Not hating or bashing you did a wonderful job, but no water proofing the wire connections or even moisture resistance of any sort required? being that it’s a shower and water splashes and the water supply pipes condensate, just a curious question that’s all.
😂 I’m sure the electrician is thrilled that you’re cutting into his boxes. This is something you have the electrician do. Not the tile guy.
nice - but i do see some code issues. For one - you can;t just drill a big hole into a plastic box and pass a cable - needs to have a strain relief. Also - i'm not entirely sure that it's acceptable to bury that switching transformer in the wall. of course, if it's not permitted, no big deal
Love me some lights that can’t be serviced or changed out easily. Great idea, keep it up!
Is that LED driver going to be concealed in the wall? That's a no-no, and a bad idea.
I still don't trust LEDs enough to permanently put them anywhere
I could be wrong but when you hooked up the power to your driver did you but the black wire in the neutral spot and the white wire on the line side?
😮 wires should not have been exposed on top of the transformer. 😮
And 3 months later that double sided tape on the channel and the leds fell off with the heat from the leds. Congrats!
Great job! 👍
You landed the 120VAC white wire on L and the black wire on N
Lovely job - looks awesome
Neat idea. I love how you took a 30 min video and made it into a minute. Well done
And what did you use to drill through that top plate?
I like the idea of electricity and water I’m ordering the parts right now they should be in with the increase in insurance for the Missus.
What’s the rush, why are you moving so fast? Looks good
Looks cool af. Wary of burying the power supply, have had those fail.
How easy is it to replace the LED strip when one or more diodes or the whole strip fails?
Clearly incredible work, but for part 2 I'd like a voiceover explaining the process of waterproofing it as well as how it meets electrical code. All that is NOT to say that it isn't or doesn't - but rather how I can replicate this work as a DIYer. Thanks
@alexagiyants8373