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  1. #1
    Join Date
    3rd January 06
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    There isn't really much that can go wrong with one of the older machines - the non electronic ones.

    It can, if used for many hours a week be worn out - all the bearings etc just worn so they are loose, but you can usually tell by the sound it makes - everything clatters.

    They can also have the teeth stripped off the cogs by misuse, but that becomes obvoius when they are tried out.

    There is not a lot to adjust - not anything I would have thought a repairman might be needed to put right. That might be because I grew up with a sewing machine in the house, and learned to use it at an early age.

    The main thing is to get the manual with the machine. That way you know that for stitch X the stitch length is set between A and C and the width is
    D to G and the top thread tension H to J, so you don't try to use settings the machine can't cope with.

    Actually the really main thing is to get the manual and then read it. The manufacturors do usually try to tell you how to use the machine, though you need to be able to spot the ones where a native German has translated into English from Japanese. You can usually tell if the word 'backside' appears more than once on any page. Those teaching English for translation seem to think it is funny.

    Modern machines have been part of a pricing war for some time, and forcing the price down produced cheap badly made machines. It can pay to look for an older machine which is fairly heavy. There were a few lightweights made which were good quality but they so often end up on the floor that they are rarely undamaged. Even when they have a table clamp, people do not seem to use them and then look surprised when half way through sewing a hem on a curtain the whole sheebang slides sideways with the weight of the material.

    Over here in the UK you can often get second hand machines in shops where new ones are sold, as they know there is a market for them,They sometimes see the same machine several times as it is traded in for a new machine as the owner gets more ambitious.

    The best thing would be to see the machine actually used to sew some of the materials you want to use with it, so you can see the results and hear the machine working. The next best thing would be to find one where someone has tried it out and the pieces of cloth are still there under the foot of the machine. I have yet to hear of anyone working out how to do some sewing on a working machine and getting it onto a non working machine with both upper and lower threads in place.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    5th September 05
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    Chicago
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    Quote Originally Posted by James MacMillan View Post
    All the above is true, and one of the best places to find a good machine is in the repair shops themselves. Go to your local yellow pages or BBB and search out Sewing Machine Repair.

    They often have machines that have been brought in for repair, and then abandoned.

    They are often willing to sell them for just the cost of the repair bill.
    Now that's a great thought...a great way to find something serviceable. Thanks, MacMillan.

    Quoth Pleater: "There is not a lot to adjust - not anything I would have thought a repairman might be needed to put right. That might be because I grew up with a sewing machine in the house, and learned to use it at an early age. "

    I'm thinking of many of the machines sold during the fifties and sixties and aimed at the home market rather than the professional or industrial market. I'm thinking about my mom and her friends who picked up what are probably very adequate machines and then used them very sparingly. Singer pretty much ruled that market here in the 50's 60's...I know that there are varying opinions about the quality of the Singer stuff, though. What seems to have happened is that these well meaning homemakers didn't really understand the machines completely and changed an adjustment here and one there and pretty soon the tensions were way off and needed the care of a repairperson to sort of set them back to "zero". Lots of these show up at garage sales and rummage sales and they're barely used because the owner gave up in frustration. I'm sure that someone with the right knowledge could easily set one of these up and use it but some of us would need to have such a competent person show us where the adjustments were off and how to put them right. When I've been at the fabric store, I'm always surprised at the number of people coming in with these machines and seeking the services of the repair people to set it right.

    Best

    AA

  3. #3
    Join Date
    16th July 06
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    Sierra Vista, Arizona, USA
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