Yes there is.
When someone experiences a "jam" while sewing, this usually refers to their sewing machine "jamming" or locking up.A sewing machine has many moving parts. These can jam when fabric or thread gets caught in the parts, preventing them from moving. When the machine jams, it often makes loud straining or clicking noises as the gears attempt to keep moving.If your sewing machine jams, immediately stop sewing. Carefully move your fabric out from under the needle. If the sewing machine jams with the needle down, carefully jiggle the fly wheel (the hand crank on the right side of the machine) back and forth to loosen the threads. This usually works, and allows you to lift the needle. Clip the threads, and move your project out of the way.Unthread the machine by removing the top thread and the bobbin. Look for any stray threads in the bobbin housing, and remove them. Carefully rotate the fly wheel to check for any obstructions. These obstructions are usually around the bobbin and under the needle. If the fly wheel rotates fully without catching, then the obstructions have been cleared away. Re-thread the top thread and bobbin, and continue sewing.Jams usually happen when the sewing machine is not threaded properly. Make sure that your top thread follows the proper path, and is fed through the tension disks at the top of the machine. Check your sewing machine manual to make sure that the thread feeds off your bobbin in the proper direction.If you are still having problems with jamming in your sewing machine, oil the machine and replace the needle. The needle may be bent or have a bur that is causing the thread to catch, creating the jam. If, after re-threading your machine multiple times, oiling the machine, and replacing the needle, you still have problems with the machine jamming, take your machine in for service. The service tech will be able to find any problems and bring your machine back to working order.
In most cases I have found that the carburettor is leaking fuel into the engine. This can be caused by a sticking float needle. Ensure that if your machine has a fuel tap, it is turned off any time the machine is not being used.
we are pros at it, most places have years of experience that we got from being apprentices before we ever took a tatto machine or peircing needle to any real person.
No, the needle is the same as any piercing.
No but the sewing machines thread the needle for you will help.
Eeeew, No! If anything, it would coat the needle with any oil naturally present in your hair.
Answer:A compass needle can be made from any ferrous metal that can be magnetized.
Needle. Guns aren't suitable for any piercing
It allows you to move the mechanism by hand - slowly to get the machine head into the position you want (say to remove the garment from the machine or to change the needle). ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ On all standard sewing machines the handwheel is turned so the top of it comes toward you. It can be turned a small amount in the opposite direction, but turning it any significant amount in the opposite direction will cause damage to the machine.
Purpose: You should change the needle depending on the project/fabric you are sewing. For example, sewing with silk requires very small needles (such as 60/8), but sewing with denim requires much heavier needles 110/18). See the needle chart in "Related Links" for more information. Wear and tear: A sewing needle should be replaced any time it bends or breaks. If this hasn't occured, you sew often, and you haven't changed the needle, perhaps it's good to change the needle once a year or so (since it may dull with frequent use).
the ovarian cancer needle..... i know that from experience. really, almost any needle can, its just the way some people react to it
Yes. A single high-level statement can generate one or more machine code instructions, sometimes in the order of several dozen instructions.