Coil Gizmo from Artistic Wire

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oplholik

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I used FilthyBeast's idea, only I drilled a hole in the wings of the wing nut. I used a 4" piece of wire, and there is not as much waste there as it looks like.

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built4feel

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Going to Lowe's today after work....what hardware do I need to use my gizmo?

M4 wing nut and....what size washer?

I got mine a home depot and couldn't find the M4 wingnut... but I did find that the #6 wingnut, machine screw, and washers were a good fit... just dont get too big of a washer, and then it will get in the way when doing the wraps... Just be sure to bring the rod along with you and test it out. Took a minute for me to find something that I thought would work, and then I asked the guy that worked there if he could verify/test it out... :)

edit: The machine screws came with nuts... ;), I use one of those to hold the screw in the handle of the rod... Then slide on two washers and then the wingnut... hope that helps... hopefully I didn't overcomplicated it for ya ..

If you cant figure it out, just get a #6 wingnut and Ill send you the rest, since they were sold in bagies with about 10 pieces in each :laugh:
 
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tobarger

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I ended up putting a longer 6-32 screw in mine. I put a nut on the assembly and tightened it down so the screw is solid. Then 2 washers and the wingnut. Now it takes a half turn of the wingnut to lockdown the knthal...and the screw doesnt loosen up and move around.
Works even better now!

Just did it on mine
Works even better now
 

ElConquistador

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I ended up putting a longer 6-32 screw in mine. I put a nut on the assembly and tightened it down so the screw is solid. Then 2 washers and the wingnut. Now it takes a half turn of the wingnut to lockdown the knthal...and the screw doesnt loosen up and move around.

Works even better now!

Thanks
Geo

Yes, this...put a nut on first, then you can crank the screw down tight so it's part of crank, followed by a couple of washers then the wingnut. Then there's only the wingnut to tighten down, nothing to hold. I like nylon hardware, it's not as "loose" as the steel hardware. Everything's adjusted so the "wings" are out of the way when tightened down.

My only other hack was to remove the clamp and screw the "U" shaped thing to a small scrap of wood, so it just sits on the table instead of messing with the clamp. I have no problem with it trying to tip over or anything and when finished I just toss it aside.
 
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