Hi all
I am looking for a cheap solution to make a tachometer to give me the rotational speed of my woodturning lathe spindle
something that an electronics idiot can make
What about a mechanical one from a mk3 / early mk4 spitfire? you'd need to fix the cable so you can drive it from the lathe but would be easier than an electrical option....
I take it a variable strobe light wiould be too expensive to make?
A neat solution would be the sender and Tachometer from a MK 2 Jaguar\ S Type\ MK 10 etc if you can find them at a reasonavble rate, as the connection is by wire. Another solution is to simply work out the gearing and with the motor speed make a table of all the speeds?
Another :- http://business.shop.ebay.co.uk/?_from= ... acat=12576
Hi all
Thanks for the replies .A bit more information on the set up I have, I have put variable speed inverter on the lathe but also lathe had five speeds originally via different sized pulleys, normally the digital read out from the inverter would give you a speed, if you only had the one pulley , so thats why i thought if I could find something to attach to the shaft , it would not matter what pulley you had the belt on it would always read the speed.After posting this I found on the internet the idea of the bicycle speedo but I was not sure of how to set up the thing to give a reading of the speed of the shaft. If any one has done something similar could they let me know how they set up the unit as all they say is how it would apply to different sized wheels
as you only have five speeds then, surely, it's a simple matter to draw up a graph for each one to give speed for a given frequency. Once you get used to what speeds you practically need for whichever diameter\material combination you are using it will become second nature to select frequency and pulley?
Never used one on something like a lathe but bike speedos that I have set up usually require you to enter the road wheel diameter, which has limits of about 20"-30", so may not work for you.
I have an on teleprinter hand held tacho an uncle gave me years ago that I use on my lathe to check speeds (it comes from an age when tools were made to last forever)
This message board is like a family - you can't choose the other members!! But remember engine oil is thicker than water.
Hi all
Thanks for the interest
Ithink all is solved with the push bike speedometer you have to input 166mm as wheel dia if it reads in kpm and 268mm if it reads mph. So Iwill try this solution when I am ready to fit