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Juicebox cover
Juicebox cover




juicebox cover
  1. JUICEBOX COVER FULL
  2. JUICEBOX COVER PORTABLE
  3. JUICEBOX COVER PRO
  4. JUICEBOX COVER FREE

I hope you have fun with these and can’t wait to see pics of your Halloween parties! I added a joke on each of the covers as well to keep the kids smiling! I even left a little box to add a child’s name to. I made 4 different ones for you including Frankenstein, a black cat, a ghost and a pumpkin.

JUICEBOX COVER FULL

Fall is in full swing and now and now we look forward to Halloween! At our school, we have to bring store bought items to the school party and I always like to make it a little fun, so thought it would be fun to put together a fun printable to share with you.Īren’t those so fun?! I love that I can send a non-candy snack to school and keep it Halloweeny!

juicebox cover

JUICEBOX COVER FREE

You will need to carefully cut the backs off the hatches as the flanges are two small and firm to allow the entire EVSE charge handle to pass through.Hi everyone! It’s Kiki from Kiki and Company and I am excited to be here to share a free printable.

  • Stud finder (if finished garage) to ensure you don’t drill into/through a stud.
  • X-acto knife or utility knife to remove the flanges from the back of the hatch cover(s).
  • Power drill for the drill bit and hole saw.
  • The more expensive hatch cover came with screws, but they weren’t long enough for this application through the vinyl mount, siding, etc. I used prime guard deck screws that I had on hand.
  • 2″ weather-proof screws (3 per hatch/cover).
  • I used 2 packages of these per pair of hatch covers.
  • Steel wool to “insulate” around the cord inside the hatch.
  • I used two of these on the outside of my house and two of the less expensive on the inside, only because I had already ordered and installed one of the more expensive ones and wanted them to match. This one is twice as expensive and I don’t think is really much better than the less expensive one. Here’s an alternative, which was the one I saw posted from someone else. If you have a finished garage, get two of these, one for the outside of the house, one for the inside. Here’s an example, you can probably find a less expensive one. 12-18″ is probably sufficient, maybe 1/4″ diameter or so.
  • Long drill bit (if you have a finished garage and need to drill though both sides of the wall.
  • This one is the correct style but wrong color). #021 Sandstone Beige Dutch Lap Surface Universal Mounting Block $13.16 each (technically this isn’t for the siding I have, but I trimmed the edges to match an existing one that was discontinued at Lowes.
  • Vinyl siding mounting block: 6.625 in.
  • The one on the left was the more expensive of the two listed below. Follow this guide at your own risk! Parts and tools list: (left to right) Steel wool pads, 18″ drill bit, Vinyl siding mounting block, 3.5″ hole saw. You could cause damage to your house by following this guide, or risk injury if you hit live wires in the wall of your garage when cutting holes. If you’re sold on the idea, here is a guide to help you replicate the above results.ĭISCLAIMER: I provide no guarantees implied or otherwise that the procedure below is safe or will comply with your local building code. And this is the end result for the larger diameter JuiceBox charge cord.

    JUICEBOX COVER PORTABLE

    Here are my two examples for the two different chargers I currently use… This is the end result for the portable charger that came with my Chevy Volt. I recently saw a post in one of the EV FaceBook groups for which I’m a member showing how someone used a plastic cord hatch, originally intended for an RV or camper power cord, to pass their charge cord through the wall of their garage. The diameter of my JuiceBox is about 3x this due to being 40A instead of 12A. It works pretty well for the relatively small diameter cord that comes with the portable EVSE included with most GM vehicles. I got fancier with routing the wires from the EVSEs to minimize the cord getting squeezed under the garage door when closed.

    juicebox cover

    After a lot of trouble-shooting, I discovered one of the pilot wires had broken from being crimped in the garage door.

    JUICEBOX COVER PRO

    That seemed to be fine for the first 2 years, but I found that my high amperage EVSE, a JuiceBox Pro 40, was no longer working. For the past few years we’ve been running the cords from the EVSE (What most people call the charger, although technically that’s located in the car itself) out the corners of our garage door. I have two plug-in electric cars, with a third one expected next week.






    Juicebox cover