The Lights.
Just as racing stripes are known to increase the horsepower of a car, so do multicolored blinking lights drastically improve the taste of beer dispensed from a kegerator. So I had to include waterproof LED lights and an eBay LED light controller with remote. The controller is small and easily fit inside the project box. I drilled a small hole in the side of the project box for the IR remote sensor. I used the router to cut a groove in the facia boards to light up the front and two sides of the keezer. I covered the top of the collar, the insides of the facia boards, and the gas struts with shiny aluminum tape to help the photons escape and hopefully reach the main panels of the keezer.
View attachment ImageUploadedByHome Brew1481999815.387014.jpg
Lesson learned here. The stickyback of the 3M LED strand will not strick to silicone caulk at all and doesn't hold well to polyurethane. That meant I had to smear silicone caulk on top of the strands to hold them in their grooves.
The leads for the facia lights come out of the project box, through the collar, up into the main lid, out to the perimeter, then out of the lid to the lights.
View attachment ImageUploadedByHome Brew1482000788.273151.jpg
Of course I had to light the backsplash. Because the lights won't stick to the silicone covered plywood that is above the backsplash, I found some clips online that are designed especially to hold this style of LED lighting in place.
View attachment ImageUploadedByHome Brew1482000572.961795.jpg
Just as racing stripes are known to increase the horsepower of a car, so do multicolored blinking lights drastically improve the taste of beer dispensed from a kegerator. So I had to include waterproof LED lights and an eBay LED light controller with remote. The controller is small and easily fit inside the project box. I drilled a small hole in the side of the project box for the IR remote sensor. I used the router to cut a groove in the facia boards to light up the front and two sides of the keezer. I covered the top of the collar, the insides of the facia boards, and the gas struts with shiny aluminum tape to help the photons escape and hopefully reach the main panels of the keezer.
View attachment ImageUploadedByHome Brew1481999815.387014.jpg
Lesson learned here. The stickyback of the 3M LED strand will not strick to silicone caulk at all and doesn't hold well to polyurethane. That meant I had to smear silicone caulk on top of the strands to hold them in their grooves.
The leads for the facia lights come out of the project box, through the collar, up into the main lid, out to the perimeter, then out of the lid to the lights.
View attachment ImageUploadedByHome Brew1482000788.273151.jpg
Of course I had to light the backsplash. Because the lights won't stick to the silicone covered plywood that is above the backsplash, I found some clips online that are designed especially to hold this style of LED lighting in place.
View attachment ImageUploadedByHome Brew1482000572.961795.jpg