I think I was wrong
#11
Fresh coffee grounds. Sprinkle in the case, out in the sun again, then vacuum out. We used coffee all the time when we were trucking and had to haul onions, followed by a non-produce product. Worked like a charm!
#13
Featherweights came with a cardboard piece in the bottom of the case, with the corners cut out for the rubber feet. This way the middle of the machine sets on the cardboard and not the rubber feet. Most of time the cardboard is taken out and the feet go flat. If the cardboard is left in and not changed is gets oily and smells very bad. Yours being complete may still have this piece of cardboard in and making the smell. I have only received one machine with the original cardboard in the bottom and it was nasty smelling. It was replaced and then Charlee’s coffee idea was used and it worked great. Just as an added note. I cover this piece of corrugated cardboard with black felt for the black look and to place the machine on a soft cushion.
#14
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Western NY
Posts: 841
Kiffie 2413
I have done everything you have done. I changed the felt pad and it was original and it SMELLED horrible. I haven't tried the coffee grounds yet. I am going to try leaving it in the sun when the humidity drops and keep leaving it outside until it smells better. I don't think I will store my FW in the box anymore. I want to get a table for my sewing room and leave it out. I am going to teach a friend of mine to sew and I think that will be a great little machine for her to work on. Thanks everyone for your help. Seems like most of the storage boxes smell.
I have done everything you have done. I changed the felt pad and it was original and it SMELLED horrible. I haven't tried the coffee grounds yet. I am going to try leaving it in the sun when the humidity drops and keep leaving it outside until it smells better. I don't think I will store my FW in the box anymore. I want to get a table for my sewing room and leave it out. I am going to teach a friend of mine to sew and I think that will be a great little machine for her to work on. Thanks everyone for your help. Seems like most of the storage boxes smell.
#15
If you want to get the temperature of the case up to bake the smell out of it and kill any fungus/musty smell put the open case inside a vehicle that is sitting in the hot sun. It will kill the odor and you won't run the risk of the case getting wet in the event of a pop up rain storm. It can get pretty dang hot in a car. It may take a couple days but it will work. You might want to put a towel under the case to protect your interior if oil was spilled in the case, it might leach out.
#20
Member
Join Date: Aug 2013
Posts: 2
1936 FW with no tension numbers
Hello, Is it considered a 'travesty' to replace the original tension assembly on a 1930's FW with a newer version with numbers? I had thought it was a cheap 'fix' to put a new, reproduction tension assembly on my 1936 FW---BUT from the reading I've done, the new parts aren't good quality. http://www.april1930s.com/html/tensi...er_sewing.html (This author says the reproduction tension assembly units are *not* good quality.)
Is there a way to mark the original tension assembly so you know where "normal" is, or do 1930's FW owners 'just go with the flow' and live without any tension numbers or marks? I have a similar question about the needle plate--is changing out the unmarked original for a needle plate with seam line marks a 'violation' of the originality of a 1930's FW?
Other than the BAD SMELL that I'm working on with a new felt pad, my little July 13, 1936 "Baby" just purrs and it has a delightfully perfect stitch. Just this morning, I completed a thorough oiling and greasing "ritual" and I realized that the belt is probably original and very cracked (yikes!), so I'm ordering a new felt pad and belt online. The prices for the felt pads varies a lot and one style is over twice as expensive because it has a rubber layer under the felt. What do people in this group recommend? Last question, what does this group think about the aftermarket LED replacement bulbs for FWs?
Is there a way to mark the original tension assembly so you know where "normal" is, or do 1930's FW owners 'just go with the flow' and live without any tension numbers or marks? I have a similar question about the needle plate--is changing out the unmarked original for a needle plate with seam line marks a 'violation' of the originality of a 1930's FW?
Other than the BAD SMELL that I'm working on with a new felt pad, my little July 13, 1936 "Baby" just purrs and it has a delightfully perfect stitch. Just this morning, I completed a thorough oiling and greasing "ritual" and I realized that the belt is probably original and very cracked (yikes!), so I'm ordering a new felt pad and belt online. The prices for the felt pads varies a lot and one style is over twice as expensive because it has a rubber layer under the felt. What do people in this group recommend? Last question, what does this group think about the aftermarket LED replacement bulbs for FWs?
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