remery124 Report post Posted October 10, 2020 I'm going to part with my 111W , which works great, new motor added a while back. Can't find a good place to sell it where people like us know what it's value is. And do you think that $500 is too high of an asking price? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Wizcrafts Report post Posted October 10, 2020 If somebody is willing to pay $500, go for it! Sell it on Craigslist to a budding upholsterer. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
nylonRigging Report post Posted October 10, 2020 5 hours ago, Wizcrafts said: If somebody is willing to pay $500, go for it! Sell it on Craigslist to a budding upholsterer. I don't know about 500-$ ....LOL, I think your just being polite. is that 111 a needle feed or walk foot ? I myself like the old 111 needle feeds, .. walk foot is little more desirable to people for project machine. But the needle feeds can lay down some Nice stitching. I don't think he can get 500-$ for that set-up . . Not the way it looks in that Pic. ( my honest 1st impression ) that just pop in my head from looking at the Pics. of the machine , is Head, table top and frame, motor, thread stand, wiring...etc all looks ' pretty Rough '. looks to been abandoned and not used for many years. .. maybe ( 150-$ ) would be a good starting price if you were selling it on craiglist. That machine as it sits, is a Fixer-up project. maybe 150-$ if the Head sews and hook, bobbin assembly, dogs ..etc still solid shape. (for example) local here, I see a ( nice clean table set-up ) 111-W, the guy has been trying to sell, sitting here 2 years in Portland for 350-$ .. and it wont sell . and it is clean working set-up and 5x nicer shape than that machine Pic. . Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Wizcrafts Report post Posted October 11, 2020 5 hours ago, nylonRigging said: I don't know about 500-$ ....LOL, I think your just being polite. is that 111 a needle feed or walk foot ? I was being facetious ;-). Nobody who knows anything about industrial sewing machines is going to pay anywhere near that amount. Maybe if it was cleaned up it might fetch $250. This model 111w153 is a triple feed walking foot, but with low foot lift. It can sew a maximum thickness of 5/16 inch unless it was highly modified. They use standard G size walking foot bobbins and can just handle up to #138 thread, but is better limited to #92. I had one for a while. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Matt S Report post Posted October 11, 2020 A 111W153 falls into the vast gulf between "old enough to be surpassed by several generations of machine with better capabilities" and "not old/cool/interesting/rare enough to be a collector's machine", nor does it do anything unusual. Local market forces apply but over here you'd be luck to get more than a couple hundred for it. I'm sure it works great, but that machine is built for business and business is brutal. How many serious businesses would rely on a 60-year-old tool if there were just as good quality but far faster, easier to control tools with actual, ready-to-go support, upgrades and safety features available for only a couple thousand $/£/€? By way of comparison I picked up a 212G140 (a newer machine with basically the same capabilities but with two needles) for £113 because I have a specialist operation I want to set it up for with permanent jigs. It wasn't any hidden bargain in a far-off corner of the realm either -- it was on a well known auction site, described correctly and in an area of London with a good mix of well-to-do people and light industry. The seller had offered it to several industrial sewing machine dealers and been turned away. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Handstitched Report post Posted October 12, 2020 Its a shame @remery124 thats not here in Western Australia, I'd snap it up ( the freight would be astronomical , more than the machine is worth ) . Although it has no reverse, that can be overcome, I'd buy it as a 'stand-by machine'. Its not that much different to my Seiko . Hope you're successful in selling it. 18 hours ago, Matt S said: How many serious businesses would rely on a 60-year-old tool Me My Seiko is not 60, but 54 years old . And yes, I do rely on it for horse rugs, canvas, medium leathers etc. Its earned me a good income over the years . HS Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites