Positively My Last Machine (maybe)
#1
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Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Kansas City, Missouri
Posts: 1,040
Positively My Last Machine (maybe)
I have been very good about not purchasing anything for a few months. However since I have several of the Singer 201, 301, 401, 501 and some in the 600 range I was really wanting a Singer 101. Well, one popped up on CL yesterday and I just had to go and take a look. The seller came down $10 from his listed price and sold it to me for $40. I badly need a manual because there are things on this machine that I am not familiar with. You will be able to see some of them from the pictures, like what's with the bottom, what are the screws for above the label, what is the big thing to the left of the spool pin and of course what to do about this wiring mess. Also the round shaped thing that I guess covers the motor and it does twist off but do I need to do anything about it. Many questions.
#3
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Join Date: Oct 2012
Posts: 1,131
I googled "Singer 101 Sewing Machine", and the third hit is a pdf of 54 pages of the original manual, very thorough, but the pictures are dark, as in all of those copied manuals. It is from singerco.com . The first hit was from this quiltingboard.com dated May 5, 2011, also very informative regarding actually using the machine.
#4
#6
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Join Date: Oct 2013
Location: Centralia, WA, USA
Posts: 4,890
You already have the manual info. Class 66 bobbins and regular old 15x1 needles. The bottom is covered. You can pop the two round covers off to grease the gears. It's a gear driven full rotary hook machine kind of like the Singer 201. The screw above the Singer badge holds the motor on.
To me they're a neat design. They were Singer's first electric only sewing machine. Singer didn't make them very many years, I suspect due to manufacturing cost and it really didn't do anything better than Singer's other designs like the 66.
Rodney
I gave mine to my daughter. It makes a really pretty straight stitch.
To me they're a neat design. They were Singer's first electric only sewing machine. Singer didn't make them very many years, I suspect due to manufacturing cost and it really didn't do anything better than Singer's other designs like the 66.
Rodney
I gave mine to my daughter. It makes a really pretty straight stitch.
#7
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Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Kansas City, Missouri
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FREE DOWNLOAD HERE>
http://www.singerco.com/support/inst...man_model_no=1
http://www.singerco.com/support/inst...man_model_no=1
#8
You have your work cut out for you. They are irresistible though.
Forgive me for being a smarty pants but that is your last machine... until the next gem comes along!!
Ask me how I know.
Ask me how I know.
#10
Looking through the singerco manual, I still can't figure out what the big thing next to the spool pin is. My guess would be to be able to get to the gears inside that area. There is also an older 1921 manual at http://www.sil.si.edu/DigitalCollect...2682/index.htm Somewhere on the Smithsonian site there are five pages of thirty-six of the adjuster's manual for the 101, but can't find it now. Maybe put 1833 in place of the 2682 in the above link. They scanned the cover pages and so doesn't have really any useful information in what was scanned.
Sewbeadit - thank you, for guessing correctly about the stitch length dial. I wondered about that, too. Interestingly, when I looked at the PDF regarding that dial the manual states, "This disc is marked with arbitrary numbers, ranging from 6 to 30" and "(The numerals do not denote the number of stitches to the inch)"
Janey - Neat people never make the exciting discoveries I do.
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