[amayausers] Re: needles and thread breaks on nylon jacket

  • From: "Body Cover" <info@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <amayausers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Thu, 15 Dec 2005 13:35:14 -0800

Re: [amayausers] Re: needles and thread breaks on nylon jacketDarn!
I was hoping to here something glaringly wrong!
Sounds good to me.
I know that font sews down some small thin blocks
at the point where certain parts of the letters overlap
to keep the garment from showing through as the 
2nd column pulls the threads back from the 1st column
as they overlap, With the block sewn underneath
it pulls back the column still but only shows the sewn
block underneath making the separation not noticeable.

I think they change in fonts is the best choice then once your job is
done and your hair grows back you can try to decipher what
the answer is.

Good Luck

Ron Vinyard
Body Cover / Magic Stitches
1-888-435-0176
541-471-1504
fax 471-0427

420 SW H street
Grants Pass, OR 97526

info@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
www.bodycoverdesign.com


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Roland R. Irish III 
  To: amayausers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Thursday, December 15, 2005 1:08 PM
  Subject: [amayausers] Re: needles and thread breaks on nylon jacket


  I've run into problems before with fonts-at smaller sizes things do go 
haywire-its trying to sew too many stitches into one area-around a curve in the 
serif, etc.-that give you ulcers. Changing the font as you found helps, 
otherwise you have to go in and play with moving stitches, changing auto 
density, short stitches, etc. until it works. Okay for large quantity jobs but 
when you are only doing 1 or 2 items it's easier to switch fonts and tell the 
customer he loves it!
  Roland


    From: "Avalon Embroidery" <avalonembroidery@xxxxxxx>
    Reply-To: amayausers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
    Date: Thu, 15 Dec 2005 12:36:19 -0800
    To: <amayausers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
    Subject: [amayausers] Re: needles and thread breaks on nylon jacket




    speed was 600......

    font density was the default of 4.5..........and I added a bit of column 
width  (120%)

    needles were  new 70/10 sharps - (titanium) and I was unable to go more 
than one to two letters before all hell broke loose.

    Now, I've switched to CooperDak font.....same speed, same density, same 
column width, same needles......no problems.

    weird.



      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: Body Cover <mailto:info@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>  
      To: amayausers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
      Sent: Thursday, December 15, 2005 12:24 PM
      Subject: [amayausers] Re: needles and thread breaks on nylon jacket

      What you haven't told
      us was the density you are using on that font
      at .4 high?
      and what speed is the machine running.
      Nylon is very tight and heats up a needle very quickly
      making for hot soft needles that bend and break easier.

      Let us know.

      Ron Vinyard
      Body Cover / Magic Stitches
      1-888-435-0176
      541-471-1504
      fax 471-0427

      420 SW H street
      Grants Pass, OR 97526

      info@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
      www.bodycoverdesign.com <http://www.bodycoverdesign.com> 


        ----- Original Message ----- 
        From: Avalon Embroidery <mailto:avalonembroidery@xxxxxxx>  
        To: amayausers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
        Sent: Thursday, December 15, 2005 11:09 AM
        Subject: [amayausers] Re: needles and thread breaks on nylon jacket

        scientific testing is now showing the FONT to be part of the problem.

        using CooperDak  .4" letters   sewing out RHS letters........all is 
well through 6 sewouts on the nylon.
        using Full Block    .4" letters   sewing out RHS.......the needle just 
busted on the H.    All 4 needle breaks have been when using Full Block only.

        I'm starting to suspect a problem in density in the lettering of this 
font.

          ----- Original Message ----- 
          From: Roland R. Irish III <mailto:signman@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>  
          To: amayausers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
          Sent: Thursday, December 15, 2005 11:11 AM
          Subject: [amayausers] Re: needles and thread breaks on nylon jacket

          When we get the 'shredding' we run a fingernail done the needle in 
question-and if there is a 'burr' you'll feel your finger tip catch on it...and 
that means your needle is hitting on something-either off center and hitting 
the needle plate, or your jacket is hanging off the table and pulled the hoop 
as the needle went through-and the needle hit the plate. Or someone 
repositioned the jacket as it was sewing or (I've done this) accidentally hit 
the hoop arm bending over to get something...
          doesn't take much at all to make that needle go sidewise,  just a 
hair and it will hit the plate underneath and cause a 'burr' when the tip bends 
a little. That's what catches and unravels the thread but it keeps on sewing....
          Roland


            From: "Avalon Embroidery" <avalonembroidery@xxxxxxx>
            Reply-To: amayausers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
            Date: Thu, 15 Dec 2005 10:43:09 -0800
            To: <amayausers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
            Subject: [amayausers] Re: needles and thread breaks on nylon jacket




            Judy        

            I'm getting "partial" shredding breaks......where it appears the 
inner core of the thread usually stays intact, but the outer "shell" gets all 
knotted up in the needle case area...

              ----- Original Message ----- 
              From: OnleeJudy@xxxxxxx 
              To: amayausers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
              Sent: Thursday, December 15, 2005 10:31 AM
              Subject: [amayausers] Re: needles and thread breaks on nylon 
jacket

              Hi there.  A couple of things to try...more backing, as nylon is 
very light, and sew slow....and depending on the type of thread breaks (clean 
breaks or shredding breaks), check needle alignment, and add or subtract MT.

              BEST WISHES!








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