singer touch and sew
#11
Never heard anything good about them and hated the one I used. It was my sister-in-laws, and she always thought the problem was her. After I had to use it and it was horrible, she got rid of it and got a Viking. That was in 1973.
#14
Member
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Summer/MN Winter TX
Posts: 15
I have a Singer Touch and Sew that I bought new in 1975. I am still using it. I love the bobbin winder in the machine! I don't use the cams a lot, but I like the feather stitch and use it frequently. The bobbins can still be found in Singer shops.
#15
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: So Cal
Posts: 576
I had one years ago and it was a nightmare most of the time. The tension was terrible and couldn't ever be adjusted right and it was in the shop a lot. When, I finally traded it in, the dealer said that they got a lot of them as trade-ins and were sold for $50.00 a truck-load in Mexico. I traded it in for a Bernina and have never looked back.
#16
I would stay away from any vintage machine that has plastic gears. The Singer 401 is the best vintage machine for not too much money. Ebay has some listed for as little as $100. That is where I bought mine and have really enjoyed the machine. I was careful to buy one that could be returned if not working.
I bought my first Touch and Sew in 1969 with my babysitting money. I sewed on it until I bought my first Bernina in 1976. I liked the machine but many of them required extensive repairs as the plastic/nylon gears wore out, cracked and broke. I wouldn't buy it without trying it out first. It also takes a specific bobbin and winds in the machine after pushing a button to fill and this also sometimes gives trouble.
#17
Power Poster
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Somewhere
Posts: 15,506
I had one years ago and it was a nightmare most of the time. The tension was terrible and couldn't ever be adjusted right and it was in the shop a lot. When, I finally traded it in, the dealer said that they got a lot of them as trade-ins and were sold for $50.00 a truck-load in Mexico. I traded it in for a Bernina and have never looked back.
I am learning to work on those old T&S machines - they are better than the new plastic garbage machines.
#19
Super Member
Join Date: Feb 2012
Posts: 8,091
Here is what my SMG said to do: Take off the belt, (it probably needs replaced anyway), then run it at wide open for a while. If it's still cranky hose the brushes and area with lighter fluid, then run it. ( Do the lighter fluid deal outside, it can ignite).
So, in lieu of all that, just turn the darn thing on and run the snot out of it.

Joe
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