*How Many Treadles Are Too Many? Post #3 on this topic.
After a long cozy chat about this machine, you will find videos showing how to thread the upper thread and the bobbin. Read on down or just scroll down to the familiar YouTube windows.
Best guess on the date: 1878 or 1879, based on interpolating from other people's serial numbers with known sales dates. |
I look at lots of sewing machines online, just as eye candy mostly. CraigsList and coffee in the mornings. Shopgoodwill.com. Sometimes eBay. I rarely look at treadles anywhere other than CL, but one day I clicked on this machine on shopgoodwill. It was in a nearby town, the auction was ending that day, and no one had bid. I got it for $40 without knowing much about it other than it looked older than anything else I had. I felt sorry for it and wanted to rescue it.
The badge on the bed and the raised No. 8 on the pillar told me that this was Wheeler and Wilson's No. 8. I shared my score with the folks on treadleon and over the next week an amazing amount of information poured in.
Riley told me that this was the third time it had been listed on shopgoodwill.com. We have a strict no-mention-of-auctions policy on treadleon, so he couldn't give a shout-out on it. So maybe I really did save it from the dump.
Bill offered some of the rare needles (but it came with 2 dozen!)
Kevin and Miller provided amazingly detailed technical information about the needles, including advice about what modern industrial needles can be persuaded to work with it. I have saved every scrap of this information just in case I ever do exhaust my supply of needles.
Phyllis explained the two belt slots in the balance wheel (handwheel) and the flywheel: one set for speed and the other for slower sewing with more power (for heavy fabrics). She also relayed a statement from a vintage sewing machine guru that this machine was the "Rolls Royce of sewing machines before there was a Rolls Royce."
Shown here with the belt in the outer groove of the flywheel. Can you see the inner groove?
I used a coil spring steel belt so that I could easily shift the treadle belt back and forth between the wheel slots.
Jennifer and Miller had a conversation about the single rotation hook. I have read about the different types of hook rotation and have even observed some of them, but confess I have no idea of the significance---yet. There is always more to learn and I am in no hurry. Just floating down the stream of sewing machine lore.
color added so that you can see where the take up lever is |
Kelly gave me a useful tip about sewing on this machine. The take up lever, which is on the right rather than the left, is pulled to the left if you remove the material in that direction. Then when it is free (when you cut the threads) it swings back to the right, taking your thread right along with it---and right out of the needle. Hold onto those thread tails.
The bobbin mechanism was filthy and completely gummed up to the point of being frozen. No repairs were needed, but I did have to disassemble the bobbin mechanism in order to clean it. Its always SO satisfying to bring a machine back from the dead.
I saved all the emails from my treadlon friends in a document, which is why I can remember who said what in such detail. Sadly I don't remember who pointed me to the link to the pdf of the manual, or where I found it. This was almost a year ago.
bobbin winder bracket |
Bobbin winder in bracket, shown without the necessary tire.
Bobbin winder rests on the flywheel.
Thank you, thank you, thank you to everyone who helped me, those mentioned above and anyone else I forgot to mention. The unfolding of the story of the machine's characteristics was a lot of fun.
It has glass presser feet, wonderful for sewing visibility. And an idea that did not come around again until clear plastic presser feet were developed---when? 1970's? 1980's? Let me know if you know.
and it came with a whole set---every foot mentioned in the manual, although one of them is chipped.
and here is the whole set of goodies. It would be fabulous is that were a dated receipt, but it isn't.
The machine is fascinating because all of the workings, which on later machines were encased in cast iron, are all out in the open and you can watch it all moving.
I would never have figured out the threading of this machine without the manual. Even with it, it took me a while. Couldn't find a YouTube video of the threading of this machine, so I made one myself. These are my FIRST YouTube videos (cue the horns, bells, flutes and crashing cymbals).
On more modern machines, the tensioner has two discs that move freely, with a spring holding them together. The more tightly wound the spring, the more pressure on the discs, and the tighter the tension.
On this machine there are also two discs, but they are fixed together as one piece. They spin around as the thread feed through. The manual refers to this as the "tension pulley". There is a leaf spring in front of them. So how does increasing the tightness of the spring increase the tension on the thread? My best guess is that increasing the tension slows down the speed at which the tension pulley spins around.
You wrap the thread around the tensioner one and a half times, btw. That's just one of the things that I could never have figured out for myself.
There is a removeable panel to the right of the machine head.
Removing the panel gives you access to the bobbin area.
Lifting off the panel reveals a shallow box underneath. This serves as a drawer.
I took this treadle out to an event with my quilt guild.
Lots of machine and hand quilting going on |
Saturday, March 16 was National Quilt-In Day, and the Alamance Piecemakers Quilt Guild sponsored an event at Brookwood Retirement Home in Burlington, NC. And I can't remember ever typing a sentence with that many capital letters before. It was co-sponsored by another local guild, a recently created one and I apologize for forgetting their name.
Kathy, cutting fabrics for charity quilts |
Guild members came and went throughout the day, doing a variety of quilty tasks. Lots of plastic sewing machines, two Featherweights, and my treadle.
Residents of the retirement community were invited to stop in and see what we were doing.
look at the flywheel spinning! |
Compared to a Singer treadle, the Wheeler and Wilson No. 8 is nice and petite. I threw a piece of plywood down on a mechanics creeper and made a platform for a traveling treadle. Borrowed the DH's van with a wheelchair lift. Took the head out of the machine and laid the treadle down flat in the back of the van, and took it over to Brookwood.
All of that worked well enough, although the creeper/plywood platform thing can be vastly improved, and will be.
The cover plate next to the needle plate is missing. A piece of the outer wrapper of a bar of Lindt chocolate covers the moving parts beneath. Until I come up with something better.
The machine called forth lots of memories from the people who stopped by. A Singer would have been even better for the nostalgia factor, but managing one by myself would not be fun.
How about your treadles? Do you ever take them anywhere? How do you move them around if you do? Where do they go?