Replacement for awful Bernina
#1
Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2023
Posts: 80
I have sewn for almost 50 years, mainly garments and home decor, but about 5 years ago I switched to quilting. I saved and saved and eventually purchased a Bernina 770. Unfortunately, it has been a lemon from the very start with constant problems that take hours to figure out, if that’s even possible.
Anyway, I am seriously looking for a different non-Bernina machine. I don’t need embroidery, but the capacity to crosshatch and do free motion quilting is very important. Since I do invisible machine appliqué, I need a machine where you can adjust stitch width to 0.7 and stitch length to 0.5. Of course, the biggest requirement is reliability! I am so tired of my sickly Bernina!
I certainly can’t afford another machine at Bernina’s price. That was supposed to be my forever machine. But all referrals are greatly appreciated!
Anyway, I am seriously looking for a different non-Bernina machine. I don’t need embroidery, but the capacity to crosshatch and do free motion quilting is very important. Since I do invisible machine appliqué, I need a machine where you can adjust stitch width to 0.7 and stitch length to 0.5. Of course, the biggest requirement is reliability! I am so tired of my sickly Bernina!
I certainly can’t afford another machine at Bernina’s price. That was supposed to be my forever machine. But all referrals are greatly appreciated!
Last edited by LadyAg77; 10-27-2024 at 10:41 AM.
#2
Power Poster
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 41,610
Sorry you got a lemon! I love my little workhorse Bernina 440 but I have heard that others have had problems with the newer models. I have quilting friends that like the Pfaff machines but I don’t know there price range.
#3
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: British Columbia
Posts: 2,640
If you want a machine built to last, look into Janome. If being the number one brand in school sewing programs isn't a testament to longevity, then what. Janome also makes a variety of machines with various functions so shop for what you want. There is definitely one to meet your criteria and you'll certainly get other features you didn't realize were so useful. No, I'm not affiliated, just a happy owner.
#5
Power Poster
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Southern USA
Posts: 17,810
Bernina seems to be going down in quality. Several of my guild members have the newer Berninas and all have complained they are not like the older ones, said the new ones are too fussy and will mess up in a second. One member bought the newest $25K one. She already regrets it. It's been in the shop longer then she has gotten to sew on it. She is sewing on her Juki waiting for the machine once again to get out of the shop. She knows she has lost money if she tries to sell it. Hoping that the repairs will solve the problems.
I use Juki 2010 TL for piecing and quilting. I use old Bernina for decorative stitches and Brother for embroidery if I ever do that again.
I use Juki 2010 TL for piecing and quilting. I use old Bernina for decorative stitches and Brother for embroidery if I ever do that again.
#6
Super Member
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 1,152
Anyway, I am seriously looking for a different non-Bernina machine. I don’t need embroidery, but the capacity to crosshatch and do free motion quilting is very important. Since I do invisible machine appliqué, I need a machine where you can adjust stitch width to 0.7 and stitch length to 0.5.
For decent throat for FMQ, you're likely looking at either the Janome 6700 or 9850 (the Continentals are HUGE, and the M7 doesn't have the best reputation), or the Juki HZL-NX7, DX-3000 or DX-4000.
#7
Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2023
Posts: 80
If you want a machine built to last, look into Janome. If being the number one brand in school sewing programs isn't a testament to longevity, then what. Janome also makes a variety of machines with various functions so shop for what you want. There is definitely one to meet your criteria and you'll certainly get other features you didn't realize were so useful. No, I'm not affiliated, just a happy owner.
#8
Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2023
Posts: 80
Bernina seems to be going down in quality. Several of my guild members have the newer Berninas and all have complained they are not like the older ones, said the new ones are too fussy and will mess up in a second. One member bought the newest $25K one. She already regrets it. It's been in the shop longer then she has gotten to sew on it. She is sewing on her Juki waiting for the machine once again to get out of the shop. She knows she has lost money if she tries to sell it. Hoping that the repairs will solve the problems.
I use Juki 2010 TL for piecing and quilting. I use old Bernina for decorative stitches and Brother for embroidery if I ever do that again.
I use Juki 2010 TL for piecing and quilting. I use old Bernina for decorative stitches and Brother for embroidery if I ever do that again.
#9
Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2023
Posts: 80
I have no affiliation with them, but the same shop (Gigi's Fabric Shop) in Florida sells both Janome and Juki, either of which would be my recommendation if either brand has a machine that meets your needs. Most Janome models are going to be 9mm machines; Juki tops out at 7mm stitch width. I would consider reaching out to them, either via JukiJunkies.com or JanomeJunkies.com and ask which models of each brand have crosshatch and the small stitch width/length you mention.
For decent throat for FMQ, you're likely looking at either the Janome 6700 or 9850 (the Continentals are HUGE, and the M7 doesn't have the best reputation), or the Juki HZL-NX7, DX-3000 or DX-4000.
For decent throat for FMQ, you're likely looking at either the Janome 6700 or 9850 (the Continentals are HUGE, and the M7 doesn't have the best reputation), or the Juki HZL-NX7, DX-3000 or DX-4000.
Thanks for the information about the user groups and the specific models. I will definitely check out all of them.

