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Making your own Ropes

Just look at the direction of a single rope, and a direction of several ropes you're showing. You're twisting them in the same direction.

Even on a manual planetary ropewalk, the rope behaves the same. Nothing changes.
Kek.
 
a great find in my olympic dumpster diving days, prewound bobbins. i once lived in the fashion factory dist of the city. i still have a large box of bobbins my grand daughter is using. she'll have enough to last her lifetime.

i did a search and found this....


maybe this can help your bobbin problem?
 
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After spending a fair bit of time with this machine, I think it’s important to also talk about the big positives, because there are some genuinely strong advantages here.

First up — footprint.

This rope maker takes up very little bench space. For anyone working in a small workshop or on a crowded modelling bench, that alone is a huge win. It’s compact, tidy, and easy to move or store when not in use. Compared to traditional rope walkers that can take over half a room, this thing is incredibly space-efficient.

Second — rope quality (within its sweet spot).

When used for what it’s designed for — fine rope — the results are excellent. Clean lay, consistent twist, and very uniform diameter. For thin running rigging, detail work, and smaller scale builds, the quality is right up there.

But there is another practical consideration that doesn’t get talked about much — the bobbins.

If you go down this path, you’re not just buying a rope maker… you’re buying into a bobbin system.

To use it properly, you’ll need to wind your own bobbins, and realistically that means having access to a sewing machine. Hand-winding just isn’t practical if you want even tension and decent capacity. It’s not difficult, but it is another piece of equipment you need to factor in.

So before anyone jumps in, it’s worth knowing:

• You’ll need time to prepare bobbins
• You’ll likely need a sewing machine to do it properly
• Bobbin capacity becomes a limitation on thicker rope
• But for fine rope, it works extremely well

For me, this machine still has a place in the workshop. Its compact size alone makes it very attractive, and for thinner lines it produces excellent, repeatable results.

It’s just a matter of matching the tool to the job.

If your focus is fine rigging and you’re short on space, this rope maker makes a lot of sense.
If you need heavy, long runs of thick rope — you’ll want to look elsewhere.

Every tool has a purpose.
Every build teaches you something.
Even if you have to go to ropes of scale for the larger diameters you should see savings on the overall cordage expense. Plus the satisfaction of doing it yourself.
When I was in the Boy Scouts we had a small manual rope making device. It was good for you to say 3/4" thickness using jute. When trying to make 1 1/2" or larger the problem was applying enough back pressure to the final twist.
 
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