I grudgingly paid $500 for my Mojotone winder after heavily considering making one. I wrote the arduino code and started specking out parts before I realized the speed control and such would be hard enough to get right the first time that $500 is actually a bargain. I have no complaints with this winder. But the pickups I have designed so far have not been as great as I hoped. I don't see myself winding pickups for sale unless I do come up with something unique and great.Mossman wrote: ↑Wed Oct 20, 2021 12:12 am How much does a good winder generally cost? I've only seen cheap ($200-ish) winders from China. I've thought about trying my hand at pickup winding, just to make pickups for my own builds. I'm not interested in manufacturing and selling them, so I don't want to spend too much money on a winder, but I have a real aversion to buying a cheap, no-name machine direct from China.
Mosstone Thinline Baritone Strat Project
- BatUtilityBelt
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Arduino? I thought all you needed was a sewing machine motor with a potentiometer (foot pedal) to control the speed?BatUtilityBelt wrote: ↑Wed Oct 20, 2021 9:22 amI grudgingly paid $500 for my Mojotone winder after heavily considering making one. I wrote the arduino code and started specking out parts before I realized the speed control and such would be hard enough to get right the first time that $500 is actually a bargain. I have no complaints with this winder. But the pickups I have designed so far have not been as great as I hoped. I don't see myself winding pickups for sale unless I do come up with something unique and great.Mossman wrote: ↑Wed Oct 20, 2021 12:12 am How much does a good winder generally cost? I've only seen cheap ($200-ish) winders from China. I've thought about trying my hand at pickup winding, just to make pickups for my own builds. I'm not interested in manufacturing and selling them, so I don't want to spend too much money on a winder, but I have a real aversion to buying a cheap, no-name machine direct from China.
Finally escaping the People's Republic of Kalifornia!
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I think @Brendan built one like that. Hopefully, he'll see this and chime in...
Delightful mix of insolence, arrogance and narcissism
Proud RINO trapped in a heavy metal chassis
Growing up, only kid in the neighborhood with an Uncle Ahkbar
Proud RINO trapped in a heavy metal chassis
Growing up, only kid in the neighborhood with an Uncle Ahkbar
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Feature creep worked into my wish list. I was thinking of not just giving it the best hand-winding ability, but eventually fully automating it and allowing programmable patterns and tension. Arduino would have made these features easier to add on later.
Ah, yes... The infamous "feature creep". Killer of many a project.BatUtilityBelt wrote: ↑Wed Oct 20, 2021 11:22 amFeature creep worked into my wish list. I was thinking of not just giving it the best hand-winding ability, but eventually fully automating it and allowing programmable patterns and tension. Arduino would have made these features easier to add on later.
So what was disappointing about your initial efforts in pickup winding?
Finally escaping the People's Republic of Kalifornia!
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Oh, the winding part went great. It was my design ideas that left me unimpressed. I'll try to describe this quickly with an example. I had this thought that if instead of solid poles, you had two magnets pushing against one another (like north against north), and could adjust the distance between them with a screw, you should be able to change the shape of the field, and in so doing, modify the sound of the pickup. I could not even predict what to expect, so I had to try it. It turned out that changing that gap had no effect on the sound of the pickups, so it was just an overly complicated design.
Eh... That's ok. If you haven't tried to re-invent the wheel at least once in your life, you're not really living.BatUtilityBelt wrote: ↑Wed Oct 20, 2021 10:58 pmOh, the winding part went great. It was my design ideas that left me unimpressed. I'll try to describe this quickly with an example. I had this thought that if instead of solid poles, you had two magnets pushing against one another (like north against north), and could adjust the distance between them with a screw, you should be able to change the shape of the field, and in so doing, modify the sound of the pickup. I could not even predict what to expect, so I had to try it. It turned out that changing that gap had no effect on the sound of the pickups, so it was just an overly complicated design.
Finally escaping the People's Republic of Kalifornia!
BANNED BY MOMO
BANNED BY MOMO
I stripped it down so it was just a housing for the motor. I had to make a spindle and guides. I used a pedometer for the counter and a harbor freight speed controller for more-accurate speed control. Making a new one with a pen lathe, but work is absorbing more and more time.