Are you annoyed by the wandering USB hub on your desk that easily moves? Would you like some extra space to store your videos, pictures and documents but don't like the look of those external hard drives?
You can create your own, one of a kind, fancy looking external hard drive with USB hub.
The USB hub has its own power supply so you can keep charging your USB devices when the computer is turned off.
You can create your own, one of a kind, fancy looking external hard drive with USB hub.
The USB hub has its own power supply so you can keep charging your USB devices when the computer is turned off.
This project even holds a little extra: a secret storage space activated by a hidden magnet.
The cost was around 5 dollar because I only had to buy a few small components (resistors, LED's, switch and felt pads).
Step 1Materials and tools
Materials:
- Internal hard drive (old or new, I salvaged mine from an old computer)
- USB hub with own adapter (adapter is not essential)
- USB flash drive
- 3 USB cables
- Serial ata to USB converter with own power supply
- An old ore broken adapter
- Two LED's any color you want I used a blue and a white one
- Resistors 2x 75 ohm
- Switch
- Reed switch
- Magnet
- Wooden board (I used oak)
- Felt pads
- Power jack
Tools:
- Jig saw
- Drill
- Drill bit 6, 7, 8, 20 and 30 mm
- Solder
- Solder iron
- Shrink wire
- Electrical tape
- Wood wax
- Wood glue
- Super glue
Step 2Jigsaw
The dimensions of the box are: height 9 cm, length 19 cm, width 12,5 cm.
I made a lay-out of every side of the box in sketch-up which you can download below.
Or you can create your own lay-out.
Glue the lay-outs on the wooden board and jigsaw them out.
Drill holes on the inner marks with the corresponding drill bit (for example if a mark is 6 mm, you drill a hole using a 6 mm drill bit). On the wooden board which will become the back of the box hollow the hole of 8 mm using a 20 mm drill bit. The hollowed out hole has to be 6 mm deep.
Sand the all the pieces and make sure you leave no paper or glue residue.
Step 3Glue the pieces
Glue the front, the back, the sides and the bottom together. The top will be glued on in step 8.
Step 4Main power and switch
Solder a 19 cm cable to the positive side of the power jack and solder the other end to the switch.
On the other end of the switch solder another 19 cm cable.
Cut the top of the Serial ata to USB power adapter off (leave a 10 cm piece of cable on it), strip the cable: the outer wire is the negative, the inner wire the positive.
Solder the negative cable to the negative side of the power jack.
Solder the positive cable to the cable leaving the switch.
Use shrink wire to insulate the connections.
Step 5Signal light and power distribution
Cut the red cable and one black cable of the Serial ata power connector and strip them. The yellow cable is +12 volt, the red one is + 5 volt, the black cables are the ground (use a multimeter to be sure).
Cut the top of the USB hub adapter and solder its positive side to the red +5 volts cable. Solder the negative side to the black ground cable. Considering the adapter of the Serial ata to USB adapter is rated 2 amp and the hard drive uses only about 0.6 amp, there is enough amp left to give the USB hub some extra power.
If you don't want to mess up another adapter, you can solder two cables to the Serial ata power connector (one to the positive end and one to the negative end) which you can solder directly the USB hub.
Solder a 75 ohm resistor to the positive side of the blue LED.
Solder a cable to the other end of the resistor and solder a cable to the negative side of the blue LED.
Solder the positive cable coming from the LED to the positive + 5 volt cable of the Serial ata power connector and the negative cable to the black ground.
Use shrink wire to insulate the connections.
Step 6Secret switch
Shorten a USB cable. Use a multimeter to decide which cable is which.
Reconnect the two data cables.
Solder a cable on each side of the positives, solder a reed switch in between these cables.
Solder a 75 ohm resistor next to the reed switch, make sure its on the female side. Solder a cable to the other end of the resistor, this cable leads to the positive side of the white LED.
Solder a cable to the negative side of the white LED and connect it to the negative ends of the USB cable.
The female side is that side of the USB cable were you can plug-in and the male side of the USB cable is that side that you plug-in.
Use shrink wire to insulate the connections.
Step 7Shorten the USB cables
Shorten two USB cables: cut the middle part out and reconnect them.
Use shrink wire to insulate the connections.
Step 8Magnetic marker
A small magnet is needed to activate the reed switch. I used a little piece of a hard drive magnet (any small magnet will do).
Remove the bottom from a marker, place the small magnet in the bottom and put the marker back together.
Test if the switch works.
The magnet will not interfere with critical components because of the small size of the magnet and the distance between the magnet and the hard drive.
Step 9Putting it all together
Glue the white LED in the bottom of the box and cover it with electrical tape.
Attach felt pads on the bottom and place the hard drive on top of them.
Connect the hard drive to the Serial ata to USB adapter. Cover the bottom of the USB hub with electrical tape and glue it into place to the side of the box.
Glue the blue LED in the front of the box.
Glue the female sides of the two USB cables in the front of the box and connect them to the USB hub.
Glue the switch and the power jack in to place.
Connect one side of the USB cable with the reed switch to the USB hub and connect the other side to the flash drive. Glue the flash drive to the side of the box.
Glue the reed switch in the top cover of the box. Glue the top to the box.
Attach felt pads to the bottom.
Wax the box with wood wax.
Step 10Enjoy
This project is now finished. Enjoy this nice extension to your computer while working on your desk.
Feel free to modify this project. You could install a card reader, a LED desk light, … The possibilities are endless.
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