Free motion quilting - thread is fraying
#1
Free motion quilting - thread is fraying
I am doing my best to practice free motion quilting with my Singer Quantum Stylist 9600. I say trying because I am not doing very well! I keep reading that everyone says practice practice practice so I am doing just that!
My problem is that my thread keeps fraying. I took the end piece off the machine to try to see what is going on. I know - not good to leave the machine like that - but I have figured out that it is something in that last step of the threading of the top thread. Somewhere between the top and the hook right before the needle the thread keeps unraveling and getting "stuck" thus breaking.
I was having problems before thinking it was the thread and ordered some from Connecting Threads. I don't think that is the problem but I can't figure it out...
Any ideas?
My problem is that my thread keeps fraying. I took the end piece off the machine to try to see what is going on. I know - not good to leave the machine like that - but I have figured out that it is something in that last step of the threading of the top thread. Somewhere between the top and the hook right before the needle the thread keeps unraveling and getting "stuck" thus breaking.
I was having problems before thinking it was the thread and ordered some from Connecting Threads. I don't think that is the problem but I can't figure it out...
Any ideas?
#4
not a kink, a nick (knick). sometimes breaking a needle does damage to our machines and makes a nick or rough spot.
you will also need to use a larger eye needle to help the thread travel through the needle without rubbing too much.
you will also need to use a larger eye needle to help the thread travel through the needle without rubbing too much.
#5
Super Member
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Anchorage, AK
Posts: 1,397
quality of thread makes a big difference - you didn't say what you were using. And in addition to just a "new needle" you need to be using the right needle - smooth eye, large enough for the thread, etc. I think that Doctor Bob from superior threads once said that a single section of thread moves thru the eye several times before it enters and stays in the thread...and each time it passes thru the eye it is more prone to fraying - therefore the need for an extremely smooth eye that feeds the thread easily.
#8
Super Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Ohio
Posts: 2,148
check to make sure your needle is not rubbing on the hole in the FM foot. I made the hold bigger on mine so that would not happen. It seems that my foot plate has become a little loose so it will shift slightly causing to thread to rub on it.
#10
Yup, agreed. I always use a 90/14 topstitch needle for FMQ, and every now and then even a 100/16 if I'm having issues with fraying or breaking thread. The needle, and therefore the thread, goes through the fabric zillions of times at high speed when we do FMQ. The bigger eye and groove in the topstitch needle give the thread just that teeny bit of extra room as it passes through.
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11-16-2012 12:28 PM