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Annie Hill wrote:Do a bit of checking on your double-sided (basting) tape. Some are more powerful than others and some are so sticky that they gum up your needles.
The kind I have is from Sailrite, and sounds like it should work. I need another bunch of rolls, though, because I bought it to make another tiny junk sail.
Arne staples his sails together rather than taping them. Anybody got any comments on that ?
Try, if you can, to have a nice slippery surface under the sailcloth. It might be worth setting the whole lot out on one of those so-often-mentioned polytarps. Walking feet are great because they help push the fabric along. They struggle if you have a rough surface for the material to move over. Ergo, even without a walking foot, if the rest of the sail bundle can move easily, it will be much less effort to push things through.
Excellent idea. Since I haven't made my work table yet, I may buy some cheap paneling made to go inside bathrooms, that is white and slippery, as a work surface.
I have a Brother machine and used it to make my sail cover, which is a patchwork of Top Gun bits that Paul scraped together for me. The machine had no problems at all with this much heavier material and Odyssey would be a shoo-in.
Good.
Sailmaking is fun. It's a nice clean job, done indoors with no dust, no smell and an accommodating little machine that only asks for a sharp needle and a frequently swept-out bobbin case.
Swept out bobbin case? Is that what I've been doing wrong all these years?
And carrying right along in the same vein, Barry and Meps wrote:
A little more detail on my experience with basting tape and Odyssey III:
I used the stuff from Sailrite, #129 Seamstick 3/8" Basting Tape for Canvas. I bought 8 rolls, for my 2.5 sails, and still have some left over. Others might sew a sail without it, but I'm not gonna, at least until after I've sewn as many as Annie has to date :)
That's the stuff I've got. Sounds like I need to buy another 3 rolls and I'm good to go.
I suspect that there is a cheaper place to get it than Sailrite, but I wasn't able to identify it and source it elsewhere, and didn't want to risk trying something cheaper and finding it didn't work as well. I had the same attitude about thread--I could have got it cheaper, but I wanted stuff that I knew would behave well. It didn't seem worth the risk.
I did occasionally need to clean the gummy residue off the needle, a little rubbing alcohol on a rag worked great.
I'll try to remember that.
I found that it stuck better to the shiny side of Odyssey III, and also that the rougher side of Odyssey III was pulled better by the sewing machine, so putting things together shiny-to-shiny worked best. Not all seams could be assembled that way, but if I had a choice, that is what I did.
Annie, thank you for the reminder--yes I had a lot of fun lofting and sewing my sails!
Barry
Well, I'm getting readier and readier. Pretty soon now.
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