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jimerickson

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Posts posted by jimerickson

  1. Helen:  I just looked on e-Bay and found listings for 2 commercial units.  Listing number 165674996748 "Tin Lizzy" unit at $90 plus shipping, and listing number 363815762528 SWF unit at $73.67 with free shipping.

    The units I have are like the Tin Lizzy one.  I'm unfamiliar with the SWF unit, so I can't really comment on it.  Based on another listing it seems the SWF unit is quite expensive new.  If I were buying, I'd probably buy the SWF unit, but I'm sort of adventurous and a bit of a risk taker so it might not be the best unit for you.  I know the Tin Lizzy unit will serve you well.  I see a lot of Chinese stand alone winders at reasonable prices, but I'm a bit leery of quality control on their stuff.  Might work great, might not work at all.  Good luck.  Jim  

  2. Helen:  Don't buy another cheap winder.  Save your money and buy a good one.  I use a commercial winder and it has served me well.  I have several that i've bought over the years.  Some as complete free standing units, others a simply pieces that I put together.  I bought all mine as used items. Paid as low as $10 (a really good buy at a quilt show rummage sale), and as much as $65 off e-bay.  APQS's high end winder is high quality, but also high cost.  Jim

  3. I've seen posts in the past from quilters who sew binding on their quilts using their long arm.  I'm looking for specific detailed instructions on how to do this.  If someone would be so kind as to write them out, or direct me to a set of instructions, I would appreciate it.

    I wonder about how it's sewed, horizontal, vertical, or both.  Post and lintel, or mitered corners.  Batting trimmed to edge or plus 1/4 inch to fill binding.  And so on.  Thanks.  Jim 

  4. Bonnie:  On all the winders I have (4 or 5), the tension disks can be adjusted horizontally, and this controls where the thread is wound on the bobbin.  Look and see if your winder doesn't have a similar adjustment.  I think the screeching sound you hear is the "O" ring on the drive shaft slipping.  Probably time to replace it.  Good luck.  Jim

  5. I'm surprised it "falls off" in only one place.  Examine the rail for damage of some sort.  Tighten the wheels back up.  As for new wheels or not; examine them for wear.  Are the grooves nice and smooth?  Is there any play between the hub and body of wheel?  If you find any problems with the wheels, then yes, they need replacement.  If the wheels look good, concentrate on proper adjustment.  My guess is that you had them too loose to begin with.  Good luck.  Jim

  6. Are you asking about a sewing machine to piece with?  If so, top of my list is an old Singer 301, followed closely by a Singer featherweight 221.  If you're planning to do something other than piecing, maybe these aren't the machines you want.  The quality of manufacture of these old Singers is something you don't see today, probably never see again.  Sixty, seventy, eighty years old, doesn't matter.  They just don't die.  Jim

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