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GerryR

Cable Pedal For Enduro Drives

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I put this together for a project I started for a Chinese patcher.  Probably nothing new, but it makes for a nice portable unit not having to have to setup on a bench and use the provided rods.  I used a bicycle handbrake and cable and made the adapters for the Enduro side and fabricated the foot pedal.  Works pretty well.  I thought it might give others some ideas.

Z_Patcher_1 Lo-Res.JPG

Z_Patcher_4 Lo-Res.JPG

Z_Patcher_9 Lo-Res.JPG

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16 hours ago, GerryR said:

Works pretty well.  I thought it might give others some ideas.

Nicely done. Neat and tidy.

kgg

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It turned out that the stroke of the hand grip was perfect for the stroke of the Enduro drive speed control arm.

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that is cool as he**!!!! where and how much was the drive unit?

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1 hour ago, chuck123wapati said:

that is cool as he**!!!! where and how much was the drive unit?

It is an Enduro Pro SM645B-2P drive I bought off of ebay a couple of years ago.  I bought two of them.  I have another patcher, the cast iron version,  bench mounted, using the other unit.  I recently bought this patcher off of ebay for short money and was surprised when I received it that it had an aluminum alloy frame, and the control arms were chrome plated, sort-of.  Because of its weight, I thought it would be a good candidate for a portable unit, hence another project was born.

Z_Patcher_6 Lo-Res.JPG

Edited by GerryR
Added picture

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I have an Enduro drive as well, and saw this after my table was found missing the pedal.

I welded a base bracket for a brake lever similar to the one shown in the picture.  (Mine doesn't look as nice)  I didn't add a cross bar to the end of the lever.  It works fine as is.  

If you look at the picture of side of the Enduro motor/drive unit you will see the nicely milled bracket that holds the cable.   Just to the left of that is a plastic boss.

I drilled a hole up through the plastic boss from the bottom and threaded the cable into it.   Just above that is a hole in the plastic arm.  I threaded the cable into the hole from the backside and used a screw clamp cable stop to prevent the cable from slipping back out of the hole.   Zero machining was required.   It works fine.   I have the Enduro drive on a Pfaff two thread chainstitch machine and it works great.   The brake cable/lever was a genius idea.   And the machining while nice, is not required.

I used a chunk of steel and piece of handlebar to attach the brake lever to the plate for the foot pedal.   It weighs several pounds so it tends to stay in place.

What is really great about this idea is that the pedal is moveable.  When I am sewing large panels of cloth for covers (3 - 40ft x 5ft panels in a recent project) I can sit at an angle to the machine to feed the machine and I can move the pedal to suit, which means great pedal control in just about any seat position!   How nice!  

The brake pedal idea is truly genius.  Thanks!  

 

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2 hours ago, Dave9111 said:

 

I have an Enduro drive as well, and saw this after my table was found missing the pedal.

I welded a base bracket for a brake lever similar to the one shown in the picture.  (Mine doesn't look as nice)  I didn't add a cross bar to the end of the lever.  It works fine as is.  

If you look at the picture of side of the Enduro motor/drive unit you will see the nicely milled bracket that holds the cable.   Just to the left of that is a plastic boss.

I drilled a hole up through the plastic boss from the bottom and threaded the cable into it.   Just above that is a hole in the plastic arm.  I threaded the cable into the hole from the backside and used a screw clamp cable stop to prevent the cable from slipping back out of the hole.   Zero machining was required.   It works fine.   I have the Enduro drive on a Pfaff two thread chainstitch machine and it works great.   The brake cable/lever was a genius idea.   And the machining while nice, is not required.

I used a chunk of steel and piece of handlebar to attach the brake lever to the plate for the foot pedal.   It weighs several pounds so it tends to stay in place.

What is really great about this idea is that the pedal is moveable.  When I am sewing large panels of cloth for covers (3 - 40ft x 5ft panels in a recent project) I can sit at an angle to the machine to feed the machine and I can move the pedal to suit, which means great pedal control in just about any seat position!   How nice!  

The brake pedal idea is truly genius.  Thanks!  

 

Could you post some pictures of your pedal and the attachment to the drive.  No machining sounds great to me!  Sometimes I can overly complicate things.  Thank you.

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