A new thing to check when your tension goes wonky
#1
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Cedar Falls, IA
Posts: 923
A new thing to check when your tension goes wonky
This is a funny story, or at least it is now! I have a Handiquilter Sweet 16. Some people have problems with adjusting the tension, but I am quite competent in adjusting it for a nice stitch on front and back no matter what thread I decide to use. I am quilting a baby quilt, and suddenly the tension goes weird. Umm. It was fine to start, then went wonky. I rip out the bad stitches and check the bobbin thread for a bit of fluff. Nothing there, but I oiled the bobbin race and checked the tension on a scrap sandwich. Looks good so I start on my quilt again. I get a nice amount done, then weird things again. More ripping stitches out, more checking the entire thread path, etc. This happened four times before I realized my thread was looped around itself on the spool! Not on the spindle, but a slip loop around the spool itself. It was a fine thread, light gray, and I didn't notice it! I wasted so much time, ripped out feet of stitching, threw away what was probably a good needle, but at least I added one other thing to check when my tensions goes weird. I finished the rest of the background stitching and now I am on to the central design without any more problems.
What a silly thing to have happen.
Pam
What a silly thing to have happen.
Pam
#2
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2015
Location: Rosemere, Quebec, Canada
Posts: 322
Netting for thread spools helps a lot to control flow of thread. There is also a product called WonderFil WonderGuard for smaller spools. I use one or the other whenever I'm using a fine thread.
Now you'll be on the look-out, Pam. We learn something new almost every day, don't we?
Now you'll be on the look-out, Pam. We learn something new almost every day, don't we?
#3
Power Poster
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 17,827
Those kind of things are frustrating ... but great learning tools!
You'll never have that problem again!!
Just like on my DSM when I was having problems and could never understand. Would thread and re-thread top and bottom. Work fine and then ................. arrgghhhhhh
Turned out that the thread was sometimes catching in the little notch on the edge of the spool, and it would take a few revolutions before that happened each time.
I now mostly use Aurifil .... no notches, but at times there is a rough spot on the edge of the spool that the thread will catch on .....
They all keep our lives interesting!!
You'll never have that problem again!!
Just like on my DSM when I was having problems and could never understand. Would thread and re-thread top and bottom. Work fine and then ................. arrgghhhhhh
Turned out that the thread was sometimes catching in the little notch on the edge of the spool, and it would take a few revolutions before that happened each time.
I now mostly use Aurifil .... no notches, but at times there is a rough spot on the edge of the spool that the thread will catch on .....
They all keep our lives interesting!!
#4
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2016
Posts: 548
I was having tension problems on my janome, I finally got a $15 dollar thread holder and when I use that machine it lives on the right side of me with my thread and my tension does so much better! My janome is a great machine but it had the thread on its side almost in the middle of the machine. I don't think it allows for it to "flow" off the spool very well that way. My older singer has the thread post on the far right of the machine upright and it always seems to work well that way.
#5
Power Poster
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 17,827
Austinite .... My Janome had the thread laying on its side too. For the most part I did not have problems. Mine had an extra hole, in the horizontal thread holder area. With the accessories, there was a plastic spool holder that fit into that hole, to allow for the spool to sit upright. Check and see if your machine has that hole, and you can eliminate the thread stand next to your machine.
#6
Thread is wound on the spool two ways and depending on how it is wound will dictate whether you put it on a vertical or horizontal spool. If the thread is wound on the spool in a round and round (straight wound or stacked) fashion use a vertical spool. If the thread is wound in a cris cross fashion then use a horizontal spool or a thread holder so the thread comes off the top of the spool when being unwound. My older machines only have a vertical spool spindle but I think when they were made thread only came wound in straight wound fashion.
Here's what I'm talking about. https://auribuzz.wordpress.com/2016/...urifil-spools/
Here's what I'm talking about. https://auribuzz.wordpress.com/2016/...urifil-spools/
#9
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Cedar Falls, IA
Posts: 923
Folks, I literally had a loop of thread around my spool when I put it on the spindle. Nothing but lack of stupidity and watching what I was doing would have helped. I just got a laugh at how I tried all these traditional things, wasted over an hour, and it was just sheer stupidity. I thought others would get a laugh out of it, not take it seriously.
Pam
Pam
#10
Super Member
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Texas
Posts: 2,369
[QUOTE=QuiltE;7735154]Those kind of things are frustrating ... but great learning tools!
You'll never have that problem again!!
>>>>Turned out that the thread was sometimes catching in the little notch on the edge of the spool, and it would take a few revolutions before that happened each time.
You'll never have that problem again!!
>>>>Turned out that the thread was sometimes catching in the little notch on the edge of the spool, and it would take a few revolutions before that happened each time.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
DebQuilter50
Main
72
01-18-2021 07:22 AM
n2scraplvr
Pictures
80
09-27-2011 08:21 PM