Hubby, though, has an RSS feed that sends him a copy of each Craigslist ad with the words "knitting machine" in it. Sure, sometimes you get an ad with knitting needles and a sewing machine and no knitting machine, but you can eliminate those false positive and you have a clever way to know when there's a machine for sale. He sees a cool one, sends it to me at my office by email, and I take two minutes to glance at it and email him back that we really shouldn't...yeah, right.
I went to see this Princess Hi-Memory machine. The seller, who picked it up at a thrift store, was a really nice gal who isn't a knitter and just thought she'd resell it. She was careful with it, had no idea if it would work (and neither did I, at first). She couldn't quite close the case. The manual was gone. She thinks it's an KE2500. I could only manage to find a KE2400 manual online. I don't see KE2500 on the machine anywhere. It looked like the punch cards weren't there, just blank ones, and like the hand tools were missing (I think this is a Silver Reed/Studio/Singer, and they usually used an accessory box). We made a deal, I paid her, and off I went.
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So much of the engineering is different. On the bottom, the clamps are attached and hinged to the case. The bottom has rubber pads, which makes it less slippery, a nice feature. We clamped it to the kitchen island.
The punch card mechanism is in the carriage, which is something I had not seen before.
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By reading the downloaded manual, I could see what the unfamiliar-to-me controls did. Once you fold the handle up into working position, there's tension slider on the main carriage. You turn a little knobs and then slide the lever to change the tension. Plain, slip and tuck are on knobs for each direction.
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It didn't want to knit at all in one direction, because a cam under the main carriage was entirely stuck. John lubed and loosened that up, and by the end of the evening, we had it "air knitting." We weren't ready to put in yarn.
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An avid knitter, like me, really shouldn't try to sleep with a brand-new-to-me machine sitting in the kitchen. Questions were popping into my mind. How did that lace carriage work, since it doesn't select needles? What should I knit with it to test it thoroughly? Does it do punch lace or thread lace? It is like a Juki Hi Memory? Could I buy punch cards?
This weekend, I really must do other things. I am, after all, teaching a seminar in beautiful Denver next weekend! I have to pack. I have to review the materials, and make sure I have everything I need and I'm not rusty on any demos. This is going to be big fun - I really enjoyed a prior seminar in Denver, and love to teach and meet knitters anyway.
This morning, the new baby is still on the kitchen island. I looked at the manual some more, answered a few of my mental questions, and discovered - oh, joy - that the punch cards are actually here, underneath the blank cards, and the hand tools are in a compartment in the bed.
Though y'all would get a kick out of the pictures, and selfishly, perhaps some kind soul can tell me whether it is a KE2400 or a KE2500 and might even have a manual, if I haven't got the correct one.