Members Snakeoil Posted March 3, 2020 Members Report Posted March 3, 2020 Yesterday, a friend dropped off some nylon straps for me to sew into custom length straps for a large structure he will be loading in and out of his Sprinter van. My 29K70 was giving me fits with skipped stitches and as bad as sewing several inches with not a single stitch. I adjusted the timing multiple times and with time and patience, managed to make the 4 straps for him. But my wife told me that she was sure that a fist fight was about to break out in the basement, even though she knew I was down there alone. Yes, I was doing a Basil Fawlty impression as I berated my machine. Although I did refrain from giving it a proper thrashing. Today, having cooled off, I did a little research. First, I read both of the original manuals I have and they both say exactly the same thing. Missed stitches are probably a needle problem. I went to Google for more and found a pretty good write-up that walks one thru the missed stitch issue and ended up at the same conclusion, bad or wrong needle. So, I went back down into the basement, where my machine cowered in the corner, donned my jewelers visor (magnifies up to 10x) and started looking at needles. I also looked at the needle and thread charts that I've found or was directed to here by members for proper needle to thread sizing. A slight tangent first. When I got my machine a few months ago, the little drawer in the base was packed with needles in cases and loose in the drawer. I figured that I had a lifetime supply of needles. I did my research and learned about needle sizes and then on a bitter cold day, hunkered down in the basement and went thru what could easily be called a pile of needles. I had original SIMANCO needles and other brands. I had plastic caddies with brand new GB needle in several sizes. I had needles that looks like something you could use to frame a house. I sorted them, put them into little vials with nicely printed labels with sizes and was quite pleased with myself. I had what I thought was a lifetime supply of needles, given the hobby application for this machine. Meanwhile, back at the ranch, something I noticed in the two singer manuals was the differentiation between cloth needles and leather needles. For this machine cloth requires 29x3 and leather 29x4. All the cases, caddies, envelopes in that little drawer said 29x3, regardless of the size. So, it would at first glance appear that I have zero leather needles. And I got this patcher from a shoe repair shop that was closing up. I put on my jeweler's visor and started looking more closely at my needles. The older ones with no packaging were interesting. It appears that they had been re-sharpened. The point was not symmetrical and was more of two flats that came to a point, and at a rotational angle relative to the eye. I looked at brand new GB needles and they looked nothing like that. So, my plethora of needles is really more of a pile of scrap metal. I put a new needle into the machine with a properly matching thread size and sewed a perfect seam down a piece of that same nylon strapping I was sewing yesterday. My guess is the thread I was using yesterday, a V92, was a tad too big for the 130 needle I was using. Although the chart have says a 130 will work, I suspect that a 140 would have worked better. What I was finding as I worked on the straps yesterday was if I went slow and ran the hand wheel by hand, all was well. But if I upped the speed with the treadle, I'd start to skip stitches. I suspect that the slipperiness of the nylon strapping did not help produce a decent loop for the shuttle to catch. I did measure all my thread today with a micrometer and compared it to the chart that Wiz directed me to (thanks again, Wiz). Turns out I have 1 spool of V46, several of V69 and 1 of V92. It was the V92 and a new 130 needle that was giving me agita yesterday. I never would have guessed that needle size would create this problem. Just proves that because you can sew, does not mean you fully understand how a machine sews. This reminds me of working on friend's cars as a kid. I was always a motorhead. I'd get calls for dead cars and the owner would have all kinds of theories on why it would not run. More than once I turned on the ignition and saw that the car was out of gas. Yesterday, my 29K70 was out of gas. regards, Rob Quote
Members Bert51 Posted March 3, 2020 Members Report Posted March 3, 2020 When I first started sewing, I to had problems with missing stitches and like you I worked out just because the thread fits through the needle, does not mean it will sew smoothly. I found on this forum where some one put up a post about getting a meter of the thread you what to use and if the thread slides down when held on an angle it's okay to use, if it sticks, go up one size. Also known as the school of hard knocks. Bert. Quote
Moderator Wizcrafts Posted March 3, 2020 Moderator Report Posted March 3, 2020 Okay. I use #92 thread in my long arm, big bobbin patcher and #69 in the small bobbin 29k71. I have round, lr and diamond/tri point needles in every size. When sewing leather I use a leather point needle of some configuration. Most of the titanium needles I now buy are tri-point. They let the thread lay on top more than the slicing point needles do. But, you weren't sewing leather... Webbing is a woven synthetic fiber material. Leather point needles will slice and break the strands in the woven webbing. They are the wrong point. You should use 29x3 or 135x17 round points when sewing woven and cloth materials. Size-wise I use a #19 or #20 needle with #92 (T90) bonded thread. If you are using a #22, the eye is way to large. There won't be any resistance in the eye as the needle makes its down/up/down jog and the loop may dissolve before hook time occurs. You can counter this by playing with the settings of the barrel adjuster vs the top flat spring on the arm. When I encounter difficult materials that cause skipped stitches I try loosening the flat spring and cranking up the lift from the barrel adjuster. This is in addition to checking and tweaking the hook timing. If you have adjusted the timing perfectly and tweaked the take up adjusters and are still getting skipped stitches, replace the paddle shaped spring inside the needle bar. 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.
Members Constabulary Posted March 3, 2020 Members Report Posted March 3, 2020 Patchers - they can be a lot of fun but even more a pain - sometimes. 3 hours ago, Wizcrafts said: If you have adjusted the timing perfectly and tweaked the take up adjusters and are still getting skipped stitches, replace the paddle shaped spring inside the needle bar. Ouuuuh yes, this little annoying thingy can be a pain and is the last thing you would think of. Not sure if it is mentioned in the manual but you can also move the needle holder a bit sideways (by loosening the upper screw) when the hook will not grab the thread. As Wiz said - you can also use 135x17 (or 135x16 for leather) they have the same length as the 29 needles but have a scarf above the needle eye. I´m using 135x16 / 135x17 needle only in my 29K71. 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 Snakeoil Posted March 3, 2020 Author Members Report Posted March 3, 2020 I guess it is all part of the right of passage. When any type of machinery is new to me, there is always some suspicion that something is going on that I'm not aware of. I don't have a lot of feel for what is acceptable wear which put that in the back of my mind all the time. I now suspect that those needles that look like they had been re-sharpened, could be what Wiz called "diamond point. I need to learn a bit more about needles. I was on a site several weeks back for a company that manufactured needles. I think it was GB. The range of styles and sizes was truly mind boggling. I also read a post here where someone was having trouble and a member mentioned a different type of needle with a larger scarf. I had that paddle spring off the needle bar when I had the head apart. The spring is fine. But there was a track cut into the needle bar from the thread passing by. Someone else who was rebuilding a 29K machine mentioned this issue and was not sure if that track is supposed to be there or is simply wear. I suggested a fix using epoxy if indeed it was wear. I chose not to fix mine and if that track is wear, it could be contributing to the problem. Although, I would think that the creation of the loop is a job for the needle and the material being sewn. But that could be ignorance talking on my part. I need to watch the machine go thru the entire cycle to get a mental image of all the parts moving and which moves when and how they interrelate. I read in a post here when I first got the machine that sewing a straight line with them is difficult at best. I was skeptical of that comment. But since then I've learned that it is pretty damn accurate. I appreciate the input, guys. regards, Rob Quote
Moderator Wizcrafts Posted March 3, 2020 Moderator Report Posted March 3, 2020 2 hours ago, Snakeoil said: I chose not to fix mine and if that track is wear, it could be contributing to the problem. Although, I would think that the creation of the loop is a job for the needle and the material being sewn. The loop is created when the needle makes its down/up/halt jog. But, the take-up spring exerts pressure on the take-up lever at this point. If the little paddle spring and the area behind it are badly worn the spring pressure will cause the loop to dissolve before the hook can pick it off. The original System 29x needles have no scarf above the eye. The current System 135x16 and 17 have a scarf. You can move the needle clamp to the right to get it closer to the hook than you can with a straight 29x3 or x4 needle. 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.
CowboyBob Posted March 3, 2020 Report Posted March 3, 2020 (edited) 3 hours ago, Snakeoil said: cut into the needle bar from the thread passing by. Someone else who was rebuilding a 29K machine mentioned this issue and was not sure if that track is supposed to be there or is simply wear. I suggested a fix using epoxy if indeed it was wear. I chose not to fix mine and if that track is wear, it could be contributing to the problem. Although, I would think that the creation of the loop is a job for the needle and the material being sewn Epoxy would wear quickly,we always filed them & yes if this is deep enough it is one of the many reasons it could be skipping. Edited March 3, 2020 by CowboyBob Quote Bob Kovar Toledo Industrial Sewing Machine Sales Ltd. 3631 Marine Rd Toledo,Ohio 43609 1-866-362-7397
Members Snakeoil Posted March 3, 2020 Author Members Report Posted March 3, 2020 Thanks guys. I truly appreciate the follow-up info. There are epoxies with metal filler or I can add metal powder to JB weld to give it better abrasion resistance. Another option would be to braze it and then file it down to original specs. Keep in mind that this is purely a hobby machine for me. So, it will not see a lot of wear. They also make super glues with metal fillers in them now. My cousin has used them to repair damage to engine blocks and similar. They work great. But I realize that those repairs do not see any abrasion. And nylon thread is like running lapping compound thru the area. I have the needle as close to the shuttle hook as I can get it. I just have this thing about keeping original parts working. There was a bobbin in the drawer that looked like it had been thru both world wars. The hole in the hollow spindle was ripped, the flange on the non-slotted side looked more like a Chinese coolie hat. I made a jig and brought it back to shape, fixed the hole in the spindle and had to take a few thousandth off the OD because it had stretched a bit as I reformed it. But it's back in action now. I suppose I could just spring for a new needle bar. But that would just go against my grain. ;-) regards, Rob Quote
mikesc Posted March 4, 2020 Report Posted March 4, 2020 Another option would be to braze it and then file it down to original specs Use Nickel rod ? ..harder..resist abrasion better ..a little more of a challenge to do, but :) Quote "Don't you know that women are the only works of Art" .. ( Don Henley and "some French painter in a field" )
Members shoepatcher Posted March 5, 2020 Members Report Posted March 5, 2020 JB weld better to use and fix groves. Depending how deep the grove is, I sometime file the steel down just a little where the thread has cut a grove in the needle bar at the spring. Glenn Quote
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