Members Shays Posted July 4, 2021 Members Report Posted July 4, 2021 My Cobra 26 is too fast at small radius bends I have screwed up wallets and bags. The slowest speed it goes is a 100 spm. I have tried every thing but cannot get around those narrow bends..just too fast...any suggestions guys Quote
Members bland Posted July 4, 2021 Members Report Posted July 4, 2021 Most of the time around sharp turns I use the hand wheel and go one stitch at a time. Quote
Members Shays Posted July 4, 2021 Author Members Report Posted July 4, 2021 Thank you, I wonder can the Cobra servo motor be slowed down Quote
Members Constabulary Posted July 5, 2021 Members Report Posted July 5, 2021 (edited) you could add a speed reducer. https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-d&q=speed+reducer+site:leatherworker.net/forum/ Edited July 5, 2021 by Constabulary Quote
Members Shays Posted July 5, 2021 Author Members Report Posted July 5, 2021 The Cobra 26 has a speed reduction system already,it will not go real slow like one stitch at a time.The lowest setting is 100 Quote
Moderator Wizcrafts Posted July 5, 2021 Moderator Report Posted July 5, 2021 You will need to change to a different type of servo. I had a few like yours and swapped them out for a Family Sew FS-550s. These motors can sew under 1 stitch per second with a speed reducer, or possibly 2 per second direct, depending on the size of the hand wheel pulley. Quote
Members Constabulary Posted July 5, 2021 Members Report Posted July 5, 2021 What diameter is the pulley on the servo? A small pulley will help too. The lowest setting on my JACK Servo is 500 but it actually starts at 200 and I have a 1:3 reducer + 40mm motor pulley. That lets my Singer 111G156 sew super slow Quote
DonInReno Posted July 8, 2021 Report Posted July 8, 2021 Machines with small hand wheels always seem a bit fast with the industry standard 3:1 ratio reducer. Definitely try a small drive pulley if you don’t already have one, then a different servo as Wiz has suggested. If that still doesn’t get it slowed down enough, you could install a larger handwheel, or cobble together a 5:1 reducer. Quote
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