Posted 14 years ago
RetRN
(3 items)
Another one from my father in law; machine was inoperative; cabinet had bad water rings from wet glasses. Some one had tried to refinish it and had just put a stain varnish on top without any prep. Disassembled, stripped, restained, oiled with Watco and reassembled using all original bolts, screws, hinges. Oiled and got machine working with a new belt. Sadly someone had painted the machine, I tried gently stripping the paint and was able to get some of the old gold flaked letters and detailed work to come up. Amazing the machine has a drip pan when it is in working position to catch oil, it was very obvious that it needed constant oiling.
RetRN needs to learn how to spell treadle
Hi RetRN - that machine isn't a White, it's a Wheeler and Wilson D9, which became the Singer 9W, the Wheeler and Wilson company was taken over by Singer in 1905.