Health & Fitness
Use Rubber Bands for Simple Household Repairs
Free your discarded rubber bands from the junk drawer—they're needed elsewhere.

Mostly we see rubber bands on our newspapers, holding our hair back, binding our produce, or else piled in a drawer somewhere, forgotten. But a lesson from MacGyver tells us a rubber band can be surprisingly helpful in a pinch. We’ve collected some MacGyver-inspired ideas from the Internet.
What MacGyver did:
Made a makeshift motor out of a battery pack, some rubber bands, and an electric whisk. Attached the “motor” to a food trolley (making it move on its own) to confuse a motion sensor.
What you can do:
Find out what's happening in Waukeefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
• Remove a stripped screw. Lay a flat rubber band over the head of the screw, which will give the screwdriver a tighter fit.
• Pry open a stuck jar lid. Wrap a thick rubber band around the lid and twist it off.
• Secure wooden slats on a bed. Wrap a rubber band around each end to keep them from coming loose.
• Wipe excess paint off your paintbrush. Wrap rubber bands around a paint can across the opening. Wipe your brush against the rubber bands instead of the side of the can. Paint falls back inside, leaving the grooves around the can clean, saving you paint and the hassle of a stuck lid.
• Get more use out of an old broom. Tie rubber bands around the bristles to tighten them.
Read more: http://www.houselogic.com/home-advice/repair-tips/what-would-macgyver-do...
Find out what's happening in Waukeefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Cy Phillips
CDPE, GRI, CRS, ABR, e-Pro, SRES, CHMS, CREN, REALTOR
Cell: 515-422-4731
Fax: 515-864-0151
Email: cyphillips@remax.net
Website: www.CentralIowaHomes.com Remax InnovationsCurrent Listings
Licensed to sell real estate in the state of Iowa