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Hello from Germany guys,

longtime lurker first time poster.

I just inherited a lovely Adler 30-1 from the 1940´s that runs like a dream,

but while trying to switch the drive belt to the other pulley it disintegrated into several dozen pieces.

So if anyone knows the length i need to cut the replacement to, please let me know.

Also I´d love to retrofit an electric servo motor, but have no idea what motor to buy or if it can even be done to such an old machine?

Furthermore i was also unable to find any info on what kind of grease goes into that trough the thread is pulled through.

If anyone could give me some pointers I´d be deeply grateful.

Cheers Scorpio

 

   

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I can help you.  Is it on a treadle stand?  Do not need any  oil or grease in the oil boat on top if you are using nylon or polyester thread since most come lubricated.

You are looking for a one piece servo motor.  Not sure what is available in Europe. If in  US,  I can tell you.  You might check with Strima in Poland to see what they carry.  You will need to have the motor come with a 45-50mm pulley on it.  No bigger.

glenn

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4 hours ago, shoepatcher said:

I can help you.  Is it on a treadle stand?  Do not need any  oil or grease in the oil boat on top if you are using nylon or polyester thread since most come lubricated.

You are looking for a one piece servo motor.  Not sure what is available in Europe. If in  US,  I can tell you.  You might check with Strima in Poland to see what they carry.  You will need to have the motor come with a 45-50mm pulley on it.  No bigger.

glenn

Thanks Glenn,

yes it is on the original iron stand.

Good to know that I need not worry about lubrication.

I think regarding the motor I´ll try the local Sewing-shops, one has a highly regarded repair service.

 Scorpio  

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I set up an Adler 30-1 recently, using a 1,500W servo motor with a 50mm pulley and a needle position sensor. It works beautifully, especially with the needle position sensor. I can adjust the needle stop positions to perfectly catch the brief moment where the foot lifts up, to easily change direction. The other needle stop position for the perfect position to pull the material out of the machine.

My table is a custom made piece with the motor mounted on top just behind the machine. Your cast iron table may have a very different layout, but it may be suitable for mounting the motor in a similar position. My preference is for three-piece servo motor sets (motor, controller, and speed input are separate pieces , not integrated.) This allows for the most flexible installation options, in my experience.

I happened to have a suitable 3L belt on hand to use with my setup. You can also use  a 5/16” (8mm) polyurethane belt material to make a custom length belt in about five minutes, and it’s much easier than trying to find a belt at the hardware or automotive store.

Here are a few pics from my Adler 30-1 motor installation. The motor is mounted on a hinge, with an adjustable latch to change belt tension. 

 IMG_0475.jpeg

 

This picture shows the door hinge I used to attach the motor to the table:

IMG_0547.jpeg

 

This picture shows the adjustable latch to put tension on the belt:

IMG_0546.jpeg

 

IMG_0548.jpeg

 

I used a similar setup for a Juki LS-341. This picture shows both machines and how the speed input is mounted and connected to the pedal. The motor on the Juki is mounted in a fixed position directly to the table. I adjusted the length of the polyurethane belt to provide the correct tension. The polyurethane belt is a like very thick rubber band and can be stretched a little to install and remove the belt. This is particularly useful if the machine doesn’t tilt back, like the Adler or similar patchers. 

IMG_1016.jpeg

 

This may not be the exact same setup you’ll use on your Adler, but looking at different installations may help you figure out how you can solve your particular installation problem.

 

Edited by Uwe

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Scorpio Leatherworks,

See if you can get a one piece servo motor in Europe with a 45mm-50mm pulley on it first.  Let me know and we can go from there.

glenn

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Thanks Uwe and Shoepatcher,

that certainly helped a lot.

But I still can´t figure out how long to cut the leather drive-belt so I can use the treadle mechanism in the interim,

(I was rather surprised not to find that piece of information in the Manual that came with the machine).

Cheers 

Scorpio

 

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You just wrap the uncut,  too-long piece of leather belting around the hand wheel and treadle wheel and hold the ends so they overlap. Where the belts ends overlap, that’s where you cut. Use a metal clip to connect the ends. Use a normal tape measure to estimate how long the belt material should be, then buy it a little longer to be on the safe side. Having some extra also allows you to practice connecting the ends before you work on the actual belt. 

I’d recommend using urethane belting instead of leather. It’s easy to make custom belts from urethane belt stock and they will very likely last much longer.

Depending on your treadle base design, you may have to connect the belt ends after you thread the open belt into place (sometimes it’s not possible to hook up an already-closed belt.)

 

Please post a bunch  pictures of your machine and treadle from various angles. We want to see what you have, and it’s often useful  to just add an arrow to a picture rather than composing a long paragraph to describe what we’re talking about. 

Edited by Uwe

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please post pics of your Adler on the stand.  That will help,

Uwe,

what is the cylinder arm machine on the floor in the back in your photo?
glenn

Edited by shoepatcher
grammar

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1 hour ago, shoepatcher said:

what is the cylinder arm machine on the floor in the back in your photo?

That’s a Cowboy CB3200, waiting to be put into service. 

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Thanks Guys,

I´ll try to take and post some pictures shortly.

Scorpio

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Hi guys,

sorry for the late reply, first my phone croaked and now I can´t upload the pictures even though 

I already compressed them, it still says they´re too large.

Any help would be very welcome.

Cheers

Scorpio

 

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You might try installing Faststone Photo Resizer if you have a Windows computer. Otherwise, there are phone apps that do image resizing.

Typically, cellphone cameras on let you change the resolution you shoot at. The smallest files are produced at the smallest length and width. If that's not enough, a resizer can take it a step farther. Faststone's resizer can reduce not only the dimensions, but also the quality. I usually reduce the quality of uploaded files by 15% with no noticeable degradation. This makes a huge difference in the file size. If you need a phone-only app, read the descriptions and user ratings first. Choose one that can reduce the quality, and other parameters. Use caution! Phone apps from individuals, or unknown companies are like the Wild West.

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Thanks Wiz,

I can´t change the resolution in my phone´s camera (Had I known that before I would not have bought the Samsung a54).

And I even after compressing them by 75% with Faststone they´re still 1,6-1,8MB.

Cheers Scorpio

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This feels more like a smart phone support forum at times.

A simple “Samsung photo resize” search reveals these instructions: https://www.samsung.com/sg/support/mobile-devices/how-to-resize-photos-in-the-gallery-app-on-your-galaxy-phone/

 

IMG_0196.jpeg

Edited by Uwe

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Thanks Uwe,

that did the trick!20230820_144659.thumb.jpg.53bd5b3118a9e1ce95b89866b74ccb63.jpg20230820_144710.thumb.jpg.c565de97a426c4e79ab0945246aae6ad.jpg20230820_144809.jpg.5b1499b5c82018f7fa9f9470627e9042.jpg20230820_144802.jpg.d894b7ee488e002ba4698c86b5ba17a2.jpg20230820_144752.jpg.f408977967363d27b6313b1e5a6a9896.jpg

 

 

20230820_144729.jpg

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Great, she’s a beauty! The decals are gorgeous and in great shape.

You might be able to mount/clamp a servo motor under the top surface at the rear to drive the big, currently unused pulley. That would act as a HUGE speed reducer (perhaps too big to use with a position sensor)

Disconnecting the linkage between the pedal and the big wheel would allow you to connect the existing pedal to the speed input. You’d loose the ability to pedal-drive the machine, but the front hand wheel is a great option for slow manual stitching.

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That sounds like a great option.

I`m currently looking at this motor https://www.vevor.de/servomotor-c_11222/naehmaschine-servomotor-naehmotor-justierbar-befestigung-kupplungsmotor-750w-p_010611078687.

Would it be suitable for that sort of conversion?

 

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Yes, that’s a suitable motor, I think.

You’ll have lots of flexibility mounting the speed input, motor, and control box wherever you need them to be. You don’t need to use the mounting brackets that come with the kit. You can create custom mounting solutions like I did in my setup shown in the pictures I posted earlier.

Your table is not designed to accept the standard 3-hole mounts, so you’ll have to get creative. These motors, controller, and speed input also lend themselves to simple clamping installation, for testing or permanent use.

 

Edited by Uwe

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Hi Guys,

just to let you know, I got in a bit of an accident so I can´t work on the machine for a while.

I´m still looking at options for mounting motors to it.

Cheers

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contact me.  I will tell  you how i set them up.  Different than Uwe.

glenn

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Maybe I’m missing something, but why are motor mounting options a secret to be discussed in private?

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