Play with changing where the needle is in its cycle when you pull the fabric away. I think it works best when the needle is on its way back down, rather than up. I cant remember. It took me a while to figure that out.
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Yea i think the machine is trying to hook a stitch and you catch it mid process. I stopped having that issue when i figured that out. Interestingly i have never heard this mentioned anywhere and i have spent my fair amount of time reading sewing info.interesting I’ll try that, would make sense as it only happens sometimes
Play with changing where the needle is in its cycle when you pull the fabric away. I think it works best when the needle is on its way back down, rather than up. I cant remember. It took me a while to figure that out.
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Most likely yes. Especially if you are on a home machine and not an industrial one. They are not designed to use heavy thread and are not designed to apply adequate top tension. You can work around it though. Easiest is to add an extra wrap somewhere along the thread routing process. Or you can disassemble the top tension adjustment and remove the stop on the side of most tension. That will allow you to tighten it further. You can also get heavier tension springs.Same experience here. Figured that out many years ago and thought it was just a quirk of the machine I had. But the same holds true for other machines.
I have a question. What causes a big mess of knotted thread on the bottom side of the fabric when using heavy duty thread? Does it have to do with thread tension?
Most likely yes. Especially if you are on a home machine and not an industrial one. They are not designed to use heavy thread and are not designed to apply adequate top tension. You can work around it though. Easiest is to add an extra wrap somewhere along the thread routing process. Or you can disassemble the top tension adjustment and remove the stop on the side of most tension. That will allow you to tighten it further. You can also get heavier tension springs.
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Not typically. Putting in bigger thread will automatically make bobbin tension go up because the hole it pulls out of stayed the same size and the thread got bigger.Thanks. Does it also require more tension on the bobbin side?
sometimes after I go back and forth to lock a stitch in I get this tangle of thread. Could somebody help me out with what I’m doing wrong?
Correct. Needle needs to be on the down stroke.I fiddled around with it today and seems like I need to go all the way up and down just a hair