Members Duane Posted December 19, 2021 Members Report Posted December 19, 2021 I am requesting help in how to adjust the needle-to-hook distance on the Pfaff 345. In 2006, I purchased a 1960's Pfaff 345 H3. The price was only $150, and the seller told me that the needle-to-hook distance was large and that "all adjustment has been used up". I have never been able to slide the hook saddle far enough to the left to be able to get the hook close to the needle. The 6-page Pfaff 345 Service Manual states "Hook-to-needle clearance....Adjustment is made by turning the eccentric bush on the sewing hook boss." The Service Manual has no illustrations, and the parts diagram of the hook and the hook saddle show no "eccentric bush". Hopefully, I am just missing something obvious (for the past 15 years). The machine has always skipped a few stitches, but now it is getting worse.....so I am determined to "fix it this time". Any help will be greatly appreciated. Duane in Florida Quote
Members Constabulary Posted December 19, 2021 Members Report Posted December 19, 2021 (edited) I once owned a 345 but do not recall all details. So I would probably look into a Consew 227R manual. I´m sure you will find a lot of similarities. https://www.manualslib.com/manual/1231775/Consew-223.html#product-227 Edited December 19, 2021 by Constabulary 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 Duane Posted December 19, 2021 Author Members Report Posted December 19, 2021 Constabulary, Thank you very much for your quick and helpful reply. I downloaded the Consew 227R manual. Clearly Consew made improvements to the Phaff design (as Phaff did to the older Singer design). I see that Consew added a safety clutch, redesigned the feed dog drive and the hook saddle, and probably a lot more. Phaff’s designs for the feed and the hook saddle are an engineer’s delight, but a repairman’ nightmare. Consew recognized a opportunity to simplify the design to improve ease of manufacture, adjustment and repair. The hook saddle of the Pfaff, which has baffled me, has been elegantly replaced by Consew with a more repair-friendly hook saddle system. As you stated in your reply, the similarities on Pages 15 and 16, and figure 25, should be enough to guide me to a solution. It looks like I will have to take out the two drive shafts for the feed dogs in order to get to the two jam plates that hold the hook saddle onto the sides of the arm’s frame. I would guess that will be about a 40 hour job, at my current speed of performing repairs; but at least it looks like “fun”! I will again when/if I successfully complete the adjustment. Thank you, Constabulary, again. Duane in Florida Quote
Members DrmCa Posted December 19, 2021 Members Report Posted December 19, 2021 (edited) When machines run out of adjustment, look into mismatched parts. People do it, to cut costs by a few pennies. There are cheap bastards out there that you would not believe exist. So, check if all of the parts are really Pfaff and really 345. Something could have been broken and grinded or machined as well. Edited December 19, 2021 by DrmCa Quote Machines: Mitsubishi DB-130 single needle, Kansai Special RX-9803/UTC coverstitch, Union Special 56300F chainstitch, Pfaff 335-17 cylinder arm walking foot, Bonis Type A fur machine, Huji 43-6 patcher, Singer 99 hand cranked, Juki DDL-553 single needle (for sale)
Members Duane Posted December 19, 2021 Author Members Report Posted December 19, 2021 DrmCa, Your comment awoke an old memory. I just took out the hook; there is no name or part number on it. The bobbin cap says “Phaff”. The 345 came out of a golf bag manufacturing company when they went out of business. The seller had a box full of parts and he assembled the 345 in his garage while I waited and watched. He asked me several times if I wanted original worn Pfaff parts or newer “generic parts”. I asked for Pfaff parts, but he said that the the golf gag company replaced the high wear and highest cost parts with only generic parts. The guy that sold it said that I should just heat the hook tip and bend the sharp tip outward toward the needle. I was afraid to try it. That was 15 years ago. How do I determine if a real Pfaff hook would reach out farther? This seems like a very likely cause. I have not looked up the price for a real Phaff hook, but I suspect that it’s more than the $150 that I paid for the head and the table. As a retired hobby leather worker, preparing for the “great collapse”, I’d prefer the DIY solution. Thanks, Duane in Florida Quote
Members shoepatcher Posted December 20, 2021 Members Report Posted December 20, 2021 (edited) Do you have a parts list for the 345? I have one. A genuine hook will not be cheap. Part number is #91-014-192-31. A genuine hook if you an get it would cost over $300.00 Hirose and Cerliani both make aftermarket hooks. Very good quality. Used them for years. I will see what I can find and get back to. Can we get a few pics of the machine. glenn Edited December 20, 2021 by shoepatcher Quote
Members shoepatcher Posted December 20, 2021 Members Report Posted December 20, 2021 (edited) Ok. Strima in Poland has a genuine for $272.03, AliExpress has a generic for $43.68. I suggest you call DAP in Atlanta which is Durkopp/Adler/Pfaff and see what a genuine hook cost and if they have it. That gives you a starting point as to price. Shipping not included in these prices glenn Edited December 20, 2021 by shoepatcher Quote
Members Duane Posted December 20, 2021 Author Members Report Posted December 20, 2021 Shoepatcher, Thanks for the additional leads. I do have a parts list for the 345. I cleaned up the hook and looked at it under a magnifier, and I now see that it says "14 191" It does not say "Pfaff". I assume that the number is short for "91-014 191-91" which is the hook, gib, and base plate according to the parts list. The bobbin cap says "Pfaff 10159", which I assume is short for "91-010 159-91" according to the parts list. I attached a few photos per your suggestion. The photo of the hook-to-needle distance is as close as I can get it, without bending the hook out a bit. The needle is a 19 and the shaft is about 1.2 mm. The hook-to-needle distance is to be no more than 0.1mm according to the 345 Service Manual provided by Constabulary. I noted that Amazon has a hook from Evernice brand for $49, but it ships from the Wuhan province, so......not that one. Alliexpress has a complete hook, bobbin case and bobbin cap made by Baludan for $51 including shipping. I can't afford a genuine part; especially if the current part is genuine Pfaff. I still can't get to the screws holding the bottom of the hook saddle, so any replacement hook will probably end up with the same gap. It looks like my best bet is to bend the tip of the current hook out about 1 mm, per the suggestion from the seller, 15 years ago. Duane in Florida Quote
Moderator Wizcrafts Posted December 20, 2021 Moderator Report Posted December 20, 2021 When I look at photo #1, I see the deflector bracket in hard contact with the needle, while the hook is far away from it. I can't tell if it is actually pushing the needle away from the hook. I recommend bending the deflector inward and see if this allows the needle to get closer to the hook. 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 Duane Posted December 20, 2021 Author Members Report Posted December 20, 2021 Wizcrafts, You are totally correct, in that the deflector bracket is in hard contact with the needle. Paragraph 6 of the 6-page "Pfaff Service Manual" for the 345 H3, states: "...the needle must contact the needle guard lightly so that it can not be caught by the sewing hook point when it is deflected toward the sewing hook. Adjust the need guard ...accordingly." The manual contains no diagrams. I completely agree with you. I never noticed that contact before, and I will bend that deflector bracket tonight. Thanks! Duane in Florida. Quote
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