While I'm at it:
The felt pad tensioner seems to be what everybody uses. But my mad-scientist side is nagging at me. How about we put together a pair of offset rollers, one of which is fixed, and the other of which is spring loaded to force the wire into a non-straight path. As you pull on the wire, the wire tension forces the sprung roller to move to straighten the wire path. Using this, we can sense wire tension. I'm thinking that the sprung roller is a bit of music wire which bends when the wire moves it. There is a magnet on the music wire and a Hall effect device to sense magnet movement. This is the position sense.
For the actual tension holder, we use the felt pad, but on one pad we put a chunk of iron, and on the other we put an electromagnet. When we want more tension, the current is increased in one direction in the coil of wire. When we want less, the current is decreased. Zero current is zero attractive force, and therefore almost zero friction.
This mess is controlled by a servo system with a few opamps which read the Hall effect device's position and increase the current in the tensioner pad coil to keep the Hall device in the same relative position. Coil driver is a small power-amp IC like the TDA2030 or LM386.
I think this can be set up to give very fast, high compliance tension control, even with an odd-sized bobbing tugging at the wire. The tension itself is electronically adjustable by changing the servo reference voltage. I bet this can be done with a quad opamp and a power amp IC, some resistors and caps.
The felt pad tensioner seems to be what everybody uses. But my mad-scientist side is nagging at me. How about we put together a pair of offset rollers, one of which is fixed, and the other of which is spring loaded to force the wire into a non-straight path. As you pull on the wire, the wire tension forces the sprung roller to move to straighten the wire path. Using this, we can sense wire tension. I'm thinking that the sprung roller is a bit of music wire which bends when the wire moves it. There is a magnet on the music wire and a Hall effect device to sense magnet movement. This is the position sense.
For the actual tension holder, we use the felt pad, but on one pad we put a chunk of iron, and on the other we put an electromagnet. When we want more tension, the current is increased in one direction in the coil of wire. When we want less, the current is decreased. Zero current is zero attractive force, and therefore almost zero friction.
This mess is controlled by a servo system with a few opamps which read the Hall effect device's position and increase the current in the tensioner pad coil to keep the Hall device in the same relative position. Coil driver is a small power-amp IC like the TDA2030 or LM386.
I think this can be set up to give very fast, high compliance tension control, even with an odd-sized bobbing tugging at the wire. The tension itself is electronically adjustable by changing the servo reference voltage. I bet this can be done with a quad opamp and a power amp IC, some resistors and caps.
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