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Push-Button Switches for Exposed EMT

High Desert

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Joined
Sep 17, 2012
Messages
43
Location
Rio Rancho, NM
During the planning stages of building my workshop, I got ahead of myself and purchased some old-style push-button switches from classic accents. They don't sell mounting plates for this application though. I thought I could just purchase a blank switch plate and modify for the switches. It wasn't until a few months after the shop was completed that I went to change out the standard switches installed by the electrician with the push-button switches that I realized nobody makes the "blank" plate.

The only way to make it look correct was to weld fillers into the rectangle openings in the existing plates, then grind and drill to accept the push-buttons.

I finished the plate up with some hammered gray paint.

Although everyone loves the block construction of the shop, I get more comments on the old-school switches than you would believe.

This just shows the double-box. I also did a single for the back door.
 

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pentavolvo

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Sep 6, 2010
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584
Location
Indiana
Mom and dad still have a pair of push button switches on the staircase, I need to take them haha. Looks awesome
 

LS6 Tommy

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Dec 27, 2013
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26,162
Location
Northern NJ
There are loads of antique & vintage design companies that sell cover plates for push button switches...

Tommy
 

n8n

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Mar 11, 2014
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3,607
Location
Curtis Bay, MD
yeah, but probably not for a 1900 box.

You can still find vintage brass switchplates for single and double gang boxes on the 'bay for these switches as well, usually less expensively than buying new repros.
 

C96

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Joined
Nov 30, 2013
Messages
1,251
Nice job on the industrial switch cover conversion, very cool. :beer:

My Grandmother had those type switches throughout her entire house along with glass doorknobs on all the doors. The electric panel had the glass plug fuses that screwed-in just like a light bulb. Yea, the kind you could stick a penny behind in an emergency….:shocking:
 
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jeff000

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May 6, 2012
Messages
437
That turned out super slick looking.

I did some demo work last summer and tossed out hundreds of those switches, although I am not sure if the cover plates were for a 4x4 for not.
 
OP
H

High Desert

Active member
Joined
Sep 17, 2012
Messages
43
Location
Rio Rancho, NM

Thanks! I probably should have asked what is available here first before welding and grinding everything.
My grandpa's garage/shop (and entire house) had these types of switches, and I just loved them as a kid. He always had something cool he was working on whenever we went to visit.
 

sands35

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May 29, 2012
Messages
936
Location
St. Joseph, MI
Thanks! I probably should have asked what is available here first before welding and grinding everything.
My grandpa's garage/shop (and entire house) had these types of switches, and I just loved them as a kid. He always had something cool he was working on whenever we went to visit.
Yeah - but personally, I look for excuses to weld stuff. :)
 

Stuart in MN

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Joined
Sep 8, 2005
Messages
23,052
Location
Minneapolis
My Grandmother had those type switches throughout her entire house along with glass doorknobs on all the doors. The electric panel had the glass plug fuses that screwed-in just like a light bulb. Yea, the kind you could stick a penny behind in an emergency….

I still have one original pushbutton switch in the back stairway of my house, along with the glass doorknobs. Fortunately, the fuse box is long gone. :)
 
OP
H

High Desert

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Joined
Sep 17, 2012
Messages
43
Location
Rio Rancho, NM
hine_punk;3923531]Well done! I like a little bit of a vintage feel to things. Did you use the Oxy-Acetylene torch to weld those plugs in?

Great idea. I wish I had thought of it.

Kev

Yes, it seemed like too intricate work for the mig, and I didn't want to use any body filler. A #2 tip and patience for both sides. Smoothed it out with a cutting wheel on the dremel. It is the kind of dedication that my wife makes jokes about.
 

machine_punk

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May 14, 2011
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2,540
Location
Napa Valley, California
Cool! I would have used Oxy-Acetylene too...mainly because that is all I have.

I think you could have gotten away with soldering or brazing...but it definitely isn't going anywhere with the welding.

Kev
 
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