Members indrekpitk Posted November 1, 2014 Members Report Posted November 1, 2014 Hi, I have an older Seiko PWG-7M post bed sewing machine. Does anybody know where to get a user manual for this as i seem to have trouble of locating one just by googleing And another question does anybody know how to change the stitch lengh as it does very small stitch at the moment. Thank you and best regards, Indrek Quote
dirtclod Posted November 1, 2014 Report Posted November 1, 2014 On my Singer post machine theirs a knob inside the hand wheel end that you turn to adjust the stitch length. Your machine maybe like that to. Quote I'm old enough to know that i don't know everything.
Members pcox Posted November 1, 2014 Members Report Posted November 1, 2014 if it is a copy of the Singer post bed 12 per inch is the longest stitch it will make. some were set up for 19 to the inch. They had a gear box with 3 sets of gears. Mine does 1 3, 15, 17 Quote
Members indrekpitk Posted November 4, 2014 Author Members Report Posted November 4, 2014 On my Singer post machine theirs a knob inside the hand wheel end that you turn to adjust the stitch length. Your machine maybe like that to. Hi, Thx for the tip. Could it be possible to pintpoint the place wheres that knob. some close-up pics could be useful to be able to check this out. Many thx. Br, Indrek Quote
Members indrekpitk Posted November 4, 2014 Author Members Report Posted November 4, 2014 if it is a copy of the Singer post bed 12 per inch is the longest stitch it will make. some were set up for 19 to the inch. They had a gear box with 3 sets of gears. Mine does 1 3, 15, 17 I'm not sure whether it's a copy of Singer, but the main question is how to find the knob/button where to adjust the stitch length. i have hard time figuring this out. not sure whether it can be adjusted at all. Quote
Members pcox Posted November 5, 2014 Members Report Posted November 5, 2014 tip the machine back look underneath on the left hand side. There may be a knob, try turning it and push in or pull out to shift gears that will change the stitch length. That is the way my singer works Quote
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