It occurred to me that if you have a setup which has a variable speed motor turning one bobbin and also something like Joe's wire guiding disks to keep flyaway wires from happening, that you could stack perhaps half a dozen coils on the spindle, each with its own guiding disks. So you can now spin N bobbins at a time.
If you make a multi-guide consisting of a sliding rod or bar with a number of wire guides clamped on it, sitting at the same distance apart as the bobbins, and have one tensioner per wire, you can now hand-guide several bobbins simultaneously.
Yeah, you gotta be able to watch for disasters on more than one at a time. Maybe pairs are more reasonable. Yes, you have to have N spools of wire to feed simultaneously. Spooling off to low mass secondary spools could do that.
You can make the sliding guide from a metal rod or tube sliding in oilite bushings with adjustable guides made from shaft collars and with the wire guide attached to the collar. An alternate is an L-bracket mounted on ball bearings or plastic slide bearings to slide sideways with a set of wire guides clamped to position. A handle on the traverse makes the multi-traverse move them all at the same time.
It's not useful to the one-at-a-time winder, but the commercial guys might like it.
If you make a multi-guide consisting of a sliding rod or bar with a number of wire guides clamped on it, sitting at the same distance apart as the bobbins, and have one tensioner per wire, you can now hand-guide several bobbins simultaneously.
Yeah, you gotta be able to watch for disasters on more than one at a time. Maybe pairs are more reasonable. Yes, you have to have N spools of wire to feed simultaneously. Spooling off to low mass secondary spools could do that.
You can make the sliding guide from a metal rod or tube sliding in oilite bushings with adjustable guides made from shaft collars and with the wire guide attached to the collar. An alternate is an L-bracket mounted on ball bearings or plastic slide bearings to slide sideways with a set of wire guides clamped to position. A handle on the traverse makes the multi-traverse move them all at the same time.
It's not useful to the one-at-a-time winder, but the commercial guys might like it.
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