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Good article...
I love that first winder ... crazy looking contraption!
Those Larrivees are very nice guitars.It would be possible to describe everything scientifically, but it would make no sense; it would be without meaning, as if you described a Beethoven symphony as a variation of wave pressure. — Albert Einstein
http://coneyislandguitars.com
www.soundcloud.com/davidravenmoon
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Those Bachi/Leesona 115 winders are very cool machines. Very compact and very solid. I have a Bachi/Leesona 115 winder and it can wind extremely fast if you want it to. They started being made in 1962/1963 and over the years have been made in many variants branded to Bachi, Leesona and Essex. Certainly a machine that should be on the short list for anyone wanting a vintage coil winder.
Side note. I have a Larrivee mandolin and love it!
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Originally posted by Electricdaveyboy View PostNice,
thanks for the link.
Can anybodytell how these wisker disks work?
tx
david
Nice article. I look forward to upgrading those in the future.sigpic Dyed in the wool
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Originally posted by Electricdaveyboy View PostNice,
thanks for the link.
Can anybodytell how these wisker disks work?
tx
david
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You really don't need one of those things, put your magnet wire in a plastic bucket a little oversized than the spool, works and is alot cheaper. I set my spools in a tall plastic waste basket, it goes up through a small plastic ring next to the felt tensioner and its all good. Fralin uses coffee cans if I remember, there's a photo somewhere of him winding that way.....http://www.SDpickups.com
Stephens Design Pickups
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Whisker disks are cheap. In the videos I have seen of Seymour's Leesona 102 they have several whisker disks stacked on each wire spool. Maybe they are using them for tension? They were available in the 50's.I use one but not for tension really. It helps keep the wire manageable.
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Originally posted by Possum View PostYou really don't need one of those things, put your magnet wire in a plastic bucket a little oversized than the spool, works and is alot cheaper. I set my spools in a tall plastic waste basket, it goes up through a small plastic ring next to the felt tensioner and its all good. Fralin uses coffee cans if I remember, there's a photo somewhere of him winding that way.....
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Originally posted by JGundry View PostWhisker disks are cheap. In the videos I have seen of Seymour's Leesona 102 they have several whisker disks stacked on each wire spool. Maybe they are using them for tension? They were available in the 50's.I use one but not for tension really. It helps keep the wire manageable.
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When I sent back my Azonic tensioner because it broke the wire every time from the jerking gauge spring meter, they suggested trying one of these
Azonic Products - Acu-Flex
It didn't look like it would work with my setup so I passed on it.
At their homepage they show their tensioner and wisker disk in action:
Azonic Products - World's leading manufacturer for the coil winding industry. Wisker Disk, rack mounting systems for multiple winding operations.
Note that the coil being wound is a symetrical ROUND coil, not an asymetrical guitar pickup. Guitar pickups cause the meter spring to bounce crazily until it breaks the wire.http://www.SDpickups.com
Stephens Design Pickups
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Originally posted by belwar View PostI have two new 5" ones from the 1960's, I'll sell them to you! NOS wisker disks! It's the PAF secret everyones been missing.
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