Members DrmCa Posted September 12, 2015 Members Report Posted September 12, 2015 Does anyone have/use a special edge guide for Pfaff 335 or similar cylinder bed machines? I know there are swing out guides for sale, but that sounds like overkill and they cost too much. Right now I am using a household machine's edge guide with the screws I made and it seems to do the job. If there was a guide that sat further out to the back of the arm, it would be a better fit as that would give more space in front of the feet to feed material in. Quote Machines: Mitsubishi DB-130 single needle, Kansai Special RX-9803/UTC coverstitch, Union Special 56300F chainstitch, Pfaff 335-17 cylinder arm walking foot, Bonis Type A fur machine, Huji 43-6 patcher, Singer 99 hand cranked, Juki DDL-553 single needle (for sale)
Members Constabulary Posted September 13, 2015 Members Report Posted September 13, 2015 No overkill - why? The swing down guides are 39.00GBP at College Sewing in the UK, not sure how much they are in Canada https://www.college-sewing.co.uk/KG1245-DROP-GUIDE-PFAFF-1245%2c1246%2c1525%2c1526%2c335%2c591 Quote ~ Keep "OLD CAST IRON" alive - it´s worth it ~ Machines in use: - Singer 111G156 - Singer 307G2 - Singer 29K71 - Singer 212G141 - Singer 45D91 - Singer 132K6 - Singer 108W20 - Singer 51WSV2 - Singer 143W2
Members DrmCa Posted September 13, 2015 Author Members Report Posted September 13, 2015 And that's exactly what I meant by overkill - it's CDN$80 plus $10-20 more in shipping, while what I am using costs next to nothing. Quote Machines: Mitsubishi DB-130 single needle, Kansai Special RX-9803/UTC coverstitch, Union Special 56300F chainstitch, Pfaff 335-17 cylinder arm walking foot, Bonis Type A fur machine, Huji 43-6 patcher, Singer 99 hand cranked, Juki DDL-553 single needle (for sale)
Kohlrausch Posted September 13, 2015 Report Posted September 13, 2015 And that's exactly what I meant by overkill - it's CDN$80 plus $10-20 more in shipping, while what I am using costs next to nothing. So drill fixingholes where you need them or fix the guide with a G-clamp. HTH Greets Ralf C. Quote
Uwe Posted September 13, 2015 Report Posted September 13, 2015 (edited) If you want it cheap and time is not important, just make one yourself from a scratch piece of aluminum. Cut the shape you need out with a hack saw, drill two mounting holes and then bend it in the right place. $5 in materials and perhaps a day fussing with it. Make a bunch more and sell them on ebay. Or start with something that's close, like a suitable angle bracket with a slot and modify it as needed. If you google "slotted L bracket" images, you'll see candidates like window blind mounting hardware etc. Go wander the aisles of your local hardware or hobby store and look for suitable brackets to modify. It'll take some tinkering, but it seems doable. Edited September 13, 2015 by Uwe Quote Uwe (pronounced "OOH-vuh" ) Links: Videos
Uwe Posted September 13, 2015 Report Posted September 13, 2015 (edited) So I made one since my last post, just because I had to get it out of my system and because I have issues with procrastinating on work that actually pays my bills. Time: 2 hours. Materials: $8. The problem is that I value my time and to sell this would cost you the same as a commercial swing down guide. So just to offer one potential home-made solution, here are some pictures of mine: Edited September 13, 2015 by Uwe Quote Uwe (pronounced "OOH-vuh" ) Links: Videos
Members DrmCa Posted September 17, 2015 Author Members Report Posted September 17, 2015 Yeah, your design places the guide where I would ideally want it. Thanks for sharing! Quote Machines: Mitsubishi DB-130 single needle, Kansai Special RX-9803/UTC coverstitch, Union Special 56300F chainstitch, Pfaff 335-17 cylinder arm walking foot, Bonis Type A fur machine, Huji 43-6 patcher, Singer 99 hand cranked, Juki DDL-553 single needle (for sale)
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