One of the first winders I started using was a HF tabletop lathe. It had its obvious shortcomings but had many benefits, good torque and speed. I took a break from winding to work on a new album and now that I've got a few pending orders I was considering getting a Mojotone winder but it's almost impossible for me to pull that $500 trigger. And if I am going to spend that kind of money, I want to spend it twice and get one of CNCdudez winders.
So I got the lathe back out and made a list of what it had to have to make it something I want to wind on, not something I had to wind on.
Here's the stock control box. I clipped the breaker, removed the momentary switch, and ran 2 wires from it out the back to my Sestos counter. It now has auto-shut off but, depending on RPMs, there's anywhere from a couple to a dozen winds once it shuts off. In place of the momentary switch I put a DPDT center off switch wired between the DC from the lathe's circuit bored and the motor. This gives me forward and reverse.
Here's the Sestos. I didn't wire the power supply into the lathes. I would do so if I put this all in a breakout box. Like I said it can be programmed and set to auto shutoff.
This is the same setup as before. Magnetic switch. I never went with photo-optic because this proved to be accurate to over 2000rpms. There's a little neo mag on the inside of the lathe faceplate to trigger revolutions. I'm certain the size of the mag is important to accuracy.
This is the last but that really makes it usable. I really hate using tape to attach bobbins. Went to the local "metal store" - they have a cool retail shop with laser cut this and that and scrap. Got a couple aluminum discs. The lathe faceplate has 8 holes well out of the way of any holes needed for bobbin attachment. Drilled 2 of these, countersunk, and bolted the jig to the faceplate. I put a center hole for strat pups and a set for 49/50/53mm HB bobbins. Haven't drilled any for P90's or other types. I tapped these holes for a 4-40 thread. The attachment I borrowed from pics of Mojotone's winder. The benefit of this is that it's very secure AND prevent flairing.
So it's everything it can be short of being automatic. It's neither pretty nor small (which is why I wanted a dedicated winder), but for under $140 it's about the best coil winder you're going to find.
Thoughts? Questions?
So I got the lathe back out and made a list of what it had to have to make it something I want to wind on, not something I had to wind on.
Here's the stock control box. I clipped the breaker, removed the momentary switch, and ran 2 wires from it out the back to my Sestos counter. It now has auto-shut off but, depending on RPMs, there's anywhere from a couple to a dozen winds once it shuts off. In place of the momentary switch I put a DPDT center off switch wired between the DC from the lathe's circuit bored and the motor. This gives me forward and reverse.
Here's the Sestos. I didn't wire the power supply into the lathes. I would do so if I put this all in a breakout box. Like I said it can be programmed and set to auto shutoff.
This is the same setup as before. Magnetic switch. I never went with photo-optic because this proved to be accurate to over 2000rpms. There's a little neo mag on the inside of the lathe faceplate to trigger revolutions. I'm certain the size of the mag is important to accuracy.
This is the last but that really makes it usable. I really hate using tape to attach bobbins. Went to the local "metal store" - they have a cool retail shop with laser cut this and that and scrap. Got a couple aluminum discs. The lathe faceplate has 8 holes well out of the way of any holes needed for bobbin attachment. Drilled 2 of these, countersunk, and bolted the jig to the faceplate. I put a center hole for strat pups and a set for 49/50/53mm HB bobbins. Haven't drilled any for P90's or other types. I tapped these holes for a 4-40 thread. The attachment I borrowed from pics of Mojotone's winder. The benefit of this is that it's very secure AND prevent flairing.
So it's everything it can be short of being automatic. It's neither pretty nor small (which is why I wanted a dedicated winder), but for under $140 it's about the best coil winder you're going to find.
Thoughts? Questions?
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