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Ok, tonight i went to a new friends house (I don't want to give his name but he can if he wants to) and watched him work some leather. He is very talented and makes some great looking and fitting holsters. His holsters fit better than a glove, more like they fit like skin. He spends a lot of time boning and making sure every nook and cranny is fit to exact specs and doesn't leave even the smallest of wrinkles in the leather. Needless to say it was impressive.

I got to try his NEW cobra class 4 and this is a great machine but has some horrible flaws. As hyped as this machine is, it shouldn't act like this. First off the machine is great but the motor is a piece of crap. This thing has a peddle that has about 2" of travel and it only uses about 1/8" of the travel. I was fluctuating the speed by just flexing my big toe. Its stupid on how little of the travel arm it utilizes (Simply unacceptable). You can have it on a pretty slow speed but basically its all or noting (You can't control the speed hardly at all with the peddle). Also (I wouldn't have noticed this unless he pointed it out to me but being a perfectionist, he did point it out) it leaves a small raised bump on the bottom (Bobbin side) of the material. Its like the leather is raised and then sewn in the middle of the hump. The manual is basically fire wood starter and the slow start function is simply crap and just marketing hype!!!

I thought the Cobra Class 4 was supposed to be one of the top of the line machines. Don't get me wrong, I am still interested in eventually getting one of these machines they are a nice machine but the motor is a pile of crap!!!! Someone could have chosen a better motor instead of cutting corners on one of the most important pieces of the machine.

SOOOOOO......what options are there for holsters, belts and such. This thing will mow through some leather,but the motor and its lack of adjustability, would make me slit my wrist

And Please don't get me wrong, i am impressed and like the machine, i just don't like the cheap motor and its lack of adjustability. I liked the machine and its still one i will consider but if there is any other options out there that are just as good with a better motor, i would entertain looking at it as well.

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Buy one without a motor and put a Quick Rotan servo on it. Just be prepared to pay as much for the motor as you did for the machine.

-- Al.

Medieval Stuff: http://wherearetheelves.net

Non-Medieval, including my machines: http://alasdair.muckart.net

Posted

Well if your lucky you might find one of the older Juki's for around 3,000.00 used or a new Ferdco for around 5,000.00. My Juki doesn't do the things your talking about. Then theirs a Campbell machine needle and awl. I think they sell for around 6 or 7,000.00 new. Their are two other dealers ( in the banners ) on here selling machines send them some leather and ask them to sew it for you. Heck theirs all types of new and used sewing machines around you just have to find them, or you can sew by hand. Plus their are several different makers of motors. So you have many choices of what you want to do.

I'm old enough to know that i don't know everything.

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Posted

A friend of mine has just ordered a special servo motor for his 441 clone and is going to put it through the paces. I'll let you all know how it performs for him once I hear more.

Posted IMHO, by Wiz

My current crop of sewing machines:

Cowboy CB4500, Singer 107w3, Singer 139w109, Singer 168G101, Singer 29k71, Singer 31-15, Singer 111w103, Singer 211G156, Adler 30-7 on power stand, Techsew 2700, Fortuna power skiver and a Pfaff 4 thread 2 needle serger.

Posted

I have a Cobra Class 4 for 2 years and the servo motor on it works perfectly. The pedal has quite a bit of travel and I total control of the speed, I can do one stitch at a time if I want/need to.

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Posted
  On 5/26/2012 at 11:05 AM, gringobill said:

I have a Cobra Class 4 for 2 years and the servo motor on it works perfectly. The pedal has quite a bit of travel and I total control of the speed, I can do one stitch at a time if I want/need to.

I have used my class 4 for 3 years and it is extremely easy to sew with. The control is unbeleivable. Two people have used it to learn to sew on the last year and both were doing a good job in just a couple of hours. Several people in my area have put competition servos on older machines and none of them are a good as the servo on the Class 4. In fact several people have purchased the class 4 after sewing on mine. I would have to see what you are saying to beleive it. Ken

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Posted (edited)
  On 5/26/2012 at 11:05 AM, gringobill said:

I have a Cobra Class 4 for 2 years and the servo motor on it works perfectly. The pedal has quite a bit of travel and I total control of the speed, I can do one stitch at a time if I want/need to.

Same experience here. I've had mine for just over a year.

WRT the OP, I've got to wonder about the adjustments/settings in place on the machine; that coupled with the actual experience of the user(s) with the machine itself, and their experience sewing on these types of machines. A Cobra Class 4 (or similar) is about the most versatile machine out there, one that gives you the quality in all facets.

Edited by K-Man
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Posted

The "leaves a bump" part has me concerned. That is 100% user error.....the presser foot tension is wrong. That makes me wonder if the go pedal or the CHAIN THAT GOES TO THE MOTOR is installed/adjusted correctly. OP, have you considered that the machine you looked at wasn't correctly set up? Did your friend call Steve for help?

You're making an awful lot of accusations and assumptions about the quality of the machine based on ONE example, and you don't even know if it was set up correctly.

Mike DeLoach

Esse Quam Videri (Be rather than Seem)

"Don't learn the tricks of the trade.....Learn the trade."

"Teach what you know......Learn what you don't."

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Posted

From another thread going on this topic, sounds like it may be something with these motors. A few other folks reported the same deal - most of the control is in that first 1/8" of travel. I'd call Steve to see if a new batch of motors had something change or there is some adjustment thing. I have different machines and older servos. They have a dial that controls top speed. Even cranked up I have good control over a usable range.

Bruce Johnson

Malachi 4:2

"the windshield's bigger than the mirror, somewhere west of Laramie" - Dave Stamey

Vintage Refurbished And Selected New Leather Tools For Sale - www.brucejohnsonleather.com

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Posted

Yes it's set up correctly. I wasn't saying the machine wasn't good. I was saying that the motor and it's lack of control ability is not what I was expecting with a machine that has this much hype. And this flaw is not new to these motors. There are a few people on the net with the same problem.

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