On Mon, 11 Jun 2012 11:42:57 -0400, Norminn <
nor...@earthlink.net>
wrote:
Thanks everyone who replied.
>> try calling some local sewing machine repair places. they might sell
>> youu one cheap off a junk machine
>
>Ebay has loads and loads of sewing machines and parts.
I had already looked. This is an unusual plug. I said what ebay had,
just the one pedal/cord for $35 and the one cord for 15, but I still
need to know how to wire the $15 cord, which is what my question was.
> Not willing to
>pay $34 for a machine?
I don't even know yet if the machine works. Even though they rarely
break, they must break sometimes. In fact I have a very old machine
that breaks needles, even when not threaded. . (I did turn this one
manually and the needle goes down and up without breaking.)
> Zounds! What do you plan to do with it? If you
I've made 3 things in the last 40 years. Mostly I just repair things.
But in addition to the machine that breaks needles, I have two other
machines, one is a White Rotary about 50 years old that wasn't
designed to do zigzag but otherwise works fine. And the other is a
very heavy electronic machine with lots of built in special stitches,
and a special monogrram accessory, and some other stuff, which a woman
on Freecycle gave me when she moved to Oregon. She said it only
worked sometimes, and that the repair cost was in the hundreds of
dollars. ( She gave me a serger too, which I gave to a friend of a
friend with an uphostery shop) For my machine, she also couldn't
find the foot pedal. It was a pneumatic pedal, which sucked on a tube
in the machine. That I could test, by putting a hose on the tube and
sucking with my mouth. It would be hard to do that for 30 minutes, so
I bought a pedal for about 25 dollars.
I don't know if this will work when I want to use it. Plus it's very
heavy.
>are going for no-cost, place an ad in Freecycle. One problem is that
>Singer machines last forever, so getting a good machine or spare part at
>such a low cost might be iffy. I would also try a Singer dealer, as it
>is likely they have scavenged all kinds of parts. I got my machine
>around 1968; it spent 10 years in a damp basement and still sews like a
>champ.
Exactly. I'm reluctant to go to a shop just to test the machine and
then when it works, refuse to pay the 30 dollars he wants. Except I
would do that at the shop where I bought the last pedal. He's far
away. In the time it takes me to get there, I could use jumper
wires to wire up a test pedal, if I knew how the pedal./cord was
wired.
Once it's running. I could put some little tubes with wires soldered
to them around the machines pins, put vaseline on the opening in the
machine, and then put pc-7 epoxee round the little tubes and the
wires. Then I would have my own plug that fits. Becaue of the
vaseline, it might even be removeable