Standalone Bobbin Winders
#1
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 501
A guild member asked for recommendations for standalone bobbin winders. I have a nice one I like but it won't wind plastic bobbins, and she wants to wind both metal and plastic bobbins.
Anyone out there got a recommendation for her?
Anyone out there got a recommendation for her?
#2
Super Member
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Chula Vista CA
Posts: 7,428
I bought the Singer Bobbin winder many years ago. It runs on batteries and plugs in if preferred. It works well for my Singer 15-91, Featherweight, & Janome MC6600P bobbins but not my Viking. I bought it on sale at Joann's at a price that I couldn't pass up. It's nice to have when I forget to wind bobbins before I start a project.
The other day I watched a video on YouTube of a fellow showing his bobbin winder - it looked like mine but it was a different brand and you could change out the bobbin pin for different bobbins. I thought it was a great idea but I'm not in the market for a new one so didn't make any notes.
The other day I watched a video on YouTube of a fellow showing his bobbin winder - it looked like mine but it was a different brand and you could change out the bobbin pin for different bobbins. I thought it was a great idea but I'm not in the market for a new one so didn't make any notes.
Last edited by quiltingcandy; 08-16-2024 at 02:29 PM.
#4
Member
Join Date: Sep 2020
Location: OH-IO
Posts: 83
I have a Sidewinder bobbin winder that I stole from my mother
. My Bernina uses the giant bobbins (which I love), but I don't have a lot of them. If I have left over thread that I am not going to use soon, such as green, purple or yellow, I will use the Sidewinder to move that thread to a smaller plastic or metal bobbin from an older machine. Then, when needed, I can wind the thread from the small bobbin back onto a Bernina bobbin. Now infrequently used thread is not taking up valuable bobbin space.
. My Bernina uses the giant bobbins (which I love), but I don't have a lot of them. If I have left over thread that I am not going to use soon, such as green, purple or yellow, I will use the Sidewinder to move that thread to a smaller plastic or metal bobbin from an older machine. Then, when needed, I can wind the thread from the small bobbin back onto a Bernina bobbin. Now infrequently used thread is not taking up valuable bobbin space.
#6
Super Member
Join Date: Jul 2019
Location: northern minnesota
Posts: 2,480
I use my sidewinder deluxe for my long arm. Mine has a power cord and it has worked just fine for me for 12 plus years. My Bernina's really have good on-board bobbin winders that I love. My Viking onboard bobbin winders were a bit touchier to wind.
#7
Power Poster
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Southern USA
Posts: 17,810
I have the older model of the Sidewinder. I took took it apart from the base and added a big weight in the bottom, nothing inside it so there is lots of room. Now it doesn't tip over like it use to when winding and seems to wind better.
the weight is a chunk of metal I found in my husband's shop. It was about the size of a golf ball and heavier then it looked.
the weight is a chunk of metal I found in my husband's shop. It was about the size of a golf ball and heavier then it looked.

