Members gigi Posted June 6, 2017 Members Report Posted June 6, 2017 Couldn't resist buying this 'boat anchor' for the price of a piece of leather. Made probably in the 50's in former East Germany - Textima was an old brand of machinery, related to CLAES brand, part of VEB Textima Co. LW users helping with this project directly or indirectly: - @Constabulary - who did most of the work: all the mechanical restoration. @RockyAussie and @Trox - very helpful tips along the way. Also @CampbellRandall (Dan) - very helpful videos regarding skiving. Thanks a lot!! The machine was badly rusted as you can see in the pictures (in the left is an original photo from the ad, before restoration). Couldn't find any documentation, didn't know if it's complete, if we can find parts for it, or if this thing will work again. But definitely looked very robust and seemed it was worth restoring. It is a bit different from other modern skivers: all the active parts (bell knife, feed wheel, sharpening wheel) are moving together with a ratio established by the gears (feed wheel moves slower). They all start/stop moving when the clutch is engaged/disengaged by the pedal. Machine is ALL gear driven (no belts inside) and the original clutch was on the outside. Found out: the old, heavy, wide-belt external clutch needed to be replaced with an external clutch motor. Only one part was missing: the feed wheel drive-rod (and a cover). We ordered the missing rod but realized it was too short, so Constabulary adjusted this by cutting, gluing and pinning on a tube (photo). Machine needed to be stripped to the last screw, every single bit was taking care of. That included: electrolysis bath to break some parts loose, de-rusting, hammering some parts out, heating them with a torch etc. Many components were all gummed up. Original paint was very thick, pretty difficult to remove. Following was the painting and partial assembly, greasing, shipping. Quote Houston, we have a problem
Members gigi Posted June 6, 2017 Author Members Report Posted June 6, 2017 After receiving the machine we set it up with a table. Mounted the main shaft and the clutch motor. To adapt the clutch motor we used a bearing, a straight-bore pulley for V-belt and an elastic ring. The bearing is used here to isolate the rotating movement from the hub. Luckily the DDR guys used standard parts for the machine and we were able to fit the bearing. My husband set up a VFD to control the motor for the household power. This allows me to vary the speed of the whole thing: VFD sets the motor RPM and the clutch engages/disengages the machine to/from the motor. After about 2 months from purchasing we were able to make the first test: machine worked! I was not sure I would be able to control the leather feeding speed but there doesn't seem to be a problem. Next we needed to modify the machine a bit in order to accommodate the presser feet available on the market. We made another presser foot spring (photo). I've replaced the foot with an wider one used for skiving and splitting. Basic adjustments are the same like any other skiver: the same principles. This is a video of some skiving using the old bell knife and feed wheel. The noise comes from the straight-cut gears. Meanwhile noise level improved: we moved the gears a bit. (maybe in the future we will use a special grease to improve noise level even more): Quote Houston, we have a problem
Members Constabulary Posted June 6, 2017 Members Report Posted June 6, 2017 That really is an amazing chunk of metal. Was not always fun to restore but turned out quite good. Actually the first skiver I ever have touched and I really was impressed by the well designed gear drive system. Some sticky heavy duty grease should reduce the sound a bit. Glad it is working well. 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 Matt S Posted June 6, 2017 Members Report Posted June 6, 2017 That looks fantastic. Good job everyone in bringing a fine machine back to life. I'll bet it can do another few decades of work now. Quote
Members jimi Posted June 6, 2017 Members Report Posted June 6, 2017 Yes good restoration job lads, well done. looks very sturdy. good to see it working again. C´mon Folker, silver paint AGAIN! Quote
RockyAussie Posted June 6, 2017 Report Posted June 6, 2017 Beautiful restoration. Now it has to start paying for itself I think.Roller next then extractor adaptation? Quote Wild Harry - Australian made leather goodsYouTube Channel Instagram
Members Constabulary Posted June 7, 2017 Members Report Posted June 7, 2017 8 hours ago, jimi said: silver paint AGAIN! sure - it´s timeless and always looks good and the hammer tone paint is covering small surface irregularities very good and - I ran out of pink and purple. Gigi - you forgot to mention "Dan the Picker" who drove this thing all the way across Europe. 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 gigi Posted June 7, 2017 Author Members Report Posted June 7, 2017 14 hours ago, jimi said: C´mon Folker, silver paint AGAIN! 'Make Textima Gray Again!' Quote Houston, we have a problem
Members gigi Posted June 7, 2017 Author Members Report Posted June 7, 2017 Thank you everyone for your kind words! 19 hours ago, RockyAussie said: Roller next then extractor adaptation? Yes, roller presser foot and a new feed wheel are next Quote Houston, we have a problem
Trox Posted June 9, 2017 Report Posted June 9, 2017 Hi and thanks, you all did a great job on this machine. Gray is a good color for it Constabulary, and gray is the color that hit you when you passed the border in to the old DDR. I worked as a truck driver in the 1980´ties and drove a lot on DDR, loaded electro motors from Veb Electromotorwerke (who was made by North Vietnamese prisoners of war in DDR captivity, I did not know at that time) and clothes for Norwegian fashion stores. I visited many factories and was always invited to "dinner" ,a spoon of mashed potatoes, a piece of meat size of a dime and some brown salat. The table fork and knife was made of a soft metal that bended on the meat. The workers did not have food but made machinery of the best quality and steel. They always wanted to prove they where Germans, and did so by putting there pride in making good products. I never forget the fog of coal and smell of two stroke gasolin, the tough, long border controls when they accused me of being a spy Anyway, my point was that they made the world best electro motors and most of the other (industrial) stuff they made was top notch even without food. Quote Tor Workshop machines: TSC 441 clone/Efka DC1550, Dürkopp-Adler 267-373/Efka DC1600, Pfaff 345-H3/Cobra 600W, Singer 29K-72, Sandt 8 Ton clicking machine, Alpha SM skiving unit, Fortuna 620 band knife splitting machine. Old Irons: Adler 5-27, Adler 30-15, Singer 236W-100
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