I don't have the time nor inclination to build my own winder at this stage so I'm wondering if there are any options other than the Schatten winder? Do you guys sell winders you no longer use? Is there another commercial option?
Ad Widget
Collapse
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Buying a winder
Collapse
X
-
Actually, never mind. I've just pulled the trigger on one of these - http://cgi.ebay.com/Coil-audio-Outpu...QQcmdZViewItem
Hope it does the trick, or can be tweaked to do so!
-
Oh, well, I'm looking for a commercial winder, too.
The schatten is just TOO expensive for a electric motor and a pair of pulleys. I made a sort-of-winder, but it looks like the A.C.M.E. machinery that warner bros' Coyote uses to shoot Road Runner.Biarnel Liuteria
Italian handmade guitars and basses
http://www.biarnel.com/liuteria/
http://www.myspace.com/biarnel
Comment
-
The ebay winder arrived today, it's a solid unit. No instructions and everything is chinese but it was easy enough to figure out by pressing buttons. It has 20 programmable presets - you set the number of turns and what speed for each preset. The footswitch is a simple on/off and it slow starts and stops. I'll post detail pictures of the guts if anyone is interested. They even fitted an Australian power lead for me!
The only issue is that the minimum speed is 2000rpm (as stated clearly in the auction). I've timed it at 2200rpm but that might be because it's a 220v unit running on 240v?. Anyway, I need to reduce the speed....
Comment
-
Here's a way to slow down the winder.. a countershaft.
The Lathe Countershaft
Most small electric motors in Britain spin at 1425 rpm, whilst those in the USA and Europe are usually marked a little faster at 1600 to 1700 rpm or so. If the lathe spindle was to be driven directly from one of these motors, even using a small pulley on the motor shaft, and a larger one on the lathe, it would be turning far too fast to be useful for the majority of jobs. Hence, it is necessary to introduce some way of reducing the speed - and that is the job of the countershaft. In a typical arrangement, illustrated below, the motor is fitted with a small pulley on its spindle and fastened to a vertical cast-iron angle-plate, hinged at it base. Because the 1500 rpm motor is driving a much larger pulley, in a ratio of something like 5 : 1, the speed of the upper pulley is reduced to 300 rpm (1500 divided by 5). On the same shaft as the large pulley is a set of three pulleys, usually identical to those on the lathe, but arranged in the "reverse" order. If the middle pulley on the countershaft is made to drive the identically-sized pulley on the lathe spindle that too, of course, will turn at 300 rpm. The pulleys each side of the centre are normally set to halve and double the speeds - hence the creation of speed set covering a useful 150 rpm, 300 rpm and 600 rpm.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
Comment
-
Originally posted by dpm View PostAfraid not.
Plus the fact humbuckers go one direction while strat pups goes the other direction.
Comment
-
Flip the coils. So if the top is on the left as you face the winder, flip it over so the top is on the right...that should work. Apart from that I have no intention of winding standard humbuckers or strat pickups, I'm purely doing this for multiscale extended range instruments like in my avatar. My coil flatwork is the same top and bottom btw
vortiger, you should start another thread - there's more chance of people seeing your question that way good luck
Comment
-
Originally posted by dpm View PostFlip the coils. So if the top is on the left as you face the winder, flip it over so the top is on the right...that should work. Apart from that I have no intention of winding standard humbuckers or strat pickups, I'm purely doing this for multiscale extended range instruments like in my avatar. My coil flatwork is the same top and bottom btw
vortiger, you should start another thread - there's more chance of people seeing your question that way good luck
The guitar in your avatar looks very interesting. Looks like fun to play.
Do you have a site with more info on your instruments?
Comment
Comment