Help with identifying, threading and using what could be a FW?
#21
Linda K, you are so right about being lucky to have knowledgeable experts around you. I would love to learn from ppl local to me. I feel I am already learning so much from what is available online. If anyone happens to know of such a person or group of people in the Montreal, QC area, please let me know.
#22
I did a search for you and found a really useful site: http://www.singer-featherweight.com/ and one of the tips he states, and I use and teach my pupils to do is to use a "thread catcher"
Q: How can I avoid thread jams around the bobbin area?
A: Best prevention is to use a 'thread catcher' or 'anchor cloth'. It is called by different names. It is just the practice of always running off onto a scrap of cloth when you finish a seam and then start the next seam from the scrap. The practice saves thread as well as frustration. It takes a little while to get used to always running off onto the scrap but well worth the effort."
This page tells you all about them, and how useful they are! http://quiltville.blogspot.com/2005/...-and-hows.html I love Bonnie Hunters site and she gives such wonderful advice and patterns all FREE!
I adore your machine and am green with envy, do let us know how you get on.
Q: How can I avoid thread jams around the bobbin area?
A: Best prevention is to use a 'thread catcher' or 'anchor cloth'. It is called by different names. It is just the practice of always running off onto a scrap of cloth when you finish a seam and then start the next seam from the scrap. The practice saves thread as well as frustration. It takes a little while to get used to always running off onto the scrap but well worth the effort."
This page tells you all about them, and how useful they are! http://quiltville.blogspot.com/2005/...-and-hows.html I love Bonnie Hunters site and she gives such wonderful advice and patterns all FREE!
I adore your machine and am green with envy, do let us know how you get on.
#23
Super Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Round Rock,Texas
Posts: 6,135
"Q: How can I avoid thread jams around the bobbin area?"
NEVER turn the hand wheel backwards, that's what causes the thread jams in the bobbin area. They are a chore to get all the thread out. I have a black Singer 301 and I got a thread out from behind the bobbin case base and it was about 2" long; my machine works so much better now.
NEVER turn the hand wheel backwards, that's what causes the thread jams in the bobbin area. They are a chore to get all the thread out. I have a black Singer 301 and I got a thread out from behind the bobbin case base and it was about 2" long; my machine works so much better now.
#24
The needle seems to be placed correctly, it is not threaded from front to back but from left to right... and right now the thread seems to run smootly, as far as the top thread is concerned...
When I pull the wheel towards me, the bobbin case rotates towards me pretty smoothly too. Only the top thread gets tangled around the bobbin and the bobbin case instead of picking up the bobbin thread. Gah.
Yup, it is rather frustrating! I hope to find a solution and to turn this machine into something I can use.
When I pull the wheel towards me, the bobbin case rotates towards me pretty smoothly too. Only the top thread gets tangled around the bobbin and the bobbin case instead of picking up the bobbin thread. Gah.
Yup, it is rather frustrating! I hope to find a solution and to turn this machine into something I can use.
#27
You do have a featherweight and the bobbin case is the correct one. Don't give up...you will get it working properly. Check your bobbin and bobbin case for any rough areas that might be causing the thread to snag.
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dstclaire
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01-03-2018 07:25 PM