When the son lie along a seam in place as they are calculated without hesitation, without wrinkles, no loops, no excess wire on the top or bottom, you have balanced the tension sewing machine.
But the tension is messed up bad. You can feel that every time you sew the son wasted.
Perhaps the most common user complaints sewing machine not to the quality and course of their tension.
Another little person is under the needle plate of your sewing machine. Or wire may wrinkle up into little balls on top of the fabric.
Problems with the tension sewing machine can be caused by many different things.
Check the spring tension of any dirt or lint that may have accumulated in it and clean it. You may put your sewing machine a thousand times, but if the thread has missed a guide or ride along the crest of the voltage records, you have problems.
Dirt, dirt, grime and lint can cause the system to ruin.
Steep, uneven surfaces, burrs and rust can spoil the tension.
Loosely wound edges, a touch of evil, blunt needles, and, of course, malfunctions can produce voltage problems.
The voltage must be set correctly to produce points with the upper and lower wire locked together in the middle of the fabric. When you look at the seam of the top, you should see a steady stream of wire and also with small holes in the fabric. When you take the cloth, you should see exactly the same quality of the stitching, as you saw from the top. Points must be tight and there are more threads from the top or bottom.
What I do not want to see are the loops of wire, wire tails together, they have gobs of thread ugly, puckers, missed stitches, stitching, or other problems.
Thus, when properly adjusted, the upper and lower thread tensions are treated to produce proper points. There should be wire.
Standing at the top of the sewing machine is an imaginary person. You can call people little or gnome or elf. Pull the thread at the top. Above all, the sewer can sew along thinking everything is fine, which cry of anguish when you turn the cloth to see the tangled mass of ugly child. Everyone is pulling the cables.
The stronger you get is more than most. If the man on top, pulls stronger than the one below, will wrinkle slightly, it wobbles, or balls of yarn at the top of the canvas. If the child at the bottom becomes stronger, you will see groups of child caught in the web.
Only when they get too, is a correct approach, with little child. Only then can see the tension balanced.
Remember that your goal is to provide the same voltage or the son of equal top and bottom.
Start your corrective efforts by re-threading the upper thread.
Be aware and careful that everything is correct. Remember to lift the presser foot while threading. Do not trust anything that might hang the wire. Make sure no lint or dirt stuck between a dirty tension discs. Be wary of tough times. When you get to the needle and gently pull the two or three inches son. In addition, the thread smoothly.
Now falls the foot and repeat the test. Is there more resistance? There should be.
Take off your can. Is the wire wound uniformly? It should be.
Put it back in its cradle. Threading is often a problem. Slide the thread under the tension spring
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