Well - and I also made a pair of glasses-trovit.
Went three weeks ago to store audio products: bought the white light diodes, connector and cord glasses took mom. Diodes are the brightest, I took a standard cord socket which was made of plastic.
This week I decided to make sunglasses.
And as I a teapot in such cases, the recommendations addressed to Alexander.
Made in 4 days:
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Day 1 - drilled hole: the glasses were similar to the cheese with holes. Followed the Instructions and marked out the AAA battery area to the holes. The template is not used. The drill is found on the diameter two times bigger than Alexander's.
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Day 2 - inserted diodes and folded them, taking the battery from Nokia, checked where the diodes plus leg and minus a leg. Bent and coiled around the "pros" with the "pros" and "cons" with the "cons."
Tried to head diode closely adjacent to the glass. Did I have that plus the legs are along the periphery and to the edge points. A "minus" legs go along the center of the bridge of the nose points.
And since I don't cut the legs as shown in the photo in the Instructions, so I had major knots minus the legs on the glass. But the design turned out hard and almost stable.
Of course the placement of the diodes it turned out slightly not symmetrical. But for the first time quite decent.
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Day 3 - was connected stereosar points: how I novosilka with him bit the hand tremble, one thread "minus" wire of the cord will break, and re-start to expose the cord. Because of this, two feet of cord left only half.
Connected as shown in the 4th photo: red wire to left and white to right. Because of the bare "minus" wire stereoscope, had to stick a hollow rubber tube of glue "Moment" to the glass, to protect the "minus" wire from the possibility of contact with anything.
Wrapped a couple of times "plus" and "minus" stereosny around the outline respectively of the "pros" and "cons" of the diodes. And the joints soldered some tin. The relationship turned out sturdy and durable.
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Day 4 - plug connector to stereoscope: how full the kettle did not know that the stereo can spin - so long thought of how to solder the whole thing
It turned out everything is simple: two "plus" and "minus" "minus" cable stereosar just firmly pinched with forceps to "negative" leg of the connector, and the "plus" wire wrapped through the holes plus legs and firmly soldered with tin.
Oh Yes before you solder the connector to stereoscope examined the compliance of the left and right channel points via menu innerpulse to reduce/pushing brightness points.
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At the moment I still have to stick the rubber over his glasses to hide the wires and the legs of the diodes.
Just want to say, checking for the impact of these points at me still ahead, but the frustration is already there: even from simple batteries, or batteries of Nokia, the brightness of the diodes was higher than from innerpulse.
Financial aspect: the most expensive was the diodes, roughly of 1.40 U.S. dollars for the diode (if converted from our dollars). I missed only 20 dollars. Glasses mom took. A soldering iron and a drill from dad. Rubber tubing picked up from work. I was on the spot. And everything else attached.<