Nike+iPod Sport Kit pocket made from rubber bands and duct tape

Last week I ran down the list of various iPod+Nike Sport Kit hacks or mods that’ll put your transmitter pod onto your shoe. As I said in that post, I don’t care to carve up my shoes, so I decided a pocket was the only “safe” choice. The interpretation couldn’t be simpler.

What you’ll need:

  • Roll of duct tape (the shiny vinyl stuff)
  • Rubber bands (I get the variety pack at office stores)
  • A little patch of Velco hook/loop tape (used to shut the flap)
  • Some sort of pocket (I used a disposable foil pocket from a lens cleaner)

You can craft a pocket from plastic, paper or whatever, but I find the little foil packs used to contain wet wipes or lens cleaners work fairly well– whether they hold the Nike doohickey well adequate. You take the packet and cut it cleanly across the top, leaving adequate room in that “pocket” to hold the transmitter.

Next, use a little tape to “coat” the pocket. I made one distant strip go from front, back, up and by itself just adequate to compose a flap that closes the pocket. But don’t put the Velcro on yet! Now you have to take two more strips of tape to manufacture the lower loop, which is critical for keeping the thing on your foot.

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To compose that lower

loop, assemble one strip of tape longer than the other, next stick that onto the bottom of the pocket. Be certain to put a rubber band or two into that loop, securely fastening it to the bottom of that pocket– these bands will go into a groove on your shoe shut to the toe.

The upper band goes up on the flap end, and is secured by putting the Velcro on the flap so it will stay closed as your foot flails about. I used 1/2-inch tape cut to about a quarter inch, and so far it works fine.

Be certain to put the rubber bands into deep grooves. Since I run on a treadmill, I’m not particularly worried about them getting cut, but you don’t want to hurt your feet. On road conditions, and depending on the grooves of your shoes, you may have to experiment. I put the unit facing up, just like it would be in a Nike shoe, although some folks swear it works better flat-side down.

Still, it fixed my problem of a regular, non-destructive connection for my transmitter. I haven’t noticed huge accuracy issues, but I haven’t been using it too distant (about a month).

Original post by Victor Agreda, Jr.

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