Have you seen your embroidery machine before? Would you like to know what's going on? What do they think, what they think, why they don't understand us? The following content also has some reference value for Eagle digitizing.
Today, we are studying the mysterious world of your embroidery machine, and why it can be so frustrating but pleasant. Be careful now, we will return to the good time of those mathematics -graphics and charts. But don't be afraid. We provide you with a guarantee!
Embroidery machine as a machine
In the final analysis, your embroidery machine is like this ... a machine! They don't think; they respond. They have no emotion or judgment. In this era of personalized assistants in mobile phones, televisions, cars, and home, we have forgotten that they are not people. Let's talk about how your machine views the information you provided.
Early "computerized" embroidery
machine
Let us start with early machines. Yes, believe it or not, in the 1860s, the Schiffli embroidery machine was running on a long pore tape. These tapes are under small holes, and these holes are sent to the machine and "read", just like playing piano or music box. A hole appeared, which triggered a lever that could sew one or a few stitches.
Want to learn more about the punching machine (now more widely known digital instrument), or see the operation of these Hervley machines? Watch our wonderful history of embroidery inheritance business began in the 1960s. Create a design and put it into the chart, and move the handle from one hole to another to make an embroidery design.
What is CNC machine tool?
Anyone who knows a mechanic or metal worker may have a certain understanding of the CNC machine (computer CNC). These modern miracles read the code or input coordinates to move, carve (or in our example) embroidery head. It is a modern equivalent, which is equivalent to early tape delivery machine.
CNC machine tools move back and forth in seemingly random mode, but this is not the case. Your embroidery digital software will tell the machine's bed back and forth, so that your object can be created by embroidery digitization.
Embroidery
What your machine does only read the code sent to it! "Set a needle here ... Now one ... The other is here ... and trim. It will follow the list of this instructions like a recipe until the last trim. When the method is developing, this may be frustrating, but unfortunately, the ancient computer says "garbage input, garbage output" is usually correct. The missing single needle, the color change or the decimal point may change the information, and the machine will be the machine. Do it according to its instructions, pass through hoop, bird's nest, broken needle, etc.
How does the embroidery machine understand
different needles?
How do the machine know how to do tatami or satin? Or pattern tatami? Well, this is the same thing. The embroidery files you inserted about how to make these stitches. "Go so many needles in this direction, this big" ... "Take another way and put the needle on these points." The pattern needle is just the long needle and short needle placed on some points
Can the embroidery machine change tension and tension?
"How to set up a machine to reduce tension?" This is a common problem. Remember, our machine is just a machine. We know that they can't understand tension and don't care. They just sew we told them to tell them, where we told them.
Your embroidery machine cannot solve any
problems about tensile compensation. Remember, they only respond to your
information. Pull compensation affected by the size of the image. Do I need to
reduce tension? Make the image larger to "compensation".