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    A New Chapter for MagicMirror: The Community Takes the Lead
    Read the statement by Michael Teeuw here.

    Prepping my first build. Care to check my work?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Development
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    • 3 Offline
      3DPrintedWaffles @Mykle1
      last edited by

      @Mykle1 Dang, that’s pretty good lookin’. I especially like your frame. I think in some ways the frame makes or breaks it. With a poor/ugly frame it loses it’s “future tech” feel and instead looks tacky. But what you’ve done with a high quality frame keeps the mirror crisp and communicates that it’s not some poorly thrown together novelty/oddity. I think it’s similar to when you see what was once a very nice car that’s been beaten up and not lookin’ good.

      I’m probably not going to try to go bezel free for my first build, but as it happens my next door neighbor is a big wood working guy. I’m gonna ask for his help with that part of this. I just gotta think of some kind of gift I can give him in return…

      Mykle1M 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • Mykle1M Offline
        Mykle1 Project Sponsor Module Developer @3DPrintedWaffles
        last edited by

        @3DPrintedWaffles

        Thanks for your kind words. Really, I made that frame from a $12 piece of molding from the local Home Depot. Hell, you could buy a $6 miter box and do the same thing yourself.

        You can see the whole build here
        https://forum.magicmirror.builders/topic/1678/1-old-noob-1-rpi-i-can-t-believe-i-did-it-revisited

        And you can see my use of a cheap miter box here.
        https://forum.magicmirror.builders/topic/4930/vanity-mirror-thy-name-is-woman-using-laptop

        Create a working config
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        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • Mykle1M Offline
          Mykle1 Project Sponsor Module Developer @3DPrintedWaffles
          last edited by

          @3DPrintedWaffles said in Prepping my first build. Care to check my work?:

          but as it happens my next door neighbor is a big wood working guy. I’m gonna ask for his help with that part of this. I just gotta think of some kind of gift I can give him in return…

          Get him a six-pack of beer. It will take him less than five minutes to miter a frame. Or. get yourself the beer and make the frame yourself. Then you get all the glory. :-)

          Create a working config
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          3 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • 3 Offline
            3DPrintedWaffles @Mykle1
            last edited by

            @Mykle1
            Also you may have mentioned this earlier and I’ve forgotten, but what size is your monitor? I’m considering upping my size… =-/

            Mykle1M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • 3 Offline
              3DPrintedWaffles @Mykle1
              last edited by

              @Mykle1 Heh I might do the woodwork on my next one. I plan to make at least a few of these.

              He’s a very talented woodworker, he could make it look better than I ever could. Worth a few beers at the very least. I need both the rear frame and bezel cut, so maybe a 24 pack is in order :-)

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • Mykle1M Offline
                Mykle1 Project Sponsor Module Developer @3DPrintedWaffles
                last edited by

                @3DPrintedWaffles

                That particular monitor is 22" diagonal. Sure, get him a case. Just don’t let him drink it until he is finished with your frame. ;-)

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                • 3 Offline
                  3DPrintedWaffles @Mykle1
                  last edited by

                  @Mykle1

                  The Jimmy arrives today and unless I can come up with a better idea I’ll just be trying to crack this thing open like a monkey with a rock.

                  I got it for just $25 and could probably find another use for it, so I’m half tempted to look for another cheapo that may be easier to open. I dunno man. I dunno.

                  Mykle1M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • Mykle1M Offline
                    Mykle1 Project Sponsor Module Developer @3DPrintedWaffles
                    last edited by

                    @3DPrintedWaffles

                    Heh! Go easy broze, go easy! :-)

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                    3 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • 3 Offline
                      3DPrintedWaffles @Mykle1
                      last edited by

                      @Mykle1 Is there a reason people seem to favor computer monitors for this project than TVs? There are some cheap flatscreens in my area for pretty cheap.

                      Mykle1M yawnsY 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • Mykle1M Offline
                        Mykle1 Project Sponsor Module Developer @3DPrintedWaffles
                        last edited by

                        @3DPrintedWaffles

                        I’m sure there are reasons but I don’t know what they are. Perhaps someone else will chime in here, or, you can search the forum. I think I remember some chatter about using TV displays.

                        Create a working config
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                        • yawnsY Offline
                          yawns Moderator @3DPrintedWaffles
                          last edited by

                          @3DPrintedWaffles

                          1. Most tv’s show stuff like “signal lost” on screen when you disable hdmi in raspberry to hide the screen, and in some tv’s you cannot disable that
                          2. Cheap tv’s have a poor resolution. The 32" I bought for some bucks only runs 1366x768 and text on your mirror (calendar for example) looks blurry.

                          But you can still live with it. I will use mine to see if we actually use the magic mirror at all. Then I can still invest money in a better display add replace it

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                          • 3 Offline
                            3DPrintedWaffles
                            last edited by

                            Think this is too old/bad to be a good fit for such a project?

                            https://bellingham.craigslist.org/sys/d/excellent-condition-samsung/6476424727.html

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                            • 3 Offline
                              3DPrintedWaffles @Mykle1
                              last edited by

                              @mykle1 @yawns @bhepler @ninjabreadman @cruunnerr

                              After a bit of a hiatus due to other projects, I’m back at it. Think I should open a new post as the site suggested?

                              I got two cheap ~20" monitors and cut two panes of glass to size. I figure the first one I do will be kinda an MVP (minimum viable product) approach, and with the second I’ll customize it more to my preferences.

                              My main question is how to securely attach the wood rear frame to the monitor. This isn’t a glue situation is it? I’ve got few heavy duty glues but that still doesn’t “feel” secure.

                              The guides I’ve seen seem to gloss over like it’s obvious. To me at least, it’s not.

                              Remaining little questions:
                              How thick should/must the wood for the frame be? How much heft does it need to properly support the monitor/mirror? How much space can I safely save by cutting it down to get it closer to flush with the wall?

                              At least in my mind, the back frame shouldn’t encompass the entire perimeter but be strategically located on the back of the monitor. But maybe I’m wrong here, as I suppose it serves the purpose of blocking the view of the inner workings.

                              Thanks for all your help along the way. I’m looking forward to sharing pics of the completed beta build as soon as I can!

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0

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