I am trying to figure out the easiest way to make 20 sets of humbuckers for my custom electric ukes. unlike guitar, there are no ready made parts like bobbins, blade, mounting rings etc. I made one set using wood for bobbins and allen head screws for poles but to be honest, I was vexted with problems getting 4 holes lined up in perfect symmetry and then having those 4 holes match up to a custom spacer bar an then through to a base plate. Something always ended up off just enough to make me redo it. I got one set done but 15 hours of work is too much. I thought about blade designs and mocked one up using wood for the flat work and 1/8 barstock for the blade than wrapping the blade with some tape, superglued it to the flat work and then winding it up. Worked OK but was than perplexed by how I was going to mount these all together without a bobbin to screw to. The answer would be to have a plastic bobbin made that I can slide the blade through like a guitar sized one. When I tried this from wood it wasn't stable.
Enter 3d printing. While not the cheapest route I found someone who can work from sketchup plan which I can do and the costs would be $15 a set. he sent me pics of his mock up, I would have them in black. It seams to have some texture and I would probably have to file the edges a bit but what are your all's thoughts
Anyone ever use 3d printing for custom bobbins?
Wood prototype
These will be mailed out soon so I should have a better idea about quality.
Enter 3d printing. While not the cheapest route I found someone who can work from sketchup plan which I can do and the costs would be $15 a set. he sent me pics of his mock up, I would have them in black. It seams to have some texture and I would probably have to file the edges a bit but what are your all's thoughts
Anyone ever use 3d printing for custom bobbins?
Wood prototype
These will be mailed out soon so I should have a better idea about quality.
Comment