Hello again,
I've decided to abandon any attempts to finess my homemade hand crank winder in favor of building a more refined motor powered winder. Not to sound lazy but hand cranking thousand of winds hours on end is not as glamourous as it first seemed. Secondly, having to focus only one task would help me improve my tensioning and traversing which seems to me is what hand winding is all about. Therefore, I am building a more suitable winder using parts from a battery powered black and decker drill.
I'm assuming that the motor from the drill is DC given that it's battery powered. My plan is to use a belt drive to connect the motor with a driveshaft that drives a main flywheel. A potentiometer or dimmer switch will control motor speed. Essentially, I'm using the drill's same electrical circuitry but replacing the trigger with a potentiometer and adding an on/off switch. That setup of course means that it would run off of battery power which is ok but not ideal. I would prefer a plug in power source. I have seen some DIY videos of people who convert such devices to use AC wall wart adapters, which seems easy enough. This method involves removing the battery pack and soldering the charging plug leads directly to the motor. The adapter normally used for charging sends current to motor instead of the battery. However, is this technically safe to do without getting shocked, electrocuted or forcing the motor to perform in a way it wasn't intended?
I know some people use old appliance motors or salvage parts from sewing machines but some of those motors seem excessively large or overpowered. I'd really like to build something small and compact. I'd just like to see what some of you guys are using and what sort of success you've had with your setups.
I've decided to abandon any attempts to finess my homemade hand crank winder in favor of building a more refined motor powered winder. Not to sound lazy but hand cranking thousand of winds hours on end is not as glamourous as it first seemed. Secondly, having to focus only one task would help me improve my tensioning and traversing which seems to me is what hand winding is all about. Therefore, I am building a more suitable winder using parts from a battery powered black and decker drill.
I'm assuming that the motor from the drill is DC given that it's battery powered. My plan is to use a belt drive to connect the motor with a driveshaft that drives a main flywheel. A potentiometer or dimmer switch will control motor speed. Essentially, I'm using the drill's same electrical circuitry but replacing the trigger with a potentiometer and adding an on/off switch. That setup of course means that it would run off of battery power which is ok but not ideal. I would prefer a plug in power source. I have seen some DIY videos of people who convert such devices to use AC wall wart adapters, which seems easy enough. This method involves removing the battery pack and soldering the charging plug leads directly to the motor. The adapter normally used for charging sends current to motor instead of the battery. However, is this technically safe to do without getting shocked, electrocuted or forcing the motor to perform in a way it wasn't intended?
I know some people use old appliance motors or salvage parts from sewing machines but some of those motors seem excessively large or overpowered. I'd really like to build something small and compact. I'd just like to see what some of you guys are using and what sort of success you've had with your setups.
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