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Was gifted some old lights that were designed to be stuck into holes in wood. Didn’t want to drill holes that big into my kitchen cabinets, so I designed and printed these holders that can be screwed to the cabinets and hold the lights. Also the lights are surrounded by it, so they don’t glare. Here are the results:

Combined it with two smart plugs, one that’s connected directly to the lights and one that sits in the socket right under the light switch. The one under the light switch is configured with a „scene“, that means if I press the little button on it, the plug connected to the lights will turn on, allowing me to use it as physical remote switch, while still being able to use the socket.

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[-] ShadowRam@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago

I've bought different kinds over the past 15 years, The quality on all of them can't be that bad.

I suspect them dying is being fed 12VAC.
The halogens don't have a problem with it, and although these G4 replacements should rectify the AC properly, I still don't think they can handle it long term.

So my next step is to replace the bricks with 12VDC

this post was submitted on 11 Aug 2023
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Functional 3D Printing

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