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Posted
30 minutes ago, AlZilla said:

At 5:30 of this video, the lady is sewing those welted fingers with which you're struggling. 

How does she make the machine feed in reverse? She's got a knee lift for the presser foot, but both hands in the shot when she reverses.

friquant. Like a frequent, piquant flyer.

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Posted
8 minutes ago, friquant said:

How does she make the machine feed in reverse? She's got a knee lift for the presser foot, but both hands in the shot when she reverses.

l didn't notice that.  Probably telepathic.

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  • Members
Posted

Yeah I have watch videos and they make it look so easy. I think the reverse is on the foot pedal.  You can get those where you push forward on the pedal to go forward and backward (or heel side) of the pedal to go in reverse.  
As far as stretch and mis formed due to use, I can agree there is probably some of that.  However, there are other pieces that are different lengths where I would say there is no way they distorted the amount that I am seeing. And there is one where the left edge is a slight S curve that the right edge is a regular curve.  And those have the most difference.  

I have created this out of EVA foam and glued canvas to the pieces so I could sew them.  They came out pretty decent considering the foam has so much stretch.  

I am going to attempt to explain this and I hope it makes sense.  If you take these pieces and you manipulate them in 3 dimensions and slowly keep the edges lined up, you can get them to start even and end even (even with a large difference in length).  Now the fun is getting that to work that way on the machine.  

As far as seam allowance, I get that (sort of).  Because the welting is only 3/16" wide and you are sewing in the middle of that width. And all those edges line up the, the seam allowance of sort of just 3/32".  Unless, I am completely thinking about that incorrectly. Tolerances are quite small.

  • Contributing Member
Posted
2 hours ago, joetroba said:

I think the reverse is on the foot pedal.  You can get those where you push forward on the pedal to go forward and backward (or heel side) of the pedal to go in reverse.  

I'd like to see that. She appears to be using a clutch motor, based on the rapid start / rapid stop and the old style ON/OFF power selector.

friquant. Like a frequent, piquant flyer.

Check out my blog: Choosing a Motor for your Industrial Sewing Machine

  • Contributing Member
Posted
2 hours ago, joetroba said:

I am going to attempt to explain this and I hope it makes sense.  If you take these pieces and you manipulate them in 3 dimensions and slowly keep the edges lined up, you can get them to start even and end even (even with a large difference in length).  Now the fun is getting that to work that way on the machine.  

Sounds like a video in the making 😉

friquant. Like a frequent, piquant flyer.

Check out my blog: Choosing a Motor for your Industrial Sewing Machine

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Posted
1 hour ago, friquant said:

I'd like to see that. She appears to be using a clutch motor, based on the rapid start / rapid stop and the old style ON/OFF power selector.

most of my machines have additional small pedal for reverse as I have simple setups with cheap servos or old clutch motors without control. Reverse is anyway the sewing machine function and it is just chain/rod connecting to the reverse lever. That's number 4 on the image.

image.png.70c1715a99fdc921d549f6761baf4515.png

  • Members
Posted (edited)

machine seems to be a Singer 17 or Seiko TE-6 and they have supper small bobbin. Surprises me that they sew with fairly think thread this fairly thick leather with a machine like this > not much thread on the bobbin.

When I look at the stitch length lever the it seems to me just a screw w/o reverse - or not? However -  IIRC there was a reverse device of the Singer Class 7 that did not come with reverse ex factory... Maybe they tinkered something similar. Well.... lots of guessing here. No matter what they do a great job there - I´m quite impressed.

EDIT:

weeeeell - I´m not sure - new TE-6 have reverse AFAIK but not sure what I see there.

 

seiko TE-6.jpg

 

EDIT II:
Looks like this one - which looks like a non reverse machine

20191002_2107.jpg

Edited by Constabulary

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Machines in use: - Singer 111G156 - Singer 307G2 - Singer 29K71 - Singer 212G141 - Singer 45D91 - Singer 132K6 - Singer 108W20 - Singer 51WSV2 - Singer 143W2

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