- Thread starter
- #171
Set your stitch length pretty close to zero and up your tension, see what that does. With my machine, being computerized, I set it to a certain straight stitch where it puts the needle position in the center and it automatically sets stitch length and width, but lets me tweak it a tiny bit. Most of the time, my length is set to 2 mm or so. This machine won't allow a zero stitch length like most people suggest.
I quit having thread breaks when I changed thread to a better one than Coats & Clark for the FM stuff. Getting the right combination of tension and decent thread seemed to fix the skipped stitches, in addition to learning to push the fabric in time with the timing of the machine. Long stitches mean you are pushing it too fast for the machine speed, super tight, short stitches mean you are not moving fast enough for whatever speed the machine is going at the time. And I tend to speed up in the curves, trying to stop doing that as much. I swear, it's like juggling and keeping all the balls in the air at once, LOL.
I quit having thread breaks when I changed thread to a better one than Coats & Clark for the FM stuff. Getting the right combination of tension and decent thread seemed to fix the skipped stitches, in addition to learning to push the fabric in time with the timing of the machine. Long stitches mean you are pushing it too fast for the machine speed, super tight, short stitches mean you are not moving fast enough for whatever speed the machine is going at the time. And I tend to speed up in the curves, trying to stop doing that as much. I swear, it's like juggling and keeping all the balls in the air at once, LOL.