Chicago screws were what brought my okder brother and sister into the world. By the time I came along the family had moved out of state.😊 Here's hoping for future Projected happiness. Watching your content has always been a boon to my mental health.
Hey Peter, just wanted to say that I think Peter is a cool dude... even though those kinds messaging are difficult to process through the lens of years of negative self-talk. Your channel is a delight and a reprieve for me at work, and gets me excited to get started on my own projects.
I don't care what you use to make your project, it's YOUR project. You continue to do you and the people who truly like your channel will keep coming back.
Great job, I like the copper inside the shade also. ❤❤
Well done sir! Love that the scissor is wooden and love the inner copper!
always fascinating to see the next project come along
Thank you for your content. Also, thank you for your honesty. I think it turned out great.
Peter, love the project, and your comment about project defeats, reminded me to look at my shelf of “I’ll return another day” items :) Cable management: ascetics vs functionality, perhaps a coiled cord, has enough slack in the coils to extend, yet enough memory to return when the light is retracted. Much like an office style phone cord. I personally think it would be a great functional addition :) LOVE YOUR PROJECTS!! -Derrick
My first thought for the cord is a collaspable tube, like dryer venting. Mount it to run along the top of the scissor with the correct length at full extension and hopefully it would not "sag" and second thought was possibly some sort of reservoir or jar for excess cord to collect in when the lamp is collapsed to help keep it from hanging up or catching anything.
Thanks for sharing this video with us. Please take care of yourself and your family.
That turned out awesome!!! The copper really goes well with the bulb!
nice job! for cord management - extend the lamp fully. fix the chord along the extending cross braces. allow a small amount of slack at the brace joints....
i could not figure out what you were making until halfway through the video. but that's so cool! it looks so useful!!
I made one of these a few years ago with my kiddo, and for cable management, we put small eyebolts in the middle and top joints to keep the cord secure. Ours may have been overkill for what you want, but, as some people have commented, you could also just do a couple at the top, to keep things in line.
thanks for the upload, and also I know im a bit late but congrats on getting healthy. You look good, keep up the amazing work!
I love your channel and I love how you do things. Thank you for doing what you do and sharing what you share. : )
Pretty cool! From experience I can say that it's a right pain to build a scissor lift and have it do the thing. If you want to do it by hand you need a hole template/guide and to rigorously mark the orientation of the pieces so they all match up. shoulder bolts with nylon locking nuts make nice heavy duty pins! For the cord I recommend either a retractor cable, or a coiled cord like the stretchy telephone cords.
bluetooth sender at the lamp base and a reciever in the shade, no cord from base to shade. the wood possibly also bend from the paint on just one side
For cord management, I don't know if you'd want to go to the trouble disconnect the cord from the fixture, but if you did, you could drill a hole at the top of the opposing end (the end that has the swivel rod or whatever you want to call it), drilling it at the very top; just big enough to feed the cord through (then reconnect); then that way when the accordion part expands and contracts, the cord can just feed through in either direction, rather than bunch up when closed if it were fixed at a set length (which would need to be the max full extension, in that scenario).
The cable needs to be routed zig zag style following one side of the scissor. The length will never change and it will hopefully never get stuck between the scissor.
Matthias has a spreadsheet for doing splayed miters, no math or trial and error required if you have a miter saw that has labels on it.
Nice design. I am sitting on a lamp project to make for sometime this year. Thanks for sharing.
cable management: 3d printed wire holders that bolt in under the center bolt of each member. enough cord to be straightish when extended, then the wire folds up in to a bunch of loops when collapsed. Maybe some additional length when extended to promote the looping when collapsed.
For the cord, you could use similar holes pegs like the ones on the mount post. Attach hole pegs on each of the top joints, run the cord through them.
for the wire just install eyelets along the support board. run the wire through them also add a guide eyelet to the top of the middle accordion post. this will keep the wire from being pinched.
Great video always enjoy your videos near idea have to try it
Bless your heart Peter , it felt like you had to push through that project , I could feel that you weren’t happy all the way through the process .
Another bright idea! Well done!
For cable management I'd go in a zig-zag pattern up and down the scissor mechanism between either the top and bottom or the top and the middle hinges. Then you can secure the cable to the mechanism on one side and you would only need a little slack around the turns.
if you install loops on the top joints and a slight weight on the wire near the wall mount, that would help with cable management. the lamp looks nice and neat!
For cord management, depending on where you put it permanently, have the cord come down from above. And have it on a pully system that can wind up as needed.
We had two of these lamps when I grew up. I pinched my fingers numerous times 😭 The original lamps had the cord weave through each joint on the upper half. We had another cheaper one where I think the cord was stapled to the middle and upper half of the scissor mechanism. One important thing for usability is to fasten the top slider at the wall, so the lamp doesn't suddenly drop on your head. Thank you for sharing
I really enjoyed the video and the project came out great! I have a similar building process - frustrating from the inside but funny on the outside.
Great project! I think something like an eye bolt in the top joints would be a good place to put the cable for management.
I have several times used a math-free technique for setting up complicated compound miters: draw the finished object in the 3D CAD platform of your choice, then slice the model at the corners and have it tell you what the angles are. Then use your laser to cut a jig with slots just wider than your saw blade containing those angles out of wood or plastic, then use that jig to set your saw.
Thank you for being open about mental health.
So for cable management, actually pretty easy. Add weights to the bottom of the cable (proportional to the weight of the cable in total), and then just add a hole for it at the top of the wall mount. Cable should slide down when it's depressed, and slide up and out when pulled ^^^
18:20 You could mount a small brass pulley (maybe a wall mounted pulley if they make one) to the top of the wall mount for the cord to run through. On kitchen sinks they use a two piece clamping weight on the faucet hose to make it want to draw back in. Maybe a really small weight towards the bottowm of the power cord to make it want to pull back through while being out of sight along the wall.
They do make plastic cable clamps that you can use with your "Chicago screws" to support the cable along the length of the arm and to provide cable supports on the wall mount.
Attach the cord to the links, so that it folds up with it. On "proper" vintage ones the cord goes through the rivets, but just attaching it to the links loosely works too, basically just letting the slack spread out over several places
For cord management, I suggest adding a small loop to the top of each section of the scissor and feed the cord through that so it keeps the cord from getting pinched by the scissor...
A little peg on the front of the top of the flat part where you keep looping the cord over it could help keep the cord from falling forward into the Elbow Abyss. You could even put a second, smaller peg on the peg that points backward to stop the cord from sliding up the peg and over it to become one with the elbows.
1:19 can we just take a moment to acknowledge how cool those tools are!!! Cutter hole punch and rivet press? I need these in my life.
Great project Peter! I wonder if a braided cable would help with the cable management?
"So 7°, and... um... that much." lol I love it!
cool lamp, as for cord management how about an eye on the top of the bracket with a weight on the cord so it pulls back through as you shorten the arm.# Thanks for sharing a great video
For cord management, could you add a 'pass through' sort of tab to the top of the accordian part? Maybe something that you can add to what is there? It might still bunch up a little, but it would at least keep the cord in one place.
Dang, you did metal machinist level stuff with wood! It is beautiful! But I gotta say, I teared up when you said “why would I try to help someone I don’t even like” That really hit home with me. I stop and watch your videos because I love your crazy projects- but also because you’re a funny, pleasant and interesting person ❤
For cable management, a simple and easy solution might be to fully extend the scissor lamp as far as it could possibly go and then mark the spots on the cable that line up with the middle or bottom row of chicago screws. Then, you can anchor the cable on or near the chicago screws with hardware of your choice. The idea is to give each section the slack it needs to fully extend so you never have to worry about the cord getting snagged or binding up. Could like nice and neat too! This is all in theory, of course. I have yet to make something like this.
The Project is great the one weak point I see are those two small pieces that hold the metal rod either thicker for more glue surface or a couple of gussets.
I love it and I knew you would get there in the end. I don't think there's anything that you couldn't make.
if you put the cord to go along the links with some attachments, it would be fine, with caveat of getting kinked, but it can be rigid mounted on it, the distance between the centers and outers remains the same so if you zigzag along that it's fine in the way that it doesn't get pulled at either end, maybe you can figure out an arrangement that doesn't kink too much but the point is that the woods stay the same length so the amount of cord on the links can stay same lenght.
if you zigzag the cable along the arm following one route going up and down and attach it, it will be the length required for full extension and then will coil/fold neatly
For cord management, what about some type of ring hanging from each of the bottom joints with the cord running through them? The rings should be big enough to allow the cord to slip through them easily. Having the cord attached at the bottom would hopefully prevent it from getting tangled in the accordion mechanism.
you could use some cable clips on the scissor links down one side to keep the wire from getting caught and hanging, that would also prevent you from having too little cable and not being able to fully extend the lamp.
For the cord, extend the scissor mechanism all the way, the. Use small c clips off the Chicago screws to hold the wire where it sits fully extended. Wont be perfect, but should hold it enough to not be in the way.
For cable management, have the cable loosely pinned to one of the zig-zags. Basically have the cable follow a path that doesn't change in length, just in angle. I would put wire loops into the phillips heads(just hot glued to be lazy) and loosely constrain the cable that way.
As far as cord management, what about attaching clips on the outer side of the scissor legs along the top, extending the lamp out to fullest and then clipping the cable in place? So when it contracts the now loose extents of cable will drop down in (hopefully) tidy loops
cable management idea.run a loop of metal from the chicago bolts on the bottom of the scissor mechanism, attach the cable to those new loops so that its slightly off taught when the lamp is at full extension. The cable will droop when the lamp is retracted, but not in a way that fouls the mechanism and can be run up the outer spar to the lampshade.
We have a bunch of these at our cabin, the cable is routed along the extending arm, following the zig-zag pattern. Not hidden, but it doesn't look unseemly, either.
Now make another one as a marking tool. Next time you make another lamp shade try Dutch leaf gilding. The super thin sheets of leaf cover completely in one dose with no drying downtime after application and the leaf does a great job of reflecting the light.
Look cool! You could make loops for the top that the cord could go through. A separate piece or something.
I'd try anchoring the wire to each hinge piece if you wanna be super neat. you could also try some crazy spooling solution.
Been there done that - some projects just kill your enthusiasm to make stuff - and the whole "how hard can it be, it looks easy" turns into "I want to sell all my tools and live as one with nature in a cave in Alaska".
See if you can get something like fishing pole eyes to attach to the top of the accordion pivots. That way you can thread the cable through them and it will always be out of the way. might need a weight on the pole side to keep the slack out of it. Overall a cool project and it does that thing!
I guess people just forgot that better help was a scam because I am seeing ads for them again
@willfultrain6779
4 ай бұрын
Oh, wait, really? I kinda had a feeling but wasn't sure.
Awesome! Thanks
For the cord, you might be able to have it zigzag following the wood making the scissors. The wood pieces don't change length, so the cord won't have to slide if it's affixed directly to them. The only concern would be that the cord has to bend and unbend at each joint whenever you adjust the lamp.
coiled classic phone cord for the wire management. extends, and also retracts itself
It came out beautiful. Also never before has a video had a more appropriate sponsor. After the shades warped, even as a viewer, I had to pause the video and have a little sit-down. I think if I were in your shoes I’d have signed myself and the lamp pieces up for group therapy. Happy at how nice it turned out though 👍🏼
if you put a loop on every other ending chicago screw, you could have the cord follow a zig-zag pattern along the wood.. so it doesnt change length either. meaning cord goes down one leg, then up to the next then down to the next in a path matching the wood (that also doesnt change length)... just the angles of the bends change.
It’s my birthday today and seeing a video by you is present enough, thank you Peter.
@tlacuachobonito3157
4 ай бұрын
Happy birth 🎉
You manage the cord the same way they manage the sprayer hose in a kitchen sink. Mount the cord on every top side, (maybe on every top screw?) and put a weight in between. That should make the cord fold up nice, but I don't know if the added weight would make the whole thing try to close back up...
yea .. Ive had that same problem cutting small panels with compound miter saws.., it seems to introduce a curve ,,, tablesaws are a much better option for that kind of work ,, I think it has to do with tool path during the cut . love your work BTW