Hope it's ok to ask here ..... getting a Singer 6412 up & running
#1
Hope it's ok to ask here ..... getting a Singer 6412 up & running
I have the Singer 6412 model (that I haven't used in quite a few years) set up for my daughter to learn on.
Thought I'd better give it a little clean.
Surprisingly there was virtually NO dust in the bobbin case.
I'd kept the machine in a case.
While the machine is sewing a beautiful stitch,
and purring along beautifully, the engine itself does sound a little loud to me
(maybe it always was),
so I am a bit leery about using it anymore without giving it a good check-out.
I hate to pay the rate of a service call, because who knows if the machine is even good anymore.
I did find a can of Singer oil that I bought some time ago.
But NOWHERE in the book does it say or show to oil the machine,
so now I wonder if this is one of the machines that does NOT get oil.
Anyone have this machine?
Can you offer me any advice?
Thanks!
Thought I'd better give it a little clean.
Surprisingly there was virtually NO dust in the bobbin case.
I'd kept the machine in a case.
While the machine is sewing a beautiful stitch,
and purring along beautifully, the engine itself does sound a little loud to me
(maybe it always was),
so I am a bit leery about using it anymore without giving it a good check-out.
I hate to pay the rate of a service call, because who knows if the machine is even good anymore.
I did find a can of Singer oil that I bought some time ago.
But NOWHERE in the book does it say or show to oil the machine,
so now I wonder if this is one of the machines that does NOT get oil.
Anyone have this machine?
Can you offer me any advice?
Thanks!
#3
Super Member
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Utah
Posts: 2,093
You can remove the cover on the left side, and oil the take-up area. You may be able to remove the bottom and oil the linkages underneath. If you've removed the needle plate and bobbin case, and cleaned in there, that's about all it should need. It is a mechanical machine, so it does need to be oiled occasionally.
#5
I once ruined (the right word here) a Singer by oiling it--it did not require oiling at all, and this was a machine from sometime during the middle 70s. Maybe the bobbin case, but I think the one you have may be one of the noisy (motor) machines that you just have to live with. If you are teaching someone to use it, don't mention the noise and she will never know.....
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