Originally posted by packrat99
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Thanks - I didn't phrase things properly, I think the spring action of the reed switch limits how fast it can respond, that's what I meant to say. I did try to clean it up with a cap, but it didn't help. However, it counts fast enough for the speed at which I have been winding.
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Originally posted by packrat99 View PostThanks - I didn't phrase things properly, I think the spring action of the reed switch limits how fast it can respond, that's what I meant to say. I did try to clean it up with a cap, but it didn't help. However, it counts fast enough for the speed at which I have been winding.
(it's just a piece of metal bending/back at a rapid rate)
Do try to go with an optic switch when you can.
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Originally posted by packrat99 View PostThanks - I didn't phrase things properly, I think the spring action of the reed switch limits how fast it can respond, that's what I meant to say. I did try to clean it up with a cap, but it didn't help. However, it counts fast enough for the speed at which I have been winding.
Reed switches run at low current typically have a lifetime in the millions of cycles, which is many pickups worth. If we assume each pickup is 10,000 turns, that's 10^6/10^4, or 100 pickups per million cycles.
Optical is better; the tradeoff is complexity. The counter can power a reed switch, whereas optical needs a power source for the LED.
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Originally posted by Joe Gwinn View PostThe physically smaller reed switches resonate above 1 KHz, and so are able to keep up. You may need an oscilloscope to see what's going on.
Reed switches run at low current typically have a lifetime in the millions of cycles, which is many pickups worth. If we assume each pickup is 10,000 turns, that's 10^6/10^4, or 100 pickups per million cycles.
Optical is better; the tradeoff is complexity. The counter can power a reed switch, whereas optical needs a power source for the LED.
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Originally posted by RedHouse View PostIt's a piece of metal bending, it does/will fatigue.Chris Monck
eguitarplans.com
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Another option is proximity switches. That's how I was going to trigger my Durant counter on the winder I was going to build.
But now I'm doing the CNC winder....
Now I have a box of proxy switches I don't need...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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Originally posted by RedHouse View PostIt's a piece of metal bending, it does/will fatigue.
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Originally posted by Joe Gwinn View PostYes, but the reed switch designer has considerable control over when this will happen. In other words, not all reed switches have the same design lifetimes, and it's worthwhile to read the datasheet. Generally, long-life switches will be long and thin, so the strain in the reeds is below the fatigue limit, so what wears out is the contact coating. What's best for long life is rhodium; gold is terrible.
But to each, his own Joe. Live and let live
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