Rossr Posted December 24, 2017 Report Posted December 24, 2017 (edited) So I have a Campbell Randall Needle awl machine. I needed to replace the belt and this dial thing was in the way. After some study and a look at the really old book it appeared to be removable and didn't have any effect if I took it off and put back. So went too it. Belt fixed but learned a couple things. First off this must of had to be some kind of time or stitch counter. The book page at the end of the passage says about earning being calculated correctly. Also the screws both on the dial face and on the arm that holds it were covered in lead. My guess is so the user couldn't just take it off and manually move the dials forward. Which once it was off could be done easy. So does anyone know the history here? How old is this add on? I cant seem to find any pictures of it anywhere on the net. Other than the one page in the book about it, there isnt even mention of it in the schematics? Just curious id anyone knows anything? Thanks Ross S Edited December 25, 2017 by Wizcrafts Got rid of unnecessary underlined paragraphs of text. Quote
Rossr Posted December 24, 2017 Author Report Posted December 24, 2017 (edited) Realized I posted this in sewing leather when it should be in leather sewing machines....can it be moved? Edit: Moved Edited December 25, 2017 by Northmount moved as requested Quote
Moderator Wizcrafts Posted December 25, 2017 Moderator Report Posted December 25, 2017 That Campbell has a stitch counter installed by the manufacturer. It was originally leased out and the amount of stitches were metered. Any overage from the agreed upon monthly stitch allowance was charged for in a future invoice. Machines that were sold to customers didn't have stitch counters by default. You may be on shaky ground Ross. Quote 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.
480volt Posted December 26, 2017 Report Posted December 26, 2017 Just out of curiosity, if you do the math, how many stitches has it recorded over it’s lifespan? Quote
Rossr Posted December 26, 2017 Author Report Posted December 26, 2017 @Wizcrafts I dropped you a message. Thanks for the information. Quote
Rossr Posted December 26, 2017 Author Report Posted December 26, 2017 2 hours ago, 480volt said: Just out of curiosity, if you do the math, how many stitches has it recorded over it’s lifespan? Not really sure, I looked at it. and it reads as follows: 10,000,000 dial between 1-2 1,000,000 dial Between 8-9 100,000 dial between 0-1 ..before the 1 10,000 between 6-7 1,000 between 1-2 100 between 4-5 10 between 1-2 0 between 8-9 So If I read from bottom up..I think 18,061418...or a heck of a lot. Quote
480volt Posted December 26, 2017 Report Posted December 26, 2017 Thanks for the reply, it’s like voodoo having that kind of information. So if I’m doing the math right, at 6spi, that works out to about 47 miles of stitching. A heck of a lot. Quote
Rossr Posted December 26, 2017 Author Report Posted December 26, 2017 40 minutes ago, 480volt said: Thanks for the reply, it’s like voodoo having that kind of information. So if I’m doing the math right, at 6spi, that works out to about 47 miles of stitching. A heck of a lot. Wow....didnt even think to look at it that way....yes that is a lot Quote
Members Constabulary Posted December 26, 2017 Members Report Posted December 26, 2017 Impressive - seems it did not hurt the machine. But who knows how much mileage other machine have which do do not have a stitch counter. Maybe the Allied used this CR stitcher for decoding the German Enigma machine *kidding* 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
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.