DIY Hand-Driller Coil Winding Machine with Digital Counter

 by iwicom
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When I built prototypes of my invention (A No-Friction Bicycle Light Generator) before mass manufacturing, I need to test different kinds of coil to fit the product, so I made this coil maker (DIY winding machine). It is easy to be made, low cost and simple.

Link: A No-Friction Bicycle Light Generator
Link (webpage for this winding machine): DIY Hand-Driller Coil Winding Machine with Digital Counter

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Step 1: Step2

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Full view. You can get the pedometer on ebay for few dollars. There are many kinds of pedometer on market, in my mind, the cheaper one is better for building this winding machine. The magnet and reed switch can be bought as door alarm switch set in hardware shop. A old hand-driller.

Hand-driller's handle turning once, the coil will turning about 3.5 turns. So if the digital counter showed 100, the coil will be 350 turns. Each hand-driller may be in different rate, just test it before use it.

A no-friction bicycle lights dynamo

flyingpuppy says: Sep 15, 2012. 9:41 PM
OMG that's good! A pedometer!
dawoj says: Sep 28, 2010. 3:08 AM
Good counter
edwianni1 says: Sep 9, 2010. 5:53 AM
Where can I find the site for your coil winder KIT? Thank You.
agis68 says: Sep 6, 2010. 4:02 AM
pretty smart....i have some step counters
WolfVecho says: Sep 12, 2008. 5:40 PM
very good Idea
paborralho says: May 8, 2008. 11:54 AM
Great! I think it can also be done with a bycicle speedometer, since it already as a magnet switch
josie in reply to paborralhoAug 31, 2008. 7:11 PM
The speedometer can be made into a tachometer. See my instructable where I did it.
I like the counter!
raelx says: Oct 14, 2007. 7:04 AM
Nice work, great use of the pedometer as a counter. Unfortunately your bike light is not resistance-less. It may be frictionless as there are no rubbing parts but every time that magnet swings by the generator it removes energy from the rear wheel. It's a great idea I just wouldn't advertise it as violating the first law of thermodynamics.
Derin in reply to raelxAug 3, 2008. 12:35 AM
oh no,violating the law of thermodynamics!
later on,at the courtyard:
So,this person...son...son...son,has violated ...ted...ted...ted the law of thermodynamics...mics...mics...mics!So,he shall...all...all...all,be kickedked...ked...ked!
paborralho says: May 8, 2008. 11:51 AM
It´s simply wonderful! That must come from a briliant practical mind.
Ohm says: Apr 28, 2007. 9:57 PM
you could also use a cheapy little claculator as your counter, just wire the reed switch to the plus button and punch in a 1 to start it going.
rolan in reply to OhmOct 14, 2007. 5:39 AM
Great idea. You could also enter the number of windings then minus 1 to count down to zero! Soldering to those tiny zig zag button pads might be more difficult than to the large leads of the pedometer jump switch though.
Mr. Smart Kid says: Jun 28, 2007. 3:24 PM
ooooooooooooowwwwwwww
abun1991 says: May 18, 2007. 5:56 PM
Brilliance Sheer Brialliance.
andy says: May 2, 2007. 5:41 AM
Oh excellent, this is exactly what I need, time saving and incredibly practical, and cheap too. Flexible as well, because it would work with non-round coils (i need a trapeze shaped coil) just attach bobbin of desired shape. No more hand winding for me (well... in a way, but not quite so time consuming and hard on the fingers) Like it. Andy
nah says: Apr 30, 2007. 3:39 PM
If you moved the magnet to the chuck and place the reed switch to match, then you wouldn't have to worry about what the ratio was between the crank and the bobbin. Other than that, it's a nice, simple rig.
royalestel says: Apr 30, 2007. 8:44 AM
This is great. I see you already have online DIY kit instructions. You should post them here as well to improve traffic (and sales). Nothing wrong with that.

Check out ladyada's stuff
dataphool says: Apr 28, 2007. 9:37 PM
Elegant. Deals with the problem in an efficient manner.
gmoon says: Apr 28, 2007. 4:08 PM
I like! I've thought about making a coil-winder for guitar pickups--what gauge wire you using? Pickups use 42AWG (.063mm), very easy to break...
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