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fastman posted:

I just received the new Menards power plant. The electric chord to the rectifier is on a white cord with a stupid 90' fitting coming out of the side of the building,hideous,stupid and ruins the look of the plant. SHAME,SHAME, SHAME a complete waste of a $125.00

Can you post a picture of that?  I was considering this building but this sounds like a deal breaker!

Bossman284 posted:
fastman posted:

I just received the new Menards power plant. The electric chord to the rectifier is on a white cord with a stupid 90' fitting coming out of the side of the building,hideous,stupid and ruins the look of the plant. SHAME,SHAME, SHAME a complete waste of a $125.00

Can you post a picture of that?  I was considering this building but this sounds like a deal breaker!

Thinking just place a shrub or something there or camouflage it with a cut straw or styrene as a pipe?

Here is the easiest way to camouflage and  not  worry  about  an unsightly jack and cord to provide power to the structure.   Menards has  smartly included an  access port on the bottom side of the Power & Light structure that enables me to completely hide the power jack and cord.   My Dakota Cabinet Factory from Menards   also  has an access port on the bottom side which I am using to hide its power jack and cord. 

Jim Hartley, CAE

Last edited by J Hartley CAE

OK thanks my wife wanted her dining room table back so she boxed it up and I will take your word for that. Thank you WE have another issue tho. The pig tail that comes out of the rectifier has a plug in socket that connects to a jack for the 3 way divider. There is a size mismatch and it is a very loose fit. Will need to glue it together for reliability. Thank You for the fast and accurate reply

colorado hirailer posted:

I wonder what you'd use to light these as with dim, yellowish incandescant lighting, as I'd guess similar prototypes had?  (Maybe they come with it, I haven't wired any in yet)

You must have missed it, but go back a month and a half or so and see the article that Rich Melvin (the Webmaster) started about the hint to use a yellow type of paint to brush over bright white LEDs to turn them into soft white/yellow lights that are much more pleasing. This article ran for quite a while. 

Last edited by breezinup

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OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Ste 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
www.ogaugerr.com

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