Methods of measuring RPM's of spinning object?

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Dec 21, 2007
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Location
Ft Riley, NE Kansas
I have seen laser-tachometers from Harbor Freight (a national chain of Chinese tools in N. America) that sell for $40, rated for 99,000-RPM's, shines a light and a reflective strip on the spinning object sends light pulses back to the optical sensor. Reviews online are spotty, some love it, say it works and is cheap...others say its crap.

I can tape a small magnet onto something (that is spinning roughly 360-RPM / 6 times a second), and feed 5V to a hall sensor that I hold up to the hub. How would I measure the magnetic pulses and capture that to read out in a digital format?

I'm also open to any other ideas anyone might have, optical sensors are cheap, too...
 
You may have an ordinary bicycle speedometer which can do this task well.
 
Bike computer is the way to go:

  • Use a bike computer like the Cateye Velo 7 ($18 Amazon):
  • Set the wheel circumference to 1666mm (the Velo 7 uses integer cm, so round up to 167cm (error = 4/1666 = 0.24%) )
  • Set the units to kph
  • Set the secondary display to "Max Speed"
  • Read the RPM directly divided by 10 (20.4 kph = 204 rpm)
For instance:

  • velo7.png

View attachment CC-VL820520_HP_ENG_v3-1.pdf
 
Set the CA to Km and wheel to 1667mm. Then speed X 10 = rpm. If you're not going over 1000rpm, then the CA may accept 16667mm and report rpm, but I haven't tried that.
 
There's also smartphone apps which use camera flash to variably strobe a label or something on your rotating part. When it appears stationary the strobe freq is converted to your RPM.
 
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