A Rope Maker You Can 3D Print At Home

Ropes are one of those things that, while possible to make by hand, having a little mechanical help goes a long way in their manufacture. [b33ma247] wanted just such a rig, so set about building one from scratch.

It’s a simple device, but one that makes the task much easier. A series of gears are printed, which assemble on to a frame to form the winding mechanism that weaves the rope. There’s also a slide, a rope separator, and a weight carriage to ensure proper tension is kept on the string during the weaving process. The mechanism is driven by a power drill, though this could be easily replaced with a hand crank if full manual operation was desired.

It’s a project which shows if you have a 3D printer, you can make a lot of other useful tools for your workshop too. We see similar approaches taken when it comes time to wind coils, too. Video after the break.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=119&v=U55BZaPbffk&feature=emb_title

11 thoughts on “A Rope Maker You Can 3D Print At Home

  1. My late neighbour used to make his own rope from used baler twine and I copied his. It’s much simpler than this as it doesn’t use cogs, instead having a block of wood move 3 cranks in parallel. the trade off of course is that it doesn’t rotate in a fashion suitable for mechanical powering, instead moving in a triangular circuit.

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