I remember seeing them but can't remember for sure. Try Outdoor Cap. Aaron Sargent The Linen Barn linen@xxxxxxxxxxx Medford, OR ----- Original Message ----- From: David Lindsey <Vector Shirts> To: amayausers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Friday, July 08, 2005 10:43 AM Subject: [amayausers] looking for hats I saw a supplier one time that had licensed Chevrolet hats with like the bowtie on the side that you could embroider the front. Has anybody seem this or am I just going crazy (don't answer that please). Sometimes you imagine things that you want. Old age. Hope everyone had a happy Fourth. Thanks for the help. David David Lindsey Vector Shirts Hamlet, NC ----- Original Message ----- From: E. Orantes To: amayausers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Wednesday, July 06, 2005 2:04 PM Subject: [amayausers] Re: Thread feeder roller problem Yeah,... well, I believe what you say but I wonder if they meant when you install the new roller to "gently press on the thread feed gear" as you roll it into position? That's my guess. If you want to spin the roller in place, the only quick way to do this is to hit the "Laser pointer" button and the "arrow up" button at the same time. This is what I used to call the "200 point thread spit." I say this because we were taught that it was an automatic way to get 200 pts of thread advanced on the active needle. I measured it recently and it's way more that 200 points. Maybe I was measuring wrong or maybe I heard wrong in class. There are 254 points in an inch and you get about 3 and a half inches of thread. Go figure. Oh well, doesn't really matter anyway because it's not really a practical feature for us. When we need extra thread, we lift the red roller, pull out an arms length of thread, and lower the roller back down. I've heard there was a theory that there were people out there who were not lifting the red roller high enough when pulling on the thread and as a result were cutting grooves in the thread feed roller. I think that's hogwash as you've got to be a real accurate bozo to not lift the red roller high enough when pulling out extra thread for thread breaks. How's everyone doing with thread breaks? I haven't heard a great deal about thread breaks in a long time. Could they be a thing of the past??? Yeah right! To many factors, so little time. Ed -----Original Message----- From: amayausers-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:amayausers-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Lee or Terri Hoover Sent: Wednesday, July 06, 2005 11:28 AM To: amayausers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [amayausers] Re: Thread feeder roller problem Hi Ed, It makes sense what you are saying. I always take the rollers out for inspection. In the Amaya Operators manual (also in the help and maintenance windows) page 7-14, it tells you to "carefully rotate the roller" by pressing "gently on the thread feeder gear". Terri