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  • Vintage Sewing Machine Shop.....Come on in and sit a spell

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    Old 07-07-2011, 07:07 AM
      #19251  
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    There's quite a bit of information by Damascusannie right under the photo. She knows a LOT about National machines!!
    Originally Posted by SewExtreme
    Found a machine like this in a consignment store. Does anyone know anything about a Coronado? I like the turn wheel on it for some silly reason. The person is asking $75 but without me trying to dicker the price she lowered it to $50. It has the cabinet also like the one in the photo. Any info would be much appreciated! :-D

    http://ths.gardenweb.com/forums/load...134120239.html
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    Old 07-07-2011, 07:19 AM
      #19252  
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    Sometimes I wish we could just click a "like" button!
    Originally Posted by miriam
    Originally Posted by jtapp9
    So, do you ever really get a perfect tension on the old machines? I have a black 301 that I LUV. I use it but the tension has always been a "tad" off. There is always a tiny bit showing either top or bottom. And my top tension will be awful if I do anything other than between 0-1

    I have a tan 301 that i'm not so in love with. Doesn't sound the same as the black one and I just can't bond with it yet. I can NOT get the tension even remotely good on this one. It's "ok" but not right. I'm tempted to pop it in the cabinet and use it just to be using it and hoping it works out some on it's own. I'm seriously thiking of sending it to Billy in a few months for a makeover. I love red. Maybe I would LUV it in red :)

    Now I know why I would always hear my mom bit*hing about the tension :oops:
    If you can assemble a quilt you can do this: I would take the whole thing apart - yup take it apart. No kids. No pets. No DH. 'o/ Keep a muffin pan around and put the parts in it in order as you take it off. Use the tension diagram in the manual. A lot of the old manuals have instructions to take the tension apart and put it back together. (The first time I did one I was very nervous - I shook the whole time.) Just go slow - look at it carefully as you go. Clean EVERYTHING real good and put it back together according to the diagram. I amaze myself every time I do one. I don't even need the diagram anymore. I just routinely clean the tension when I get an old machine. Dried up oil can cause drag and rust or burrs can break threads - dust bunnies need to come out all makes the tension messed.. Hey if nothing else you can run some dental floss through there and pick up some of it. I just like the feel of it when I've taken it apart and cleaned it. Keep another machine right next to you so you can look at it as you reassemble. Here is an expanded diagram. It is the only one I know of with the picture of the pin. It is from sewclassic's catalog - I hope Jenny doesn't mind. http://shop.sew-classic.com/Tension-...572-125417.htm I posted it a couple pages back as well. If it doesn't go back together right take it apart and do it again. Pay attention to how that spring goes when you take it apart and in the diagram and in the other machine you have next to you. You can do this. You have made quilts. You have cooked. Go slow and don't worry it has been done before. If it is any help the service manual has about the same instructions as the owner's manual. They must have meant for the owner to take that tension apart on occasion. I do have one that doesn't work. It needs some adjustment on the presser lever. I haven't done that - the machine isn't turning and needs a total spa treatment some time.
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    Old 07-07-2011, 07:24 AM
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    Originally Posted by BoJangles
    Originally Posted by SerendipiD
    I am very new here,

    Now, I have the problem of... my plastic machines just don't give me the satisfaction that this one does - so I'd love to find an old machine that does a zig-zag (love the look of the 301s, but I don't think they do it). Does anyone have any recommendations for me?

    THanks!
    D~
    SerendipiD, welcome aboard! You did a great job on the Model 15-91? I can't tell for sure, but the picture looks like maybe a potted motor, which means a 15-91!

    Nancy
    THank you. :) Yes, it is a potted motor - a 15-91. I just love that machine. :)

    D~
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    Old 07-07-2011, 07:24 AM
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    Originally Posted by hootnannie
    I'm always looking at CL and wish I could afford this beauty. I've not seen a cabinet like this before... gorgeous!!
    http://newyork.craigslist.org/lgi/atq/2472363807.html
    Wow...I love that cabinet!!!
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    Old 07-07-2011, 07:30 AM
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    Originally Posted by jtapp9
    So, do you ever really get a perfect tension on the old machines? I have a black 301 that I LUV. I use it but the tension has always been a "tad" off. There is always a tiny bit showing either top or bottom. And my top tension will be awful if I do anything other than between 0-1

    I have a tan 301 that i'm not so in love with. Doesn't sound the same as the black one and I just can't bond with it yet. I can NOT get the tension even remotely good on this one. It's "ok" but not right. I'm tempted to pop it in the cabinet and use it just to be using it and hoping it works out some on it's own. I'm seriously thiking of sending it to Billy in a few months for a makeover. I love red. Maybe I would LUV it in red :)

    Now I know why I would always hear my mom bit*hing about the tension :oops:
    Julie, my 301 is also weird about its tension. We put a brand new tensioner on it when I got it, because the old one was just dead. Now I do have to set the tension down between 0-1, and it's still a little tight. I tightened up the bobbin tension some, and that helped.
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    Old 07-07-2011, 07:33 AM
      #19256  
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    Originally Posted by SewExtreme
    Found a machine like this in a consignment store. Does anyone know anything about a Coronado? I like the turn wheel on it for some silly reason. The person is asking $75 but without me trying to dicker the price she lowered it to $50. It has the cabinet also like the one in the photo. Any info would be much appreciated! :-D

    http://ths.gardenweb.com/forums/load...134120239.html
    Linda, I think that's a badged White...there were a couple for sale on shopgoodwill.com recently, and they both had different names, but looked exactly like a White that was on there too. My "edumacated" guess!! :thumbup:
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    Old 07-07-2011, 07:43 AM
      #19257  
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    Originally Posted by BoJangles
    Originally Posted by jljack
    Not long ago the question of when the first FW 221s came out was asked. I was just looking at the serial number records, and it looks like the first run started Oct 1933. For 2 years before that, at least, there are no 221s listed.
    Janice the first FW's were introduced a the Chicago World's Fair in 1933 - so 1933 would be the first run of the FW series! I'd love to find one of the first!

    Nancy
    Nancy, there is one on eBay right now, but he's asking BIG $$ for it!! And it's a very early one. He knows it and put that in the ad. That's why I looked back for 2 years to verify his claim.
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    Old 07-07-2011, 08:17 AM
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    Originally Posted by BoJangles
    Originally Posted by quiltdoctor
    Originally Posted by BoJangles
    Originally Posted by quiltdoctor
    You are one lucky lady!! I'd like to see a picture of the cabinet of your Singer 15-88. Looks like one I just recently bought.

    Texas Jan
    Here you go! My 'go to' machine. He does it all, plus has reverse!

    Nancy


    Yep that is the one. Mine was electrified. I can't see any sign by way of scratches or use marks that my cabinet ever was completely outfitted to be a treadle machine. She was made in 1948 (my birth year) AH701263. She has had quite a bit of use. I will restore the cabinet if it ever cools down enough here in Texas. Here are her before pictures. I paid $50.00 for her in a garage sale.

    Texas Jan
    Yep, Texas Jan, that is the same cabinet. I doubt it was ever a treadle cabinet. That straight leg cabinet was (I think) about the last model cabinet used for a treadle so it makes sense it was also used with the 15-90 and 15-91. Remember, my 15-88 is a 1939 model! I love those 15's!

    Monica, Vintagemotiff, also has a straight leg cabinet - although, I am not sure which machine came with it, but hers is a treadle!

    Nancy
    Yes, I have a straight-leg cabinet. I have had many machine heads reside in the cabinet. First, the machine that came with the cabinet, Singer 15GB168, and then the Singer 201. After that, I made the modification to hold the National Two Spools. And now, it holds my Singer 328K, Hank the Tank.

    I will post a photo of a Singer 15GB168 in the photo thread. Yes, there is such a thing as a 15GB168; the machine has a plate with this id. And the machine has the RAF decals. I forgot about this machine. It has pretty decals, but I'm not attracted to this machine as I'm to my others.
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    Old 07-07-2011, 09:57 AM
      #19259  
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    I do have a question about my 15-91...

    THe machine was purchased off of Craigslist and came with 2 bobbins - one metal and one plastic. The metal one works perfectly, but the plastic one is a hair too narrow, so it gets stuck in the bobbin winder when the foot presses down. My metal bobbin only has one hole in it and then the notch for the bobbin winder to fit into. The manual states that the machine takes 15 class bobbins, but all of the ones I see for sale have more holes in them than the one I have. Are those still the correct bobbins for this machine? Or do I need to be looking for bobbins with the one hole. Sorry if the question is confusing.

    D~
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    Old 07-07-2011, 10:41 AM
      #19260  
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    New description for sewing machine attachments found on Craigslist: "feety spindly extra things". I read it twice to figure out what was being described.

    Tommie
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