Los
New member
Sure. I went to Radio Shack and bought a project box, 3 switches of at least 6 amps each, and a couple bags of the connectors that were sized right to attach to the back of the switches. Those connector pieces are important, because it would be very difficult to attach the wires to the switches using a soldering iron without any of the wires touching. With the connectors, it's a piece of cake. Rather than splice into the heaters and pumps, I grabbed a few short extension cords and spliced into them instead. I then plugged one end into a power strip and the other end into the pump or heater. The biggest challenge was drilling into the plastic project box. For that, I used these flat type bits that have three points. I'm sure there's a name for those, but I'm not mechanically inclined enough to know it.
I'm not an electrician and I recommend contacting someone who knows what they are doing. That said, I took the extension cord and in the middle of it separated the two wires. I then cut one of them, stripped back the wire a bit, and crimped on a wire connectors onto each stripped wire. I then plugged the connectors into the switch and tested them out. They worked fine. One of the switches had a ground spot too. I'm not sure I did this part right, but I split the ground wire (the middle wire in the three wire extension cord) and attached both of them to the connector that plugged into the ground slot. If you don't know what you're doing, please get some help. I don't want to be responsible for someone burning their house down or worse. Electricity can be dangerous stuff!
BTW, the switch box really isn't necessary. The easiest solution is to have a power strip nearby and to just plug or unplug the outlets as needed. Another option which I used to use are these handy power strips you can get at Wal-Mart that have a 2" or so circular switch half way down the cable that you step on to turn the device on and off. I'm guessing it's used for lamps. You could simply velcro a couple of those to the wall and plug your heaters and pumps into that. It doesn't get simpler than that.
Hope that helps.
I'm not an electrician and I recommend contacting someone who knows what they are doing. That said, I took the extension cord and in the middle of it separated the two wires. I then cut one of them, stripped back the wire a bit, and crimped on a wire connectors onto each stripped wire. I then plugged the connectors into the switch and tested them out. They worked fine. One of the switches had a ground spot too. I'm not sure I did this part right, but I split the ground wire (the middle wire in the three wire extension cord) and attached both of them to the connector that plugged into the ground slot. If you don't know what you're doing, please get some help. I don't want to be responsible for someone burning their house down or worse. Electricity can be dangerous stuff!
BTW, the switch box really isn't necessary. The easiest solution is to have a power strip nearby and to just plug or unplug the outlets as needed. Another option which I used to use are these handy power strips you can get at Wal-Mart that have a 2" or so circular switch half way down the cable that you step on to turn the device on and off. I'm guessing it's used for lamps. You could simply velcro a couple of those to the wall and plug your heaters and pumps into that. It doesn't get simpler than that.
Hope that helps.