Members Mizzy Posted June 27, 2019 Members Report Posted June 27, 2019 (edited) Apart from antihistamines and an epi pen on standby (for when my throat is affected), the very best solution is prevention with protective gear as you have all wisely noted. Thank you. I hope others take heed, seeing is believing, as they say. The reaction lasts for about two weeks; imagine the looks my poor husband gets when we walk around our small country town together with this face? Edited June 27, 2019 by Mizzy Missed something Quote
Members PMCREATIONS Posted June 30, 2019 Author Members Report Posted June 30, 2019 Made a video of me testing it out. I'll post a video slide show of the photos I took while working. Quote
Members Mizzy Posted July 1, 2019 Members Report Posted July 1, 2019 That’s beautiful! Can you post a few more pictures of the cleaned internals please? Quote
Evo160K Posted July 1, 2019 Report Posted July 1, 2019 PMCREATIONS, Beside the Gojo, what else did you use for cleaning? Looks good! Quote
Members PMCREATIONS Posted July 1, 2019 Author Members Report Posted July 1, 2019 I used canned air to blow off the gojo. Then wd40 to rinse off the machine. Used steel wool and vinegar to get rust off parts. Then wiped it down with windex wipes. And oiled it to finish. Quote
Members Mizzy Posted July 1, 2019 Members Report Posted July 1, 2019 You’ve really done a top job there, and I love the slide show. Talented! When you took the needlebar assembly out did you only remove the bracket at the bottom in order to free it? I’m following the military handbook on disassembly instructions for needlebar removal and according to this booklet once that bracket is removed the unit just slides out. Mine doesn’t. Can you please tell me, did you have to do anything else to get it out? I really appreciate the advice I get on this forum, I couldn’t work on my machines otherwise. Thank you Quote
Evo160K Posted July 1, 2019 Report Posted July 1, 2019 4 hours ago, PMCREATIONS said: I used canned air to blow off the gojo. Then wd40 to rinse off the machine. Used steel wool and vinegar to get rust off parts. Then wiped it down with windex wipes. And oiled it to finish. Well done. I've never tried WD-40 as a rinsing material. When you say, "and oiled it to finish", do you mean all of the surfaces to bring up a shine or just the moving metal-on-metal surfaces (as usual)? Restoring these old machines is such a blast! My second favorite thing. Quote
Members PMCREATIONS Posted July 2, 2019 Author Members Report Posted July 2, 2019 2 hours ago, Evo160K said: Well done. I've never tried WD-40 as a rinsing material. When you say, "and oiled it to finish", do you mean all of the surfaces to bring up a shine or just the moving metal-on-metal surfaces (as usual)? Restoring these old machines is such a blast! My second favorite thing. Oiled the surface to reduce risk of rust forming and the parts that need oil to function. 3 hours ago, Mizzy said: You’ve really done a top job there, and I love the slide show. Talented! When you took the needlebar assembly out did you only remove the bracket at the bottom in order to free it? I’m following the military handbook on disassembly instructions for needlebar removal and according to this booklet once that bracket is removed the unit just slides out. Mine doesn’t. Can you please tell me, did you have to do anything else to get it out? I really appreciate the advice I get on this forum, I couldn’t work on my machines otherwise. Thank you I actually didn't take anything apart on mine. I know it's not the right way but I used pipe cleaners and brushes to just reach into places to clean. Quote
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