Members Einherj Posted Friday at 12:46 PM Author Members Report Posted Friday at 12:46 PM I also ran the original Chinese parameter table through chatGPT and it clarified that P-06 is most likely the number of automatic lock stitches at the start and end of sewing. This is desirable when doing bar tacking, etc. Quote
1hp Posted Friday at 02:24 PM Report Posted Friday at 02:24 PM you can remove pins from connectors without cutting the wires. https://www.cycleterminal.com/terminal-extraction-procedure.html Quote
AlZilla Posted Friday at 11:11 PM Report Posted Friday at 11:11 PM Thanks, @Einherj. The more of this that can be collected in one place, the better we all are. 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 Einherj Posted Friday at 11:36 PM Author Members Report Posted Friday at 11:36 PM 9 hours ago, 1hp said: you can remove pins from connectors without cutting the wires. https://www.cycleterminal.com/terminal-extraction-procedure.html I know. I didn't have a small enough tool handy at the time, but I had a soldering station. I was testing the P-06 some more, and it seems it is actually a limiter for the maximum number of stitches the machine sews while holding down the pedal. If I set it to 1 the machine does one stitch, if I set it to 4 the machine does four stitches, etc, no matter how long you push the pedal, that's the maximum number of stitches it does. You have to lift the pedal to do another round. This setting requires a needle position sensor, of course. When the setting is at 0, there is no limit. Quote
Contributing Member friquant Posted yesterday at 01:13 AM Contributing Member Report Posted yesterday at 01:13 AM 1 hour ago, Einherj said: I was testing the P-06 some more, and it seems it is actually a limiter for the maximum number of stitches the machine sews while holding down the pedal. Ah that's cool. Quote friquant. Like a frequent, piquant flyer. Check out my blog: Choosing a Motor for your Industrial Sewing Machine
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.