Mmm. Egg on my face. She's a 201K, not a 66. And I can't assemble her tensioner
#1
Thanks this morning for the assembly diagram for the tensioner on our little project beauty "66". My boo boo though. The girl I am working on is really a 201K (I'm still learning), born, as the nice lady at Singer told us August 29, 1934 in Scotland. I've tried to search the web for assembly diagrams, but to no avail. Anybody able to offer help? Sure do thank you. Don
#4
Originally Posted by Rose L
Find the "vintage sewing machine" thread by doing a search (at the top of the page). Someone there should be able to help you easily.
#5
I joined Needlebar forum, and found that our 201K is one of a very early batch of Scottish 201's, having a tensioner without numbering on her tension dial. Her date of birth was corrected as October 29, 1934 also. It's a beautiful day in Bowling Green...perfect for photographing her to post. Don
#7
Power Poster
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Somewhere
Posts: 15,506
http://www.tfsr.org/publications/tec...achine_manual/
This one was good for help on fixing a messed up tension - some owner's manuals have diagrams as well. Vintage tensions work pretty much the same so the info above should work on your vintage machine.
This one was good for help on fixing a messed up tension - some owner's manuals have diagrams as well. Vintage tensions work pretty much the same so the info above should work on your vintage machine.
#8
Hi everyone and thanks again so much for all the leads. I looked and looked online but could not find a diagram showing the tensioner on our particular machine. A question about it and description of our tensioner posted on a collectors forum did however elicit a response from the administrator. He posted a picture of the exact tensioner we have. It seems our machine was one of a very early batch of 201K's manufactured in Scotland that used this un-numbered tensioner only a short while before they began using one with the numbered dial. Evidently the user manuals didn't show the one we have because they only used it very early. I treated it like an unfamiliar die and tried several assembly approaches, finally finding how it goes back together (photos before disassembly for me here on out). Happy dance!! Don
#9
Super Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Round Rock,Texas
Posts: 6,135
Here's the link you need, scroll down its toward the bottom of the page.
http://www.tfsr.org/pub/technical_in...echanism_2.pdf
http://www.tfsr.org/pub/technical_in...echanism_2.pdf
#10
Super Member
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Massachusetts, USA
Posts: 1,775
Originally Posted by purplefiend
Here's the link you need, scroll down its toward the bottom of the page.
http://www.tfsr.org/pub/technical_in...echanism_2.pdf
http://www.tfsr.org/pub/technical_in...echanism_2.pdf
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