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Ken Nelson

Acquired machines this week

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I picked up  two sewing machines from a saddle shop going out of business this week.    They were bought new by an older gentleman and have been lightly used and well taken care of.  I don't know rather to keep them and sell my Cobra Class 4 and Pfaff 545 H4 or sell these two machines.  One is a Juki Pro 2000 by Ferdco, looks and sews like new the other is a Ferdinand walking foot chap machine, both have clutch motors and speed reducers.  Slow and easy to sew on   I could not get the pictures to attach here.  They are pretty cool.

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just right click on the image-edit-resize- click on pixels- change value to about half or less. should work.

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I would keep all four machines for say 6 months and due some comparison sewing. After comparing the quality/ease of work and taking in to account the availability of repair and accessory parts keep the best and sell the rest.

kgg

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Personally I would keep the 545 because its a Pfaff w. large hook and high lift and it most likely will hold its value better than any comparable Chinese machine. Furthermore I´d keep the Cobra 4 because it comes from a company which has a very good reputation in the leather business. I´d get rid of the other 2 as long as they are "as new". My 2 cents ;)

 

Edited by Constabulary

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Here is the Juki Pro 2000  It has a little different feed than my Class 4.  It is in really nice shape, I think.    I will get a picture of the Ferdinand Chap machine up as soon as I figure it out.  Thanks,  Ken

100_1890.JPG

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well - that looks like an original JUKI 441 to me with just FERDCO sticker put on. Being honest I would think twice now but most likely I would keep the original JUKI + Pfaff 545. Not because the Juki is better machine but it is THE Original! I also like the stand very much. As often pictures tell more than 1000 words.

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Looks like a nice setup. I know if it was me I wouldn't be able to let it go!

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Very nice!

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That Juki is gorgeous - definitely a keeper in my mind. Ferdco lived off the reputation of that modified Juki long after they stopped using Juki's. I'd be tempted to carefully peel those Ferdco stickers off - the value is really in the Juki brand and all it implies.

I'm voting to keep the Juki and the Pfaff and sell the clones. 

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Really like that stand (machine as well).

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I have a Cobra Class 4 mounted on a newer Ferdco stand that is a bit heavier, and nicer,  than this stand under this machine.   It is VERY solid but not a roll around,  I guess I could put casters on it but I haven't needed to move it in 4 years. LOL.  

Ferdco actually, or took credit for anyway, developed a little different twist on the feed system on this machine than the Cobra's and Cowboys I have been around.  So far it looks awesome but I will know after I sew a pair of skirts on it.   I am rather excited about it but I have too many machines right now. 

 

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1 hour ago, Ken Nelson said:

 but I have too many machines right now. 

 

Really? :rolleyes2:

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1 hour ago, Ken Nelson said:

I have a Cobra Class 4 mounted on a newer Ferdco stand that is a bit heavier, and nicer,  than this stand under this machine.   It is VERY solid but not a roll around,  I guess I could put casters on it but I haven't needed to move it in 4 years. LOL.  

Ferdco actually, or took credit for anyway, developed a little different twist on the feed system on this machine than the Cobra's and Cowboys I have been around.  So far it looks awesome but I will know after I sew a pair of skirts on it.   I am rather excited about it but I have too many machines right now. 

 

Ken, is it a jump foot, needle feed machine, minus the inside alternating foot?

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No, it is a compound feed machine but it has the slotted throat plate with a needle guide under the throat plate.  You could replace the needle guide with a standard leather throat plate  and a standard leather feed dog, and have the same feed as a Cobra or Cowboy.    This set up is supposed to be the real deal on strap goods with the slotted throat plate.   The needle guide is available from Nicko-Sew on Ebay or they show it anyway on their listing for a TSC Juki 441.  I will know more after I use it some but it does pull a nice stitch on some scraps I run through it.  BUT my Cobra pulls a nice stitch too and for a lot less money than a New  Juki 441 set up to sew leather. Friend of mine has a Cowboy 4500 he is quite fond of. THIS is not a put down  of any sewing machine brand, it just has a little different twist on the feed.  I am curious as to how it feeds skirts with dense sheepskin.  I do know several really good saddle makers that use the Juki Pro 2000 and love them.

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