Cartoon Network

26 April 2012

RE: Re: Re: [DIY] Electrical post

 



Plugs for the campers.
We have an electrician hired to work on this project.

------- Original Message -------
From : Mike Shoaf[mailto:mike.shoaf@yahoo.com]
Sent : 4/25/2012 7:00:40 PM
To : DoIt_Yourself@yahoogroups.com
Cc :
Subject : RE: Re: Re: [DIY] Electrical post

I am still wondering what these will be used
for: are you adding plugs for camping equipment or
just wanting to install a light or a place to tie a
horse?If adding plugs fed from an electrical service
elsewhere, there are ways to mount a weatherproof box
with plugs inside of it rather inexpensively,
depending on how many and type of plugs, without a
wooden post. The "bell box" can be mounted to a piece
of pipe using a fitting made just for that, with a
round yoke for the pipe and a threaded hub to go into
the back of the box. You would bring your wiring up
from underground in a piece of pvc pipe into the
bottom of the box, mount your plugs and install a
weatherproof in use cover.If you want an individual
service at each site, you are gonna require a larger
investment. I
would suggest hiring an electrician due to the
safety requirements for people and the horses!
From: "snaffles@essex1.com" <snaffles@essex1.com>
To: DoIt_Yourself@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2012 7:18 PM
Subject: RE: Re: [DIY] Electrical post


Yes I was thinking of ways we could do this. I like

your idea of running a place up the side where the

conduit could fit in.

thanks for that idea!

Joyce

------- Original Message -------

From : Dave Uebele[mailto:daveu@sptddog.com]

Sent : 4/25/2012 5:06:53 PM

To : DoIt_Yourself@yahoogroups.com

Cc : snaffles@essex1.com

Subject : RE: Re: [DIY] Electrical post

Have you considered going deeper in the

direction of

doing this yourself?

Either purchasing 4x4 posts and trying to drill

through them (a challenge to keep the drill centered).

There are longer electricians bits, but they are

pricey and

might wander out of the 4x4 partway down.

Might try to improvise a drill bit out of a piece of

conduit

and a file to make a cutter bit on the end of the

conduit?

Another option, getting 2 2x4s, routing out a channel

for wire,

then glue, nail or screw them together?

Even just cutting a channel for the conduit on

the surface of the 4x4 might protect it better

than pure surface mount of the conduit.

A router jig and maybe some cleanup with a chisel

to set conduit and plugs/lights or whatever the

electrical

wiring is feeding.

Sort of depends on how many posts, how much labor

vs money you have available.

dave

On 04/25/2012 02:06 PM, snaffles@essex1.com wrote:

>

>

> What we need is a wooden post to be used as a

> pedastal (?) in the area where trailriders camp. The

> post would be close to 4 foot underground and 4 foot

> above ground. The pedastals that are there now have

> the conduit and wire on the outside of the posts. We

> are thinking that it would hold up longer to have it

> all inside the posts.

>

>> From looking at the website, the prices are much

> higher than the saddle club can afford. But thank you

> anyway.

> Joyce

>

--

Dave Uebele (daveu@sptddog.com)

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