KH950i
Pretty much the day after we arrived in Ottawa, I met one of my greatest friends, Greta Grip.
She was demonstrating her hacked knitting machine at an open day at Maker Space North. We have had adventures aplenty since that day 4 years ago, and Aaron and I have both done quite a bit of work to keep her Brother KH930 operational. Recently she was a huge success as the Artist in Residence at the Diefenbunker!
That installation may have been the last real hoorah for the poor KH930.
So, because I love Greta so much, and because I am great at it, I sourced a new knitting machine for her!
Grab a cup of cocoa, it’s going to be a long ride.
Knitting machines are not really being made these days. There are some new ones around, but they lack the crazy oomph that Brother, Singer and Passap achieved in the 80′s and 90′s. Secondhand ones are easy to come by in the UK, and seemingly so in the USA. Canada doesn’t seem to have many up for grabs, and often they have issues.
I did some eBay research, and discovered that a KH9xx series machine would cost around CAD1000, and would cost a fairly large amount to ship to Ottawa.
Completely by accident, I found 3 KH series Brother knitting machines in Ontario! Yay! Near Niagara! Boo! They were being offered as not working, but in good condition. Several things were missing, and the ad mentioned no power for 2 of the 3.
I contacted the seller, who said she could package them up, and I paid her, and then paid for a courier to pick them up and deliver them.
Tada!
I’d asked the seller if she had suitable packaging, and mentioned several times that the machines would need padding inside the original boxes. She seemed confident that would be doable, but sadly ...
There was soooo much damage. The cases are metal, with plastic ends, and the seller used a very inadequate amount of padding inside the cardboard box, which lead to a vast amount of smash damage.
The photos from the ad showed everything in not-smashed condition, so this really was very disappointing when I opened the boxes up.
The edges were badly damaged, and the covers for the electrical components had also suffered. A lot.
This made my heart hurt.
I had bought a KH950i, with most of the parts present, and 2 KH910′s, with no needles, carriages, tools, etc. No power cables were present at all.
The KH950i and one of the 910′s were 220v, and needed a step down transformer to run.
Basically, I’d bought 3 lumps of broken plastic and metal.
So, what to do? One of the amazing things about these knitting machines is that they are essentially the same machine, with a few different doodads. The 950i has a data port, the 910 does not. And that is the total difference between the two model.
So, I took them apart and made the KH950i into a complete, clean and working machine!
The plastic ends of the cases were held in with plastic lugs, and they came away pretty easily.
There were enough unbroken pieces to make a new complete case.
Everything needed a really good clean, because these machines are old! There is always fluff in these machines, and old oil. This makes for oily, gummy, dirty fluff. Everything was stripped down, cleaned with alcohol, and then oiled and reassembled.
The plastic parts covering the components also got the same treatment - stripped down, swapped to put the good pieces on the 950i, cleaned and reassembled.
The needles were in ok condition, so they all got taken out, washed in alcohol and then soaked overnight in oil, before being put back. I checked all the latches worked, threw a couple away, and filled the gaps with new needles.
And then I was ready to try it out. All needles were pulled out into working position, and I cast on loosely.
It was blissfully smooth, and I knitted about 10 rows. All the needles knitted off cleanly, and there was no dragging or difficulty moving the carriage
Then I ran the carriage across the bed without any yarn and removed the knitting from the bed.
Tada! It worked perfectly.
So the next step was checking the electronic brains of the machine. We used a transformer to step down to 110v, and plugged it in. No magic smoke escaped, and the light came on. Amazing!
Then on to the data cable. Greta is a yarn artist, and uses software to input patterns. This thing of beauty below brings the 1′s and 0′s to the machine so it can transform them into knitted art.
Cute huh?
Then we tried to use the software
Another tada! We input the Square Lemon logo, and it was beautiful.
So, after the delight at finding ‘local’ machines, the heartache of the damage done by poor packaging, and the hard work of cleaning and repairing the pieces to make a single working machine, we have a gleaming, fresh, working KH950i!
Isn’t she beautiful?
Greta has her now. I took her poor KH930, and will be using it to make the two KH910 work again. Because that is something I now know I can do!
