Wednesday, October 28, 2015

DIY Hogwarts House Points Counter

Hogwarts House Points Counter


When “Spiderman Jr.” picked Harry Potter as one of his themes for a home school unit our other children got really excited.  They have enjoyed some of the left-over’s or side effects of other themes he has picked, for example, the super hero unit.  However, this unit has had all four children anticipating its arrival for a couple of months. 

When my kids found out that Harry Potter was the next unit “Spiderman Jr.” was going to do “Soccerboy” asked if he could participate in the activities I did with his brother. I was shocked, although I probably shouldn’t have been considering his feelings on this book series.  

It wasn’t much later that same day when our girls made the same request.  I agreed to let them participate if all of their public school work was done first.
I then started thinking about how much fun it would be for our youngest to have his sibling do activities with him.  He usually has a good time with them.

Eventually my thoughts went to the House Cup and earning house points.  I thought of putting the different kids in different houses and being able to award points for the good things they do.  I started looking around at some of the DIY house points counters and there was not a lot out there.  Some looked really pretty but didn’t function.  Some would be easy to put points in and take out but didn’t look a lot like the house points counters. If it did not look like the one in the book is described it would drive them crazy, they would not be able to let it go. I could imagine them mentioning it every day and if our youngest heard this comparison then he would get fixated on it and would not be able to let it go. 

So I had to decide if it would be possible to make a house point counter and would it be worth it to make it or would I have to let the idea go?  I decided that it would be worth the work if it would increase the amount of fun our youngest would have because more fun means more learning.

I then looked at the images of the house point counter from the movie and realized that there is no slot for the points to slide through.  Why would there need to be really, it’s a world of magic.  So I knew I would have to hide any functional mechanisms I added as much as possible.  I looked through designs for machines like gum balls, coin turner etc.  I had more than one attempt before I was able to make a working model and in the end there were some appearance ideas I had to skip(like painting the frame) because I was out of time for adding them.  I hope these ideas will help you make an even better model.

Materials you will need:

12 clear soda bottles
4 large pieces of flat plastic
1 exacto knife
1 sharpie marker
1 hole punch
A spool of clear lanyard
Goo gone
1 ruler
4 brads
A drill and drill bit big enough to make a hole for the brad
Tape- electrical or duct tape (you need a strong tape)
Scrap wood
Screws
Drill bit that makes holes
Glass marbles in the four house colors


Step#1
 
I peeled the labels off 12 clear soda bottles.  Then used some homemade goo gone to take as much of the label glue off as I could.

Step#2


I took a yellow sharpie marker and drew a line around the bottom of the soda bottles where it changes from flat to a slightly bubbled curve on all 12 soda bottles.

Step#3
 
I took an exacto knife and cut along the line I had drawn.  Some tips about cutting: lightly cut along the line first then slowly follow this line many times. I slipped with the exacto knife a couple of times and then had a crooked line so I had to clean more bottles.

Step#4
 
I then took clear plastic from strawberry cartons and other plastic items that had been purchased and cut a rectangular shape out of them.  The rectangle was just wide enough to cover the hole that the soda would pour out of but also not so wide that it would not slide easily up and down the slope of the soda bottle on the inside. Cut four of these.

Step#5
I took the soda bottle and set the hole that the soda would pour out of and traced around the hole. I made sure that the circle was in the middle of the rectangle I had cut. Then cut out this circle from each of the four rectangles.

Step#6
I then drew with the sharpie a line to the left of the circle I had just cut. The line went from near the circle and close to the edge of the rectangle. Cutting and strength tip: leave enough room in between the circle and the end of the rectangle or the brad you will be putting in will rip through the plastic or the weight of the marbles will rip through it as you use this pulling device.  Also again cut gently the first time and slowly after or you will go crooked or cut something you don’t mean to. After you cut this line widen this cut line just big enough to have the brad slide through it back and forth. Do this to all four rectangles.

Step#7
Take the bottom end of your soda bottle and cut a slit (do not widen this) along the curve of the bottle. The cut is a little wider than your plastic rectangle piece. Do not go too low on the bottle because this mechanism does not work if you do.  You are trying to have the slit high enough that the plastic rectangles that will slide through the slit you make go down and then back up the bottle when it crosses to the other side of the bottle. (Again cut slowly and gently, you would think I would have learned the first few times)Do this to four soda bottles.

Step#8
 
Slide the rectangle through the slit. Make sure you put the side that has the hole and the slit you cut through the slit in the bottle first. Slide the rectangle far enough into your bottle so that it is touching the other side of the bottle. The two pieces of plastic should look like two pieces of sandwich bread on top of each other but vertical. There should be some of the rectangle hanging out of the opposite side of the bottle.

Step#9

Turn the bottle around to look directly at the two pieces of plastic that are touching vertically. Look at the bottom of the slit you cut in the rectangle that is inside of the bottle. This should also be the closest part of the slit to the circle you have cut.  Take your sharpie marker and put a dot on the outside of the soda bottle where the bottom of this slit is.  Now drill a hole where you have marked.

Step#10
 
Take a brad and on the inside of the soda bottle you slide it through the slit in the rectangle and then right through the hole you have drilled in the bottle. Now on the outside of the bottle open up the brad on both sides. Check to make sure that the plastic rectangle slides up and down the inside of the bottle by pulling on the end of the rectangle that is sticking out of the bottle.

Step#11
Take two soda bottles that do not have pull tabs and match up the two cut ends together. Now take a hole punch and punch holes along the edges of the two bottles. Do your best to make the holes on the two soda bottles match up.

Step#12
Now take your clear lanyard and lace the two bottles together like you would a shoe and tie a bow.  Tying hint: lace it so that the bow or knot if you choose is at the back.

Step#13
Repeat steps 11 & 12 for six other bottles. You should have four laced together tubes total when you are done.

Step#14
Now take one laced together tube and one of the soda bottles with a tab. Line up two pouring ends together. Alignment hint: make sure the pull tab is in the front and on top. Also make sure the bow or knot you tied is on the back when you are lining the two pouring ends together. Now tape the two pouring ends together thoroughly. Repeat this step with the other bottles.

Step#15
I took some scrap lumber and laid the house counters next to the scrap wood to see how long the wood would need to be.  I will give the measurements I used to create the frame work to supports the counters I made. However, if I were to do it again I would take off about 4 inches from the height of the 33” pieces.
 I cut 2 pieces 33” long.
 I cut 5 pieces of wood at 22” long.

Step#16
I pre-drilled holes for joining two of the 22” pieces of wood so that they would look like the letter L. then screwed them together.  I then repeated these steps with two more 22” boards however they were facing the other way so they looked like _I  or an L in a mirror.

Step#17
I then laid the House point counters on top the L I had created for the bottom and traced with sharpie marker around where the soda cap lids would be.

Step#18
I then drilled holes large enough for the soda caps to go all the way through the wood also making sure there was enough room for me to be able to unscrew the lids so I could remove points if there was any rule breaking.

Step#19
 

I then took one of the 33” long pieces of wood and laid it on top of the L piece of wood I had just drilled holes in. I pre-drilled holes for the screws.  Then drilled the screws in place.  Then repeat this step on the other end of the 33” piece of wood, one shaped like _I on the other end.

Step#20
I then flipped over the pieces I had just put together and repeated step #19 for the other side.

Step#21

I then laid the house points counters in their holes.  I then slide the last 22” piece of wood under the counters where the bottles were taped together. Then removed the counters leaving the wood in place. This was done so I could get this board in the right place.  Marbles or glass beads are really heavy for a plastic soda bottle to hold up so I wanted to add this extra wood piece here to have an anchor for the counters to be tied to.  I then pre-drilled the holes to join this piece of wood in between the two 33” pieces of wood then screwed it all together.

Step#22

I then placed the counters back in their holes and marked on each side of the board, I had just screwed in place, so that I knew where to drill the holes. Then I drilled the holes.

Step#23

(I forgot to take a picture of this while I was making it)
I laid all the house point counters in place and threaded the holes I had drilled with weed whacker line.  As it happened I had left over line in three of the four house colors from weed whackers I had accidentally caused to melt from catching on fire. I had thrown the weed whackers away but kept the line.  I used nylon twine in the missing house color on the one I didn’t have weed whacker line for anchoring.

Step#24
(I forgot to take a picture of this while I was making it)
Now that the counters were somewhat anchored. I decided that I wanted a little more support for the top of the counters. So I drilled two holes above each of the counters and threaded weed whacker line through the holes and punched two holes in the top of each counter and tied the line through the counters to support the weight of the marbles and glass beads.

Step#25
I asked my husband to hang it on the wall and try if he could to put at least one side into some studs because I knew this was going to be really really heavy when we filled it. Thankfully it was just big enough to put both sides into studs, so it was anchored in studs at four points. Yeah for cool husbands!

Step#26
We then filled each house counter with either marbles that matched the twine and glass beads to match the weed whacker line that had anchored that counter. Counter tip: we have a couple of different sizes of glass bead and one marble. Having a variety because that is how it worked out for that color with what we had. I would do it with marbles only if I could. They work the easiest. Sometimes a bead will get stuck and we have to move it around with a chop stick from the top and this never happens with the marbles.
As each kid has had triumphs or broken rules they have gotten points or lost them.  It had been really fun to see them get excited as they get points.  We have not awarded our house cup yet. We are thinking about letting this completion go beyond the unit till the end of the school year since the whole family is having so much fun with it.

Materials

12 clear soda bottles- already had                               0.00
4 large pieces of flat plastic- already had                        0.00
1 exacto knife- already had                                     0.00
1 sharpie marker- already had                                   0.00
1 hole punch- already had                                       0.00
A spool of clear lanyard- already had                             0.00
Goo gone- already had                                          0.00
1 ruler- already had                                             0.00
4 brads- already had                                            0.00
A drill and drill bit big enough to make a hole for the brad-         6.00
Tape- electrical or duct tape (you need a strong tape) - already had 0.00
Scrap wood- already had                                         0.00
Screws- already had                                             0.00
Drill bit that makes holes- already had                            0.00
Glass bead and marbles-                                         15.00

Total Cost


                                      21.00

1 comment:

  1. This is wonderful - and thank you for the video of it in action! I couldn't picture it from the instructions but it's so clear when I look at the video. I have been looking for a working house points counter for ages because we are planning to have games with points being awarded at our wedding.
    Not that it matters to me because we won't be taking points away, but how does losing points work? I can't make it out.

    ReplyDelete