Contributing Member friquant Posted yesterday at 02:30 PM Contributing Member Report Posted yesterday at 02:30 PM 1 hour ago, girlscout4 said: my needle is a little too close to the inner wall of the foot Easy fix: Loosen the screw at the top rear of the inner presser foot, rotate the foot till the needle is centered in the hole, tighten the screw. 1 hour ago, girlscout4 said: small issue with it skipping every so often or another. Would you mind taking some close-up shots of your hook point from above? My Singer 144W103 (built in 1943) had a dull hook point: https://leatherworker.net/forum/topic/131846-best-angle-to-sharpen-a-hook/#findComment-784869 Quote friquant. Like a frequent, piquant flyer. Check out my blog: Choosing a Motor for your Industrial Sewing Machine
AlZilla Posted yesterday at 03:18 PM Report Posted yesterday at 03:18 PM Looks like you've got the corners down. I wonder why the stitch length is varying and the occasional skip. Probably the hook, needle, needle bar height and timing need to be fine tuned. Are you letting the machine feed the material without tugging on it? That can mess with the feed and thus the stitch length. 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 girlscout4 Posted yesterday at 06:17 PM Author Members Report Posted yesterday at 06:17 PM 3 hours ago, friquant said: Easy fix: Loosen the screw at the top rear of the inner presser foot, rotate the foot till the needle is centered in the hole, tighten the screw. Would you mind taking some close-up shots of your hook point from above? My Singer 144W103 (built in 1943) had a dull hook point: https://leatherworker.net/forum/topic/131846-best-angle-to-sharpen-a-hook/#findComment-784869 Quote
Members girlscout4 Posted yesterday at 06:47 PM Author Members Report Posted yesterday at 06:47 PM I guess I’ll just need to fine tune then. The hook seems sharp and I’m letting machine do its thing. Quote
kgg Posted yesterday at 07:56 PM Report Posted yesterday at 07:56 PM 1 hour ago, girlscout4 said: I guess I’ll just need to fine tune then. I would suggest a couple more photo's with no thread in the needle, the needle plate removed showing the position of the needle as the hook enters the Scarf ( indentation / cutout ) of the needle to catch the top thread. If the hook to needle timing is off you will get skipped stitches. kgg Quote Juki DNU - 1541S, Juki DU - 1181N, Singer 29K - 71(1949), Chinese Patcher (Tinkers Delight), Warlock TSC-441, Techsew 2750 Pro, Consew DCS-S4 Skiver
Members girlscout4 Posted yesterday at 09:44 PM Author Members Report Posted yesterday at 09:44 PM 1 hour ago, kgg said: I would suggest a couple more photo's with no thread in the needle, the needle plate removed showing the position of the needle as the hook enters the Scarf ( indentation / cutout ) of the needle to catch the top thread. If the hook to needle timing is off you will get skipped stitches. kgg Hopefully these are good. I’m also actively removing rust and deep oiling all pieces interior. Quote
Contributing Member friquant Posted yesterday at 10:27 PM Contributing Member Report Posted yesterday at 10:27 PM You can long press on the screen to lock the focus. See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=twl_V_vlq2Q You can shine a flashlight from underneath to illuminate the scarf. You can put a black mark on the scarf right where you want the tip of the hook to cross. See Uwe's video on timing: Quote friquant. Like a frequent, piquant flyer. Check out my blog: Choosing a Motor for your Industrial Sewing Machine
AlZilla Posted 23 hours ago Report Posted 23 hours ago Cowboy Bob told us that on these machines, the timing is correct when the needle is at dead bottom and the point of the hook is on the imaginary line between the center of the bobbin and the needle plate screw closest to the operator. I looked at mine and that's exactly what I have. Much easier than trying to squint down into the abyss. The needle to hook distance still needs to be right. 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 girlscout4 Posted 22 hours ago Author Members Report Posted 22 hours ago 1 hour ago, friquant said: You can long press on the screen to lock the focus. See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=twl_V_vlq2Q You can shine a flashlight from underneath to illuminate the scarf. You can put a black mark on the scarf right where you want the tip of the hook to cross. See Uwe's video on timing: Thank you so much for this. 30 minutes ago, AlZilla said: Cowboy Bob told us that on these machines, the timing is correct when the needle is at dead bottom and the point of the hook is on the imaginary line between the center of the bobbin and the needle plate screw closest to the operator. I looked at mine and that's exactly what I have. Much easier than trying to squint down into the abyss. The needle to hook distance still needs to be right. 🫡 Roger that Quote
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