Friday, January 3, 2014

A Sun Light for the Ceiling Fan

Something was missing in baby girl's room. We had just finished (sort of) a tree shelving, and I just wanted it to feel like being in nature. When I was at Ikea, I had seen this shade numerous times and thought it looked cheap. But after a good google image search, it was the only thing I could really find. At a whopping $25, I knew I could afford it the Smila Sol Sun Light. There were no how-to's, just the same picture on many blogs about how some guy put it up one day (not "how" he did it, but that he did). I thought, "I've changed a light bulb before, how hard could this be?"


This blog is for ANYONE who ever plans on doing this. If you choose not to read this before you attempt, have a mommy drink ready for when you are done or need a break.


When you first open it, you think "oh, simple, I think I understand the wordless instructions". And the you open the bag. That's more than 2 parts.



And honestly, they aren't confusing. What's confusing is how simple they think everything is. They say to basically tuck the wires in these little slots, but it is near impossible (not impossible, just really near impossible).

I say, if you get it to stick, congrats. If not, use duct tape. You do kinda want them out of the way, but the world won't end if you can't. Well, at this point, I realized what was really going on, and decided to think about the fan that was in the room. It was a 3-light fan. Maybe it would have been easier if it was one light, I don't know.


The first step was easy, TURN OFF YOUR POWER. I went to the surge box and just turned off the power in the baby room. When I started this project, I had just gotten baby girl down for her afternoon nap, so I only had at most 2 hours (if she slept soundly, otherwise, at least 20 minutes).  Then I began unscrewing the two screws that held the lighting part to the top part (I don't know the technical terms, but those sound right).


So, I used those twisty things (yellow above) to protect the wires. When you look at the Smila Sol light, it has two wires, one white one that splits (I guess the "positive" and "negative" like a car battery?), and then a twisty colored one (that I think was the "ground" wire). Well, my ceiling light had two wires, a white and a black one. So what did I do? I connected each of those to one of the split white sides from the Ikea light. The twisty one I did nothing with. It wasn't connected to anything, so I figured it wasn't that important.. tell me if I'm wrong.

I rigged the ceiling fan pull to hold the support the weight of the ikea light until I was able to connect them. I ran down to the surge box, and turned on the power. Ran back to the baby room, crossed my fingers, and there was light!


I know, I was thinking that I could use duct tape, twisty wires (from the bread loafs), and zip ties to connect everything. Oh how I was wrong. After sweating in the well heated room, remembering I forgot to put on deodorant, and counting my minutes, I decided to check on baby, who was about to wake from her nap.



I needed something light weight (not to weigh on the fan). Circular about 3 inches on top, and then about 6 on the bottom. I needed it to be plastic or light metal that I could drill into easily. I thought - where I took the screws out (the 2 before), I needed to screw in there (on the side), and then I need to screw the ikea light part to it (3 on the bottom). Crap. This means I have to wake baby and leave the house. So we put on our coats and left.  After walking around the hardware store a while, this is what I found.



In case you wanted to get this yourself, here's what it says in more detail. It was about 10 bucks. That, with the $7 light bulbs (3 needed!), this $25 light was getting expensive fast. But it would be soo worth it, I know. I know. Right? Right.



As you can guess, it was dark by this time. And of course, I needed to turn the power off to the baby room. Thank goodness my husband's grandmother still considers us "the kids" and gives us a stocking for Christmas every year. This year, she included this SUPER AWESOME and tiny flashlight. Oh thank you!  I held the smaller part of this pipe thing to the ceiling fan, and marked the holes with a sharpie. I noted that I could not drill it in, unless I took another screw out (the one that changes the direction of the fan). So, I marked that. I drilled 1/8 holes, which matched the screws. Oh yeah, and I bought an 8 pack of 32 x 3/4 in screw and bolt combo kit. It was like 1 buck.


After pre-drilling the holes, I made sure that the screws fit (screwed in by hand real fast).




But to my surprise, the surprise, the screw was stripped on the fan. I tried using a wrench to untighten it, and you can see how I scratched it. I couldn't get the screw off, but I did loosen it just enough to slip the pipe in it, and so I only used two screws, not 3. And then I re-tightened that stripped screw. Did that make sense? Sure.


STILL using the flashlight from heaven, I connected the wires AGAIN. This time, I had bought a $3.22 ceiling fan light switch. The room just has one wall switch, so I wanted to make sure I had the option to have the fan on, but not the light, or the other way. This thing had two wires coming from it, and since it was black, I connected one to the black part of the ceiling fan, and one to one split white wire on the ikea light source. Again, the ceiling fan pull was rigged to support the weight of the ikea light source until I was ready to attach.

In order to prevent pulling on the wires, I DUCT TAPED  (yes!! My dad's Aggie Engineering would be proud) the ceiling fan light switch to the top of the pipe.



I ran down to the surge protector, and turned on the power. When I came back to the room, and flipped the wall light switch.. NOTHING HAPPENED. I sent a quick prayer and pulled the newly installed pull, and THERE WAS LIGHT! Again, I didn't measure very well, so I only was able to use 2 of the 3 intended screws (and bolts) to attach the ikea light source to the pipe, but it was enough to support it, and very level!




Adding the ikea sun was pretty easy.




I made the mistake of buying the 4.5W bulbs, but it is a good light for her room. I was used to 3 60W bulbs. Each bulb says a max of 11W, so I might go and get more. I only had 40W in the same size, so I guess that is where Ikea makes their money. Does anyone know If we can put more than 11W in each? Does it really matter?


Well, she better love this sun light, otherwise she will be a miserable teenager. Because this light is staying for a while. All in all, this $25 light cost me about 2.5 times more than I thought, and took about 3 hours. If I ever hand to do this again, I would. It is so cute.



Tada! The room! It looks pretty good in person! Better than this photo looks. What do you think? Should we paint the blades to white?

What's that framed over there? Why it is the Kindle Book, STAR, that my husband made for our baby girl's 1 year birthday.

No comments:

Post a Comment