Singer's Competitors to the Willcox and Gibbs Automatic
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It took until 1886 for the Singer Company to produce a competitor for the Willcox & Gibbs chainstitch machine. When it came, it used the W&G pattern of rotary hook (by then, long out of patent) and Singer’s version of the ‘Automatic tension’.
The Singer 24 was a good machine and was heavily promoted but never managed to displace the W&G Automatic from the top spot of single thread chainstitch machines. Singer persevered with it for many years with a better hand version, electric versions, even a slanted reel holder like the W&G, but to no avail.
Like the W&G, the Singer 24 also ran to a large selection of modified industrial versions including versions for the straw hat industry. It was only manufactured in America.
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Clydebank never made the class 24 and had to content itself with a single batch of 10500 of the Singer 30 (a scaled-up version of the Singer 20 machine for children) in 1913 as its contribution to small chainstitchers.
by Martin Gregory