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Evolution of a Spool Holder

A project log for Wire Spool Holder With Straightener

A 3D-printed holder for a spool of wire, with an integrated mechanism to straighten wires as they are pulled off the spool

rogerRoger 01/28/2019 at 03:110 Comments

Now that I’m warmed up to make circuit sculptures, it’s time for more practice. And for that practice, I’ll need wire and lots of it. Most of the projects I’ve seen are built from straight rods of brass that I could procure from the local hobby shop. However, I personally prefer the color of copper (though it will suffer from oxidation) and I can get copper wire fairly inexpensively in a large spool. But of course, that wire would need straightening.

Thus the next project: A holder for a spool of wire that includes a straightener. For reference on straightener, I looked at CNC wire bending machines of both the DIY variety and an industrial offering, both of which featured similar wire straightening mechanisms. Then I tried to replicate my own using my stock of cheap 608 bearings and metal 8mm shafts left from my Sawppy rover project.

Version 1 was a very simple base that laid out the five shafts in the arrangement I wanted. I neglected to consider wire behavior so they ended up getting caught under the bearing.

Wire straightener 1Version 2 addressed that issue by raising its working surface so wire would not get under bearings. However, a 3D printer has problem holding precise tolerances and so shaft holes had to be drilled out before the shafts would fit. This changed position enough that final bearing spacing didn’t work well.

Wire straightener 2

Version 3 attempted to eliminate variability of shaft position by eliminating the shafts entirely – have bearings sit on 3D-printed posts. Unfortunately position errors were even worse!

Wire straightener 3After stopping and thinking about the problem, I thought perhaps I’m over-complicating the device. As an introduction, I’m only dealing with 18 AWG wire. This is fairly easy to bend so perhaps I don’t even need bearings – simple shapes might be enough. Hence version 4 replicated the round (but not rolling) surfaces in a wave

Wire straightener 4

Version 5 tried to improve by having a second stage with different spacing. This is an improvement. A mild one, but an improvement nonetheless.

Wire straightener 5

Version 6 integrated version 5 into a spool holder.

Wire straightener 6

Since I’m not using bearings, friction is quite high. It would not be acceptable if I were trying to build a CNC wire bending machine (a potential future project) but for manual use it’ll do for now. Using a pair of pliers, I can grab and pull on the end to give me wire straight enough for the next few projects.

Onshape CAD file is publicly available here. Adjust dimensions to fit your 3D printer’s characteristics, then export to STL for printing.

UPDATE: Onshape has a free subscription tier for makers, even though it isn’t as prominently advertised as it used to be.

(Cross-posted to NewScrewdriver.com)

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