K
Kim Jong ILL
Guest
Hello, I am new here but have been growing for 2 years now. I am a self sufficient cab grower. I bought a white melamine cab and had a heck of a time light sealing all the doors. While many successfully use weatherstripping, on three sides of a cab door, the last edge (that on the hinge side of the door) can be the toughest, especially if your cab has pocket hinges.
So, I took old innertubes from my mountain bike and used them to light seal my doors. Much better than the silcone/vaseline method for those that have tried and it's MUCH more durable than using weatherstripping.
It took a whole bunch of work to update the cab, expand a few spaces and light seal the thing. Then, while replacing a flat tire on my mtn. bike and wondering why these tubes can't be recycled, it hit me.
Here's what you do:
1) Get an old inner tube and cut out the valve section (tube1.jpg)
2) Then, cut it lengthwise to make one flat piece of rubber (tube2.jpg, tube3.jpg)
3) Have at it with your staple gun and put a line of staples up and down the cab side and door side of the gap (tube4.jpg)
4) A closeup of how I detailed the hinges (tube5.jpg)
5) Then, run a length of Gorilla tape over the staples to catch any last bits of light that want to creep through (tube6.jpg)
You're done!
The problem (sorry it was daylight when I took the photos) (tube7.jpg)
That's a 250 watter inside and it hides the seam perfectly. It's flexible and does not interfere with the hinges (tube8.jpg)
So, I took old innertubes from my mountain bike and used them to light seal my doors. Much better than the silcone/vaseline method for those that have tried and it's MUCH more durable than using weatherstripping.
It took a whole bunch of work to update the cab, expand a few spaces and light seal the thing. Then, while replacing a flat tire on my mtn. bike and wondering why these tubes can't be recycled, it hit me.
Here's what you do:
1) Get an old inner tube and cut out the valve section (tube1.jpg)
2) Then, cut it lengthwise to make one flat piece of rubber (tube2.jpg, tube3.jpg)
3) Have at it with your staple gun and put a line of staples up and down the cab side and door side of the gap (tube4.jpg)
4) A closeup of how I detailed the hinges (tube5.jpg)
5) Then, run a length of Gorilla tape over the staples to catch any last bits of light that want to creep through (tube6.jpg)
You're done!
The problem (sorry it was daylight when I took the photos) (tube7.jpg)
That's a 250 watter inside and it hides the seam perfectly. It's flexible and does not interfere with the hinges (tube8.jpg)