Cheapest best bet for a motor is probably a sewing machine motor. They're easy to work with and adapt to the purpose:
SEWING MACHINE MOTOR - LATHE - ROCK TUMBLER - FISHING LINE SPOOLER | eBay
They cost a bit more new, but depending on how much you wind you may never need more than one. Small (say 2 Amp) variac for speed control. No issues with speed changes under load/operation as with a dimmer. You can usually find them on eBay as well. Make sure they're 110/220VAC.
I concur with the IR optical sensor for the counter. That's what I use. You can get them from Digi-Key for a few bucks with darlington pairs to drive the output (don't recall the part number on mine, but I can dig it up). All you need is a wall wart and a resistor or two to generate a rectangular wave of whatever duty cycle you want (based on how you make/break the IR beam). Feed that to the input of a digital counter, and you're good - Veeder-Root or Durant makes digital LCD counters with 10-year batteries that are nice. I didn't check this one close to see that it functions in the manner required, but it gives you an idea of what they look like:
Durant 53300400 Digital Counter H18 (706) | eBay
In my opinion, simpler is better. Fewer moving parts means fewer thing to break and easier repairs when they do break. Good luck. Have fun.
SEWING MACHINE MOTOR - LATHE - ROCK TUMBLER - FISHING LINE SPOOLER | eBay
They cost a bit more new, but depending on how much you wind you may never need more than one. Small (say 2 Amp) variac for speed control. No issues with speed changes under load/operation as with a dimmer. You can usually find them on eBay as well. Make sure they're 110/220VAC.
I concur with the IR optical sensor for the counter. That's what I use. You can get them from Digi-Key for a few bucks with darlington pairs to drive the output (don't recall the part number on mine, but I can dig it up). All you need is a wall wart and a resistor or two to generate a rectangular wave of whatever duty cycle you want (based on how you make/break the IR beam). Feed that to the input of a digital counter, and you're good - Veeder-Root or Durant makes digital LCD counters with 10-year batteries that are nice. I didn't check this one close to see that it functions in the manner required, but it gives you an idea of what they look like:
Durant 53300400 Digital Counter H18 (706) | eBay
In my opinion, simpler is better. Fewer moving parts means fewer thing to break and easier repairs when they do break. Good luck. Have fun.
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