rktaylor Posted 9 hours ago Report Posted 9 hours ago My bottom stitches aren't clean when I start. I make one forward stitch, back stitch, then go forward to finish. I have a Cobra 4. The pictures are of the bottom and top. Any thoughts? Thanks, Randy Quote
Members Goldshot Ron Posted 5 hours ago Members Report Posted 5 hours ago Randy, what I do to avoid this problem is to use an overstitch wheel and mark about 4 or 5 stitch marks. Start at the third or fourth mark in reverse to the number one mark, then go forward from there. Make sure you hold both threads when starting. Ron Quote
AlZilla Posted 4 hours ago Report Posted 4 hours ago Yep, Goldshot Ron has it. Rookie 441 operator here and I've struggled with those backstitches, too. I've started figuring where 3rd stitch will end (4th hole), hover my needle exactly there and backstitch 3 stitches (drop the needle 3 times). Then, with the needle buried, drop the lever to forward and go. Seems to make a consistent decent stitch. I trim my tails with a pair of nail clippers. If there's any doubt, I use a pin or needle to drop just a little super glue in the hole where the cut tail pops through. Quote “Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.” - Voltaire “Republics decline into democracies and democracies degenerate into despotisms.” - Aristotle
rktaylor Posted 4 hours ago Author Report Posted 4 hours ago Thanks. I've never been able to 'eyeball' the second or third stitch very well. Using a stitch wheel is a great suggestion. Randy Quote
Members BlackDragon Posted 4 hours ago Members Report Posted 4 hours ago There are usually two ways I lock my stitching in. The standard way I do it is to start in reverse do three stitches, then go forward. The other way I do it that's not the norm is to start forward but leave extra thread so I can come back and hand stitch three holes to lock my thread in. I do this when I need a precise start and end point. Quote
AlZilla Posted 3 hours ago Report Posted 3 hours ago 1 hour ago, rktaylor said: Thanks. I've never been able to 'eyeball' the second or third stitch very well. Using a stitch wheel is a great suggestion. Randy Run some stitches without thread in scrap or cardboard, too. It's an exact template of your current stitch length setup. Quote “Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.” - Voltaire “Republics decline into democracies and democracies degenerate into despotisms.” - Aristotle
Members Hildebrand Posted 1 hour ago Members Report Posted 1 hour ago I use a set of calipers to find that 4th hole, leave machine in forward but stitch back to the start point, stop the needle just after it starts back up and the turn the work around and stitch forward through the stitches I just made. I don't have to worry about forward and reverse stitches being exactly equal in length. I keep scrap around so I make sure how long 3 stitches is currently on the machine. Todd Quote
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