Wednesday, July 1, 2009

My new baby



I recently bought this knitting machine from a woman in King City knowing absolutely nothing about it except that it looked cool, it was old, and it was a knitting machine. It had lots of bits and pieces so I figured, how wrong could I go? It was $50 - a bargain, I thought.



Turns out although labeled as a Singer it's a French-made model 360-2 Superba 5 mm fixed double bed machine - 1950's or 60's best that I can tell. No adjusting, all double all the time, although you can knit flat - even U-shaped if you need the full 360 needles wide. The indomitable Patrick swears they are the cats pajamas and he seems to be the all-time expert on them, hosting the Superba Knitting blog dedicated to them. Unfortunately Patrick is unable to walk me through the resuscitation of this machine (damn cancer) so I have to fumble though by myself.


Forgive the terrible picture, but maybe you can see that the needle in the upper position leans towards the peg on it's right. This = bad. It doesn't run smoothly in its channel and thus the carriage won't run smoothly either. Also,most of the needles were really sticky. Many of the latches wouldn't open or close without substantial help and that's just no good.

I bit the bullet and removed the needle retaining bar (yeah, I had to order a copy of the manual from someone and it came and it's in colour and it's beautiful and more to the point it's MY model. She's the only one I found who had the same one.). Then, starting with the fucked-up needles, I removed them a-la Patrick, with pliers. I only had to cut the latch hook off one, but I did snap the butt off one trying to get it out. Some of those suckers were wedged in there!

The rest came out by hand. Interestingly, the needles on the back bed were the mangled ones, and overall much harder to get out than the front bed. Maybe because it's used more? Who knows. Anyway, when the needles came out of their channels they brought with them little balls of felted fluff. Black felted fluff. Almost cute, but yet not.



Into the bath of methyl hydrate. (It was all I could find at Home Hardware. I guess I could go get IPA from the drug store but I can't be arsed.) The little bits of black crap on my table cloth is from the butts of the needles, which were by far the filthiest.


Out of the bath and polished lovingly by hand with a lightly oiled rag to remove the residual gunk and hopefully smooth out the corrosion a bit. Some are worse than others. I'm separating out the worse of them and we'll see how many we have to work with when I'm done. I find it strangely Zen polishing 8 million little latch hooks. They look so lovely and work so well when you're done.



Maybe that's why I like machine knitting so much. I get the creative stuff but I also get to indulge my mechanical side. It's a lot like owning a VW van again, but without the subzero rapped knuckles and the gasoline in your hair.

25 or so down, 300+ to go. Let's see how long it takes for the novelty to wear off. Or the skin on my thumb and forefinger - I'm betting that wears out first.

2 comments:

GUNTer said...

HOLEY MOLEY that looks like a job for McGuyver!
You will never cease to amaze me with what you will take on my friend!

A said...

Hi,
Do have a supplier you buy the knit machine needles from? I am having so much trouble sourcing replacement needles for my machine.