Everyone knows that industrial machines sew better, last longer, and are more reliable than domestic sewing machines but many sewists are reluctant to acquire one due to the size, weight, speed, and noise. The noise is attributed to the clutch motor that runs all the time and only powers the sewing head when the operator steps on the pedal and energizes the clutch.
This noise problem has been overcome in recent years by the DC servomotor that acts like a domestic foot controlled motor - it does not run (makes no noise) unless the operator steps on the pedal, then the motor spins the sewing machine. While the servomotor solves the noise problem, it still has to be mounted in a power stand so the issues of size and weight are still present.
Many years ago, I obtained a Singer 95-10 tailoring machine. It had a clutch motor but I didn't have a belt to fit and my parts bin had several motors, belts, and foot controls, so I decided to try powering it with a motor off a home machine. To my surprise, the machine worked quite well and sewed everything I put under the presser foot. It was still mounted in a power stand but I had the space so that was not a problem.
When I got my Singer 20U-33, I bought only the head. I saw that there were motor bracket mounting provisions below the balance wheel that looked like those on a home machine so I bolted a motor from an old Brother in place and sewed away.
My internet friend Rich in Tennessee carried things a bit further, he built a wooden box to hold the sewing head and a motor mount and powered a big, honkin' walking foot upholstery machine with a domestic motor. Rich has solved the issues of size, noise, and speed. Don't think that his is a portable though, it probably weighs in the 60-70 pound range.
You would think that a little 1/15 horsepower motor would not spin an industrial machine designed for a 1/4 - 3/4 hp motor but the answer is in the sizes of the pulleys. The pulley on the 1/3 hp clutch motor pictured above is 11 inches in circumference. It drives a balance wheel that is also 11 inches in circumference. The motor pulley on a domestic machine is 3 inches in circumference, so there is almost a 4-1 reduction and the 1/15 hp motor appears to be much more powerful.
This solves another issue of industrial machines - the speed. Many are intimidated by 3500 stitches per minute but with a 4-1 reduction, the machine will only sew about 900 SPM with a domestic motor - the same speed as the average domestic machine. That speed is more easily controlled by the foot control and the operator doesn't need to learn the procedure for operating a clutch motor.
Food for thought
6 comments:
Good idea. I've seen some head-only industrial machines being sold on Craigslist for very little but haven't sprung for one because of the added expense of buying a motor. I may have to try your idea. I think you may mean 'circumference' when you say 'diameter' when talking of the pulley sizes.
Oops! Thanks for catching the diameter/circumference blooper. I youse spill chick awl the thyme butt it duzzent cache that kind of errror. -Ed
I think circumference IS the right word. There's no way you've got some almost-foot-in-diameter pulley. And the pic of the little substitute motor does indeed look like it has a pulley of about an inch in diameter which, multiplied by pi would give the 3 inch circumference you mentioned.
Thanks for the good pictures.
I had been using antique domestics and had a fair herd.
Currently I am only interested in using Industrials. My favorite is a 31-15 running on an industrial treadle base. I love that it can deal with anything I can get under the foot and runs smooth as silk.
I also have a 21W180 compound feed which I use for my heavy work. Got it for $30 including a working power stand, motor and clutch (patented in 1893). I have it on an 1890s Wheeler and Wilson Treadle.
I am picking up a 95-10 with a power stand and decent top for $50 without a motor. I plan to play with it using a domestic motor before moving the top onto one of my treadle bases.
Your right, I think a lot of people are scared of the speed of the clutch motors. It is nice to have alternative power options for using these monsters at home.
Thanks for your helpful insights about sewing, sewing machines and related stuffs.
The idea is good, but the home sewing machine engine is absolutely inadequate to run an industrial machine. It is a very small engine, the situation would have somewhat improved the reduction over the double strap, like this video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tdF3Mok_NOg
Best regards
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