Thingiverse
the FlashFlood
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As someone who has fallen down their basement stairs more than once, I can appreciate a small but ever-so-critical bit of illumination at night. I don't want to install a big, power-hungry flood-light and still have to remember to turn it on when I need it.
Enter the FlashFlood.
Do you have one of those 9-LED aluminum two-dollar flashlights from Harbor Freight or the dollar store? How about a spare three to five volt AC to DC adapter? Great! Print the four parts, pop the LEDs out of the casing, solder a wire to the terminals on the circuit, add some screws, nuts and bolts and viola!
The FlashFlood was designed to be somewhat water-resistant with a wire channel in the arm and can be articulated to a pretty broad arc of range.
Just be mindful of the polarity and rating of the supply so you don't burn through two flashlights...
Enjoy!
As someone who has fallen down their basement stairs more than once, I can appreciate a small but ever-so-critical bit of illumination at night. I don't want to install a big, power-hungry flood-light and still have to remember to turn it on when I need it.
Enter the FlashFlood.
Do you have one of those 9-LED aluminum two-dollar flashlights from Harbor Freight or the dollar store? How about a spare three to five volt AC to DC adapter? Great! Print the four parts, pop the LEDs out of the casing, solder a wire to the terminals on the circuit, add some screws, nuts and bolts and viola!
The FlashFlood was designed to be somewhat water-resistant with a wire channel in the arm and can be articulated to a pretty broad arc of range.
Just be mindful of the polarity and rating of the supply so you don't burn through two flashlights...
Enjoy!
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