Leaping Light Arches - Mark II

In the summer of 2013 with the help of my brother in law I made my first leaping light arches. After 5 years of use I felt it was time to remake all five of them but sadly my brother in law was “unavailable” to help. The process of making the arches is pretty simple. I started by taking 1 inch PVC pipe and attaching it to a motor from a “tater twister” that I found on eBay.

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I took a piece of sheet metal and fabricated a bracket in the shape of a U. Then I mounted it to the motor and then attached the other side to the pipe. Next I supported the middle and other end of the pipe using saw horses and pieces of High-density polyethylene (HDPE). I used the HDPE to support the pipe because it is very dense and smooth material and I wanted as little resistance while the pipe turned so to not put unneeded strain on the motor.

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Once the pipe was supported I was able to start the tedious task of wrapping the lights around the pipe.

To start and stop the motor I used a household power strip as a simple on / off switch. Once I had a few feet of lights wrapped around the pipe I would turn off the motor and push the lights together. After repeating the process numerous times I was done.

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Once the arches were all wrapped I worked on wiring them up. The arches are divided into 8 equal sections with each section requiring its own cord. To accomplish this I used SPT wire with female vampire plugs. Each section of lights plugs into a female vampire plug and then the SPT wires all runs back to single multi pin connector.

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Each multi pin connector contains 16 pins…two for each of the eight sections on the arch. The main advantage of the multi pin connector is that for five arches I only have five connections to make as apposed to the forty connections that I had to make in the past.

Here is a short video of the arches running in my basement.