Having spun and then plied your fibre, the next step in the process is to unwind the spool into a skein.
The skein is then washed and wound into a ball ready to knit.
Most skein winders are a stand alone unit and most commonly of the "umbrella" type. These are quite large, unstable and a nuisance to store.
The ball winders are usually a swinging arm type and are clamped to a table. There is a fundamental limit to the number of cross overs - which is important when you are dealing with very fine fibres.
The "horizontal" ball winders available have never worked well, again because of poor cross over.
The challenge was to design and build a combined skein winder / ball winder which was easy and convenient to use and would handle very fine fibres.
The aim was to use stainless steel and Australian timbers.
After several failures and lots of learning ( to overcome lack of skill ! ) ..........