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Sewing Textiles - Sewing: clothes, furnishings, costumes, etc.
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Posted by Doug McLaren on November 5, 2005, 7:34 pm
My wife has a Pfaff 1540 and a Pfaff 6091 sewing machines.
She makes purses and sells them, so she puts a lot of wear and tear on
these machines, and they go into the shop quite a bit. But the shop
takes about three weeks to fix things, and sometimes both machines end
up being out of commission at the same time, so she's without a
machine. (She has other machines, but her purses require strong
machines with a double stitch (?) and a walking foot (?), which the
other machines don't have.)
I'm reasonably good at fixing things, and I've tried to fix her
machines with some limited success. Usually she gets needles broken
inside somewhere, and recently she seems to have screwed up the needle
timing on the 6091.
I can figure stuff out, but general adjustment tends to escape me or
take a very long time, as I don't know how it should be (and I don't
really know how to sew either, so that further complicates things.) A
workshop manual or something for these machines would be most helpful.
Is there one available, perhaps something like what the repair place
would use?
--
Doug McLaren, dougmc@frenzy.com
Great minds think alike. Fools seldom differ.
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Posted by IMS on November 5, 2005, 9:36 pm
On Sun, 06 Nov 2005 00:34:35 GMT, dougmc@frenzy.com (Doug McLaren)
wrote:
show/hide quoted text
>My wife has a Pfaff 1540 and a Pfaff 6091 sewing machines.
>She makes purses and sells them, so she puts a lot of wear and tear on
>these machines, and they go into the shop quite a bit. But the shop
>takes about three weeks to fix things, and sometimes both machines end
>up being out of commission at the same time, so she's without a
>machine. (She has other machines, but her purses require strong
>machines with a double stitch (?) and a walking foot (?), which the
>other machines don't have.)
>I'm reasonably good at fixing things, and I've tried to fix her
>machines with some limited success. Usually she gets needles broken
>inside somewhere, and recently she seems to have screwed up the needle
>timing on the 6091.
>I can figure stuff out, but general adjustment tends to escape me or
>take a very long time, as I don't know how it should be (and I don't
>really know how to sew either, so that further complicates things.) A
>workshop manual or something for these machines would be most helpful.
>Is there one available, perhaps something like what the repair place
>would use?
Thre's an ebay seller who has PFAFF manuals listed regularly, you might
email him/her and see if they have the ones for your model machines.
The seller's userid is msmluckystar
-Irene
--------------
You only live once, but if you do it right, once is enough.=20
--Mae West=20
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Posted by cdnsoldier69 on May 14, 2009, 10:52 pm
cdnsoldier69 had written this in response to
http://www.sewgirls.com/textiles/Repair-manuals-for-Pfaff-6091-and-1540-292-.htm
:
It's all about making sure that the timing is right on between the top and
bottom ends of the sewing maching. As well, you must be sure that the hook
on the bobbin is meeting the needle half-way through the scarf of the
needle right before the upstroke. I'm not sure what it's like on a Pfaff,
but with a JUKI, the timing is easy to adjust by making sure that the two
arrows on the shaft and the belt gear are lined up when the thread lever
is at top center.
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Posted by Who Me? on May 14, 2009, 11:21 pm
"cdnsoldier69" <green.dm@forces.gc.ca wrote in message
show/hide quoted text
> cdnsoldier69 had written this in response to
>
http://www.sewgirls.com/textiles/Repair-manuals-for-Pfaff-6091-and-1540-292-.htm
show/hide quoted text
> :
> It's all about making sure that the timing is right on
> between the top and
> bottom ends of the sewing maching. As well, you must be
> sure that the hook
> on the bobbin is meeting the needle half-way through the
> scarf of the
> needle right before the upstroke. I'm not sure what it's
> like on a Pfaff,
> but with a JUKI, the timing is easy to adjust by making
> sure that the two
> arrows on the shaft and the belt gear are lined up when
> the thread lever
> is at top center.
wow, what timely message from one of the geniuses using
sewgirls.com. do you really think "doug" is still checking
to see if there are answers to his 3+ year old (November 5,
2005) message??? LOL
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>She makes purses and sells them, so she puts a lot of wear and tear on
>these machines, and they go into the shop quite a bit. But the shop
>takes about three weeks to fix things, and sometimes both machines end
>up being out of commission at the same time, so she's without a
>machine. (She has other machines, but her purses require strong
>machines with a double stitch (?) and a walking foot (?), which the
>other machines don't have.)
>I'm reasonably good at fixing things, and I've tried to fix her
>machines with some limited success. Usually she gets needles broken
>inside somewhere, and recently she seems to have screwed up the needle
>timing on the 6091.
>I can figure stuff out, but general adjustment tends to escape me or
>take a very long time, as I don't know how it should be (and I don't
>really know how to sew either, so that further complicates things.) A
>workshop manual or something for these machines would be most helpful.
>Is there one available, perhaps something like what the repair place
>would use?