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Roger Feeley
04-02-2020, 3:04 PM
https://sawmillcreek.org/blob:https://sawmillcreek.org/a6de8ab1-ac33-4eb8-aa93-d0331db29abb

Roger Feeley
04-02-2020, 3:16 PM
oops, can't paste an image on an iPad.
429432

The sewing machine rattled the rickety table I had it on. Cast iron saw bed was muuuch better.

julian abram
04-02-2020, 9:19 PM
A stout looking sewing machine. For upholstery work?

Roger Feeley
04-02-2020, 9:32 PM
It’s a Sailrite semi industrial. It’ll go through pretty much anything you can cram under the presser foot. My other machine is a ‘70s vintage Montgomery Wards and the backstitch stopped working. I was going to have todo something and I wanted something that would do leather. It just seemed like everything I wanted sew was right athe capacity of that old machine. So the bride got me this beast. I’m really looking forward to sewing the seats for some Roorkee chairs.

Tom M King
04-02-2020, 9:43 PM
I remember when they came out with those. The first ones looked a bit different than that one. My BIL, who is a cruiser, has one of the first ones in his boat.

Roger Feeley
04-02-2020, 10:00 PM
I remember when they came out with those. The first ones looked a bit different than that one. My BIL, who is a cruiser, has one of the first ones in his boat.

im new to Sailrite and to this class of machine. I was impressed that the machine is so simple. Mine does only straight and zig-zag which is all I need. I was impressed with all the tutorials they offer for all sorts of projects. I was impressed that the machine is designed to be repaired and adjusted by the user.

It’s still a family run company where final assembly and adjustment is done at the last in Indiana.

Tom M King
04-03-2020, 8:05 AM
Some might not know that, with that machine, you can sew with the hand crank if there is no electricity.

Roger Feeley
04-03-2020, 8:54 AM
Some might not know that, with that machine, you can sew with the hand crank if there is no electricity.

There you go! I’m all set for the apocalypse. I’m used to using the wheel to raise the needle to get the fabric out. Never thought of just sewing that way. That wheel is a beast at 7lbs. I guess it helps power through heavy stuff because the motor doesn’t seem like anything special. It may be geared more for torque than speed. All I know is that the machine doesn’t flinch at 9 layers of scrap denim from some old jeans.

Tom M King
04-03-2020, 9:33 AM
We have a couple of industrial sewing machines, for canvas, and sail work. They come in handy for other stuff too.

One, we bought at auction from a place that made cargo parachutes for the military. It was originally a high speed machine, built for the Army, for making tents. It had been geared down, with a much larger wheel, that slowed it down to a little slower than a normal machine. They had been using it to box stitch multiple layers of heavy nylon webbing, where the pieces cross in the cargo nets. It'll sew through anything you put under the foot, without slowing down.

I ordered a manual for it, off ebay, and in the back, it tells how to disable it with a hammer, if you're being overrun by the enemy.

Roger Feeley
04-03-2020, 10:50 AM
Ha! I guess I’m just naive. I would have never thought of disabling a lowly sewing machine. Encryption devices and other hi-tech, yes. But once you mentioned it, it makes sense.

Michael Weber
04-03-2020, 12:09 PM
Great, now I have sewing machine envy.

Jim Becker
04-05-2020, 5:07 PM
Dude, that's a creative way to solve the stability problem and not sew your fingers into the mask because the machine is bouncing around!