Many years ago (when our family had baby food jars) there was a company
that advertised in the back or magazines like Popular Mechanics and Wood
Working that sold plastic tops for baby food jars that fit on peg board.
They were really nice. Check and see if they are still available.
-----Original Message-----
From: shop-talk-owner@autox.team.net
[mailto:shop-talk-owner@autox.team.net] On Behalf Of Mike Sloane
Sent: Monday, August 19, 2002 5:36 PM
To: shop-talk@autox.team.net
Subject: Re: Baby food jars
Brian Borgstede wrote:
> I have a six-month-old boy at home and a HUGE pile
> of empty baby food jars aching to do something creative. Okay, I know
> the old stuff about keeping small parts. You attach the lid to
> something and put little parts in the jars and hang the jars off the
> lids.
There are two ways to utilize baby food jars for small parts.
1. screw the lids to the underside of shelves above the work bench or
other
similar areas, so you can have the little parts handy. Also save peanut
butter
and other similar jars for larger parts (you will have plenty of peanut
butter
jars after the baby food is no longer needed).
2. This is a little more difficult to explain but easy to do. Find a
piece of
wood about a foot long or longer and about 2" square or more. Screw the
lids to
the long sides of the wood all around. Then you find either an old paper
towel
holder or make some metal "L" shaped brackets and put them under the
same shelf
as 1. above and loosely mount the wood between them with lag screws so
that the
whole affair can spin. Note: only remove jars from this device when the
jars are
at the bottom position. The trick is to try to load up the jars so that
they are
more or less balanced, making the whole thing easier to spin around.
This whole
thing is easier to make than to describe. I suppose you could make it
out of
plastic pipe somehow, but that is not the tradtional way to do it - I
saved one
from my parents' house that has to be from when I was a baby, 60 years
ago.
Mike
>
> I NEED SOMETHING NEW! SOMETHING COOL!
>
> Please send me your ideas (even if it involves
> keeping microscopic bits of trimmer string away
> from critters).
>
>
>
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> Brian Borgstede !
> Distance Learning Engineer !
> University of Missouri - St. Louis ! '68 Triumph TR-250
> Phone: (314)516-6433 ! (or two or more)
> Fax: (314)516-6019 !
> Email: borgstede@umsl.edu !
--
________________________________________________________________
Mike Sloane
Allamuchy NJ
Email:(msloane@att.net)
Website: <http://www.geocities.com/mikesloane>
Tractor images: <www.fotki.com/mikesloane>
"There are two different kinds of people in this world:
those who finish what they start..." --Brad Ramsey
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