Had a brief panic attack yesterday...
#12
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Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Chapel Hill
Posts: 1,086
Originally Posted by libertykm
Ok....here is a dumb question. I'm a new quilter. How do you know which is the top thread tension. I have a Brother and it is set at 3.5 and 2.5. Is this wrong or right. Help.
When I got the bird's nest last night it was because the thread went from the spool to the needle and I skipped all of the steps in between that would have controlled the tension. Not enough caffeine apparently.
Oh - and I lean towards placing the blame on Gus whenever possible, or the Corgis - but last night was all me. And he really is pretty good about not messing with settings.
Cheers, K
#14
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Join Date: May 2010
Location: Round Rock,Texas
Posts: 6,135
I do that sometimes when I'm using my Viking. Then I recall
that I didn't thread the bobbin area correctly. It makes the most spectacular thread barfs. grrrrr
Most of my machines have a separate bobbin case, the Viking is a drop in bobbin.
that I didn't thread the bobbin area correctly. It makes the most spectacular thread barfs. grrrrr
Most of my machines have a separate bobbin case, the Viking is a drop in bobbin.
#16
If you have your machine book it should explain it . I have 2 Brothers also that I piece with & the book instructions aren't the best but they aren't too bad at explaining things.
uote=libertykm]Ok....here is a dumb question. I'm a new quilter. How do you know which is the top thread tension. I have a Brother and it is set at 3.5 and 2.5. Is this wrong or right. Help.[/quote]
uote=libertykm]Ok....here is a dumb question. I'm a new quilter. How do you know which is the top thread tension. I have a Brother and it is set at 3.5 and 2.5. Is this wrong or right. Help.[/quote]
#17
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Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Northern Minnesota
Posts: 3
Here's one for you. I have owned a Janome 9500 for around 5 years and only recently started having difficulty with it. Took it to my local dealer (50 miles away) and they said I needed a new mother board for big $$$. Called the shop where I purchased it, found out it was still warranted and got the repairs done there. Didn't touch it for 3 months and had similar problems again. Took it back (120 miles away) and found out I had the wrong bobbin and it wasn't threaded correctly! Did get a nice lunch out with my husband while waiting for the "repairs" to be done, though.
#18
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Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Chapel Hill
Posts: 1,086
I was having snarling problems with my Singer a few years ago. Looked at the bobbin and learned that the millimeters difference and being concave (convex? can't remember the proper direction) versus flat really did make a huge difference in how the machine worked. Of course, I wasn't smart enough to toss or at least mark the ones that don't work, so I had to do a test run last time I pulled out that machine.
Cheers, K
Cheers, K
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