Very educational. Thank you My thread kept popping after I changed the needle. I did not put it back in right and now knowing about the flat side of the needle and how it operates helped me and now it works well.
I don't think I've had to change the needle before, but wasnt worried because I thought it would be like my domestic Singer... 😂 I don't know where my user manual is, so thanks for saving me! ❤
i accidentally bought regular needles the ones with a flat side on top instead of the industrial ones that are round on top like the one you are using on this video. can i still use those regular needles or will it hurt the machine some how.
I bought a jack industrial machine for my mom who is a seasoned sewer for 32 years with a singer home machine. But new with this type of machinery. While teaching her the mechanism I accidentally broke the needle and then install a fresh one completely wrong way. Left side right and right to left. And then that machine started the drama! Machine works nicely for 50 to 60 stitches on cotton then thread mysteriously breaks, on satin or chiffon fabric needle can't even make a single stitch, just slips away at the beginning...! And if I placed multiple layers of any fabric the cotton thread simply refuses to bind! I thought this might be the problem with thread tensioner and trying multi million times with that poor guy and failed to make any progress. It was so much heart breaking situation for me that I started to regret the buying decision. Then while surfing the web I saw your video and close up shots of this type of industrial needle. And all on a sudden everything becomes clear to me and I quickly went to check my previous setting and found that stupid mistake instantly. Now that machine works Alhamdulillah so nicely that it felt like it has never been faulty before. Thank you sir for your video and sorry to wrote all of this but I just wanted to let you guys know how a silly mistake can lead to a earth shattering situation.
Most industrial machines (read all) that I have seen have the needle facing this way, but do you know of any exceptions to this rule? Or does this hold for practically any industrial machine?
Very educational. Thank you
My thread kept popping after I changed the needle. I did not put it back in right and now knowing about the flat side of the needle and how it operates helped me and now it works well.
Thank you. Very clearly explained in a way I should remember forever. Short and to the point the way all videos should be.
Thank you very very much for your help, you are a great teacher, keep up with your teaching skills is amazing. Thanks again
Very good explanation! Thank you for sharing your expertise!
Excellent video.
Very informative and precise
Thank you very much 🙏
Hello! Thanks for showing the correct way to do it.
Blessings
I don't think I've had to change the needle before, but wasnt worried because I thought it would be like my domestic Singer... 😂 I don't know where my user manual is, so thanks for saving me! ❤
Thanks so much geting Close really helped
I have that same set of tweezers.
Except I use them for tiny surface mount electronic components.
i accidentally bought regular needles the ones with a flat side on top instead of the industrial ones that are round on top like the one you are using on this video. can i still use those regular needles or will it hurt the machine some how.
I have an industrial Serger (Juki) that uses 100/16 needles. Does the scooped out section of the needle face forwards or face backwards?
I hate to be this way, but the only video that was explained by a man was a lot more understandable from the start.
Simple rule I heard, the kerf should always face the bobbin.
I bought a jack industrial machine for my mom who is a seasoned sewer for 32 years with a singer home machine. But new with this type of machinery. While teaching her the mechanism I accidentally broke the needle and then install a fresh one completely wrong way. Left side right and right to left. And then that machine started the drama! Machine works nicely for 50 to 60 stitches on cotton then thread mysteriously breaks, on satin or chiffon fabric needle can't even make a single stitch, just slips away at the beginning...! And if I placed multiple layers of any fabric the cotton thread simply refuses to bind! I thought this might be the problem with thread tensioner and trying multi million times with that poor guy and failed to make any progress. It was so much heart breaking situation for me that I started to regret the buying decision. Then while surfing the web I saw your video and close up shots of this type of industrial needle. And all on a sudden everything becomes clear to me and I quickly went to check my previous setting and found that stupid mistake instantly. Now that machine works Alhamdulillah so nicely that it felt like it has never been faulty before. Thank you sir for your video and sorry to wrote all of this but I just wanted to let you guys know how a silly mistake can lead to a earth shattering situation.
Most industrial machines (read all) that I have seen have the needle facing this way, but do you know of any exceptions to this rule? Or does this hold for practically any industrial machine?
Thank you!!!!
You would have thought they would put a flat side like standard machines to avoid confusion.
Traducere
dear master please tell me how much you earn dollars per month? I myself live in Russia, I am very interested !!
I am a visual girly girl. Please just show x& point ...talking too much I can't remember
U r talking too mutch. u could tell us in 6 seconds ONLY
Doesn’t work 😠