Greetings,
Here's another idea for a pickup winder. Made from recycled floppy disk parts -- please see attached picture.
After playing around with small stepper motors for use in my winder and finding how hot they got after a while, also not quite being successful at getting good speeds/torque, was looking for something else. Then found this old floppy disk drive in my spares box --- the older 360K/1.2Meg variety. Neat thing I thought was, it has a decent brushless motor and in addition useful stepper-driven linear transport parts.
The challenge was to find a way to vary the motor speed. After a bit of prodding, it now spins from quite slow to about 2000 RPM. The linear transport was jigged to do the auto spooling function. To control all this, I made up a little A PIC-driven controller board for implementing a simple user interface and added a LiniStepper controller to drive the auto spooler.
My firmware allows setup of the spooler for different style bobbins, the actual spooling pattern (linear/scatter), and keeps tally of actual/desired turns count. Of course, the spooler is in lock-step with the motor. The motor has plenty of torque, enough to easily break #40 wire.
The test pickups made with the winder sounds OK to me, machine wound or not. I did, however, install a wire guide for doing occasional hand-guided winds.
Trust this is of interest to other DIY'ers.
Regards.
JBF.
Here's another idea for a pickup winder. Made from recycled floppy disk parts -- please see attached picture.
After playing around with small stepper motors for use in my winder and finding how hot they got after a while, also not quite being successful at getting good speeds/torque, was looking for something else. Then found this old floppy disk drive in my spares box --- the older 360K/1.2Meg variety. Neat thing I thought was, it has a decent brushless motor and in addition useful stepper-driven linear transport parts.
The challenge was to find a way to vary the motor speed. After a bit of prodding, it now spins from quite slow to about 2000 RPM. The linear transport was jigged to do the auto spooling function. To control all this, I made up a little A PIC-driven controller board for implementing a simple user interface and added a LiniStepper controller to drive the auto spooler.
My firmware allows setup of the spooler for different style bobbins, the actual spooling pattern (linear/scatter), and keeps tally of actual/desired turns count. Of course, the spooler is in lock-step with the motor. The motor has plenty of torque, enough to easily break #40 wire.
The test pickups made with the winder sounds OK to me, machine wound or not. I did, however, install a wire guide for doing occasional hand-guided winds.
Trust this is of interest to other DIY'ers.
Regards.
JBF.
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