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unclealec

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Hi guys

Ancient retired bored creaky henpecked hamfisted wannabe master craftsman reporting for duty.

I have just inherited a Singer 211U, serial no. yet to be discovered (suspected to be hidden under a service label) with no presser feet, but otherwise seemingly working fine.

If anyone has expert knowledge of these models please step forward.

I live 3 miles from College Sewing Machine Parts Ltd, ; I can see them getting a visit or two.

I am now off to my man cave to look for the full serial no, and get the machine off my trailer. They're not light, are they!

Gratuitous photo of my beloved Riley cars attached. I can't afford to buy a new car, so I have to make one.

IMG_20210817_200359598_HDR.jpg

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Welcome to the group. Bunch of great people here. Nice Ole rides! Need a couple Tommy guns to go with them sleek rides. 

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Welcome!  This is a great forum!

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I would be most grateful if some Singer expert could verify my search-based diagnosis of the machine I have just installed in my mancave.

My belief is that it is a Singer 211U, serial number unknown; the rivet holes are there, but the ID plate is long gone. I know not why; it sure ain't stolen.

There is tinkering to be done; I am intrigued by the location of the spool winder atop the mainframe; I am used to them being under the flywheel and being engaged by pushing overcentre onto the drive belt. This one seems to be a dog clutch drive. The throwout lever needs adjusting, it lies about 1/4" outside the outer diameter of the spool, so presumably I need it to throw out level with or just inside the spool o/d.

By browsing this forum I believe that I can find and download a Parts Diagram for the 211U; a hint as to which sub-species I have would be most helpful.

For operating instructions, I believe that I will have to settle for a 211G manual which will be approximate to my requirements (thread path, stitch length adjustment etc) but if anybody does know where I could find an operator manual more specific to my machine I would be grateful. Although I have supergoogled, I often find that my googling skills are inadequate when compared to others.

I have purchased a thread guide for the needle shaft, and two piping feet, from College SM Parts Ltd, who are very close to my home, and this together with the standard foot already with the machine should cover all my needs.

The clutch motor is rocking a 5" drive pulley. I doubt my limited skills could cope with this rocket speed, and I have from my current machine a 2" drive pulley that should fit the armature shaft; hopefully this will reduce the speed to one with which I can cope. The slower the better for me.

Any and all advice and suggestions will be gratefully received.

 

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Another picture of the back side if you forgive my crude language.

 

 

resized2.jpg

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2 hours ago, unclealec said:

I would be most grateful if some Singer expert could verify my search-based diagnosis of the machine I have just installed in my mancave.

My belief is that it is a Singer 211U, serial number unknown; the rivet holes are there, but the ID plate is long gone. I know not why; it sure ain't stolen.

Moved this thread to leather sewing machines.

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2 hours ago, unclealec said:

The clutch motor is rocking a 5" drive pulley. I doubt my limited skills could cope with this rocket speed, and I have from my current machine a 2" drive pulley that should fit the armature shaft; hopefully this will reduce the speed to one with which I can cope. The slower the better for me.

To get controllable slow speed sewing and to reduce your frustration level I would suggest:

1) dump that clutch motor ---- Clutch motor:

   i) It is always going to be on at full speed probably revving at 1750 rpm's or 3500 rpms.

   ii) It is going to be annoying loud.

   iii) Learning how to feather the clutch has a very steep learning curve for most.

2) Install a servo motor:

   i) about $150 this side of the pond.

   ii) More energy efficient as the motor runs only when you press the "go" pedal

   iii) More bottom end torque.

   iv) ability to set the speed and no matter how hard you depress the "go" pedal the speed will not exceed that setting

3) install a speed reducer for added torque but most importantly added speed reduction.

kgg

 

 

 

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Thanks for the move, mods. In retrospect I should have considered more the appropriate placing for my machine post.

Are servo motors plug & play, or is there more to the installation that I can forsee?

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3 hours ago, unclealec said:

Thanks for the move, mods. In retrospect I should have considered more the appropriate placing for my machine post.

Are servo motors plug & play, or is there more to the installation that I can forsee?

Welcome from a fellow Brit. Changing to a servo is a must and is pretty straightforward. You'll still want a speed reducer. Smallest pulley on the motor and either replace the handwheel with a large pulley or fit a speed reducer in between.  Either way will enable one stitch at a time if that's what you want. Having College up the road will be very handy but they can be pricey, especially for original parts.

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