DIY Jam Jar Garden Lamps - Basic Homemade Yard Lights | Tutorial

by Max Imagination in Workshop > Home Improvement

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DIY Jam Jar Garden Lamps - Basic Homemade Yard Lights | Tutorial

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Want to spice up your yard on a budget or just light it up in style? Make a set of AC Jam Jar Garden Lamps!

In this Instructable, I'll guide you through how to make one of these basic but stylish outdoor yard lamps simply from some scrap pipes n' cans and one of your everyday Jam Jars. Each of these will house an LED light bulb that'll illuminate your yard without looking cheap.

CAUTION:

As these lamps will have 110V AC (or 220V depending on the country) powering them, keep in mind the safety hazards that come with working around electricity if dealt with improperly. NEVER work on a lamp while it is powered (live electricity), even when wiring one to the grid (keep electricity off when installing). If you can, ground any metal casing/enclosing tin parts on the lamp with an earth wire nearby to prevent anyone from being electrocuted during operation (this is shown in step 12).

Supplies

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To make one of these lamps, we'll need:

• Glass Jam/Mason Jar with Lid

• 100mm Quarter-gallon Tin Paint Can

• 0.7m Section of 15mm or Half-Inch PVC pipe

• Half-Inch PVC Coupling

• Half-Inch PVC Tee fitting

• AC Threaded Bulb lamp Holder

• Small LED AC Light Bulb/Lamp

• 14 Gauge Electrical Wire

• M3 Nuts, Bolts, and Washers (x2 of each)

• Spray Paint - by the color of your choice


Other Supplies and Tools you may need:

• Drill Machine with 38mm borer and 3mm drill bits

• Stanley/Utility Knife

• Flat-nosed Pliers

• Wire Cutters

• Access to a Kitchen Stove

• Can-opener tool

• Superglue

• Hot Glue Gun

• Pipe Cutters or Hacksaw

• Scissors

Peel Away Label on Jam Jar

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Peeling away the label on our Jam Jar can be done with a Utility knife or simply loosened off with some warm water under a tap. Scrub and wash well with some dish soap to remove excess sticky residue.

Bore Hole in Lid

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With the help of a drill machine, we can drill the appropriate-sized hole in our jar lid for the AC Lamp holder to poke through. Diameter - 38mm or 1 1/2 inch

Afterward, we can spray paint the lid with just a single coat. Though, an anti-rust primer is recommended to apply onto the lid first.

Making the Lamp's Head Joint

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Heating up an 8cm section of pipe over the stove, we can split it down half-way and spread it flat on a surface. After trimming the piece and drilling it a pair of holes, this makes for a decent lamp head-to-pipe joint.

Forming the Lamp's Hat

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We can take something as basic as a tin paint can and convert its bottom into an oriental-style hat for our lamp to help deflect rainwater. In forming it, be sure to snip around every 1cm and bend the sharp edges away below the hat for safety.

Diameter of can - 10cm

Prepping the Lamp Holder Stick

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Let's trim off a wedge from the longest section of pipe to form a pointy grounding end. Cutting the pipe near that end will help create the necessary gap to fit in a PVC Tee Joint for the wires to slip out sideways.

Painting Parts

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Now that we're done forming the necessary parts for the lamp, we can spray paint them with the color of your choice. I chose silver for metal parts and black for plastic ones.

Assembling Bulb Base

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Here, let's take the painted split joint we made earlier and bolt it to the porcelain bulb holder with those 3M nuts and bolts. For connecting the supporting pipe, let's also connect a half-inch coupling to the custom adjoining mount.

Electrically, we'll also pull through the 14AWG wire pair and fasten those to the bulb holder's screw leads.

Securing Jar Lid

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We'll insulate the electrical connections and take the cover holder or jar lid we drilled previously and hot glue it to the bulb holder. Be sure to check that these have a tight fit.

Gluing on the Lamp's Tin Hat

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Assembling the 3 Parts

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Let's screw in one of these LED bulbs into the socket (check that your bulb will fit in jar before purchasing). Then we can fit the 3 parts together that we've prepared earlier: Glass enclosure (top), lamp base with bulb, and the supporting ground pipe. Be sure to pull the two wires down and out through the Tee pipe.

Hooking Things Up to the System

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To install these lamps, you'd first need to already have underground electrical tubing in place (preferably, a junction wiring box containing a live and neutral wire to which we'll connect the lamp. There must also be a ground wire installed, shortly afterward (shown in the next step).

Once the wires are hooked up to the system in parallel, these must get insulated and hidden away at the base of the lamp or junction box.

Grounding the Lamp

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Grounding/Earthing the lamps you install is crucial in preventing potential tingles, shocks, or even deaths from touching the lamp's metal parts. You wouldn't want to leave a rigged setup or death trap waiting for somewhere out there!

We must ground the lamp we've made by running a third wire (in pink) from the tin jar lid casing to the ground via a ground rod (homemade version). The longer the ground rod, the better connection with moist earth. I used these short, quarter-inch copper tubes extended with additional stranded copper wire to get a crude-looking but functional grounding rod.

Grounding systems typically have grounded elements such as the lamps also connected by a common wire, creating an interconnected set of grounding points (fully grounded). This step is not shown in these images.

As Alternating Current (AC) can get really dangerous at voltages higher than 50V, it is important to have any AC appliance's metal casing connected to the ground. This drains leakage AC voltage from the hot wire touching the metal to the conductive rainwater floating in the tin lid to flow right into the ground, rather than passing through you.

Creating a Base

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We can create a basic supporting base out of concrete to help keep the lamp firmly seated in the ground. I used a sour cream plastic container for the mold.

More Spray Painting

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To blend in the base, we can do it with a layer of black spray paint, matching the rest of the lamp.

The Finished Garden Lamp

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You've made it this far, great job! Having followed the steps above, you now have at least one or more of these AC outdoor lamps as a neat addition to lighting your Yard, patio, or driveway in style. In my case, I made 3 of these DIY lamps specifically to replace the old/broken driveway lamps that were previously seated in those spots.

I've had these lamps sitting in the driveway for over 3 months as of releasing this Instructable. There are slight signs of corrosion on the tin due to not using a coat of primer spray paint prior to painting the parts. So it's quite important to prevent such a thing from happening with some basic anti-rust primer paint. Other than that, they're still running well outside to this day, lighting up the way.


Thanks for reading and happy making!