The speaker system is powered by the minty boost USB charger. Plug in your ipod and listen to some sweet tunes.
There are four legs that retract from the suitcase so you can prop the suitcase up and use the surface as a table.
I've recently gotten into re-purposing suitcases. I've found lots of great inspiration online for fun projects. This project was more of a hybrid of things I've seen plus a few new ideas of my own.
Step 1: Materials
1. Suitcase - find a suitcase hard shell. I love this old vintage Samsonite suitcase! However, the edges of the suitcase are curved and this cause a few problems in mounting the legs and hardware. I would suggest finding a suitcase or briefcase that has 90 degree edges (box).
2. 4 Leg Braces - I bought these locking leg braces from McMaster Carr (#2). Let me tell you, I spent a good amount of time figuring out the best way to mount the legs and this was definitely the best option. I'd love to hear other ideas on what could work. I liked these also because the legs sit nicely inside the suitcase and are easy to prop up and lock.
3. 4 Legs - I cut 4 pieces of 1" x 1" wood at length 12"
4. Speakers - I know a little bit about electronics but not too much. Instead of creating a speaker system from scratch I just bought an inexpensive USB powered computer speaker system. It came with all the parts I needed, all I had to do was take it out of its case. Heres a link to the speakers I used.
5. Minty Boost - powers your speakers and is simple to put together. You can buy this here.
Step 2: Attaching Legs
- Wooden Legs
- Hinges
- Power Drill
- 12 small screws - to mount the hinge to the suitcase. Be careful with the size screw you choose. The head of the screw needs to be larger than the holes in the hinge (so everything is secured properly) but short enough so they don't go all the way through the suitcase
- 8 small screws - to mount the hinge to the leg. These still need to have a large head but they should be longer then the other screws, I'd say at least a 1/2 inch
- Spray Paint
STEPS
Prepare Legs
- If you haven't already done so, cut 4 12" legs out of the 1" x 1" wood
- Paint the legs with the spray paint (see spray paint instructions)
-
Line up a hinge against the suitcase edge and mark with chalk where the hinge will be screwed to the case (you will see three holes in the hinge which is where you will mark). Do this at all for corners for each leg.
- Make sure you leave enough space between where the hinge will mount to the suitcase and the edge of the suitcase. When the leg is un-hinged the hinge lock will pop out, you need enough space to allow for the locking mechanism to pop out. See Diagram.
- Line up the leg against the hinge where you want them to be attached. Use a pencil to mark the wood where the legs will be screwed into the hinge.
- Use the drill to make pilot holes where you marked in the previous step
- Attach hinge to legs with longer screws
- Use the drill to make pilot holes where you marked in the first step with chalk. Make sure you don't go all the way through the frame.
- Attach hinge to suitcase with shorter screws.
Step 3: Remove Hardware from Speakers
BE CAREFUL. You don't want to compromise any of the electronics, so just be patient during this step and chip away little by little.
Step 4: Prepare Suitcase for Speakers
- Speaker hardware
- Dremel - w/ grinder attachment
- Hand drill
- Set of drill bits
I knew I wanted to mount the speakers on the side of the suitcase because I wanted them to be visible, but I didn't want to put them on the top surface because people would be eating off of it. I love how the speakers and knobs/switches for the speakers look on the outside!
STEPS
- Decide what you want the layout of speakers and knobs to look like on the outside of the suitcase.
- Use a marker to mark where each element will go.
- Mark on the outside of the suitcase where you want the knobs to go. I had three elements I needed to worry about: volume knob, on/off switch, and LED indicator.
- Drill a hole where the knobs will go. Make sure you use the correct size drill bit -- you want the knob to fit snugly in the hole. Its ok if the outside of the suitcase looks ugly or torn up because the hole will be covered up by the plastic knob attachments.
- Mark on the outside of the suitcase where you want the speakers to go.
- Use a hand drill and drill a small pilot hole in the center of the suitcase. Move up in drill bit sizes until you have drilled the biggest hole possible.
- With the dremel grinder attachment cut out the hole for the speaker. The speaker should sit right in the hole.
Step 5: Put Speakers in Suitcase
I epoxied all of the parts in the suitcase. This is all pretty intuitive assuming you cut out everything properly.
ADDING OUTSIDE DETAILS
I liked how it looked having the speakers exposed but I wanted to cover up where I cut. So I took the speaker cover and removed the fabric. The black ring fits perfectly over the speaker and covers up the hole. I attached it to the outside of the suitcase with epoxy.
To cover up the on/off switch and volume switch attach potentiometer knobs on the outside. We had some extra lying around the office, and I sourced some from the original speaker system.
On the inside I covered the hardware with some plastic boxes.
Step 6: Inside Storage
Food Storage Containers - use ribbons and snaps. Use a staple gun to staple ribbon to the inside of the suitcase. I used hammer in snaps instead of sew in snaps -- they look more sleek!
Vase - elastic. Stapled elastic to inside of case.
Wine Bottle - stapled two pieces of ribbon to the bottom of the suitcase. The ribbons tie together to strap the bottle down.
Plates - criss-crossing elastic bands stapled to the bottom of the case.
Wine Glasses - the stems are strapped down with ribbon. One side of the ribbon is stapled to the case the other side is velcroed down. The cup part is strapped down with elastic which is stapled to the case.
Forks/Knives/Spoons - ribbon is glued down to the bottom of the case. A small gap is left unglued to allow for the silverware.
** I also have a wine bottle opener and small place mat used as a table cloth that are not pictured.



















































Visit Our Store »
Go Pro Today »




I'm wondering about the leg length - I wonder if it would be possible to cut the depth of the legs in half and attach the "second half" of the leg to the bottom part of the first piece with a small locking hinge so that the table could potentially be twice as tall yet the legs could still fold and sit nicely on top of each other inside the suitcase. This would make sitting on lawn chairs a lot more doable.
Great tutorial and I can't wait to try it out myself
I do love this idea. Frequently I see old suitcases and wonder what to do with them so I don't bring them home. A cube like one would be great too- make the (presumably short) lid the table and have access to the food, etc. left inside the (presumably larger) bottom part.
Thanks,
D2
Great job! Thank you for the inspiration :)
Cheers,
Jason
In any regards, this is so cool.
Tunes and a glass of wine at the park, who can ask for more?
I have 5 -6 suitcases like this...everyone thought I was daft for hanging on to them...but I see I shall have the last laugh now !! especially when I show up with one and they want it!!
TOTALLY AWESOME project, thank you for sharing your brilliance !!
5 Stars and one of my votes... excellent instructable!!!
Add a small portable solar panel to run the iPod as opposed to the Minty boost and it's a 100% mean green pic-nic table iPod machine. ;0)
thanx for sharing,
- chase -