sharon martin
Reviewed in the United States on March 12, 2025
Does not wind evenly. Looks like a birds nest after winding on bobbin. Total waste of money.
MAGA Customer
Reviewed in the United States on February 24, 2025
This bobbin winder is great. It's compact. Easy to open and use holds bobbins nice. It's not just for a seamstress only but anyone who s ews enough to have some extra bobbins ready.
B. S. Wofford
Reviewed in the United States on January 31, 2025
Nice to have this item. It saves me a lot of time not needing to stop and wind the bobbin
Yvonne
Reviewed in the United States on January 31, 2025
It was cheap and a piece of junk!!! The metal bar was supposed to screw in and stand up but the threads were stripped.
yes an customer
Reviewed in the United States on January 2, 2025
Sending back not all bobbins fit
Dismayed
Reviewed in the United States on January 17, 2025
Horrid! Swindler SO FAST—NO CONTROL-THREAD WENT EVERY WHERE! Total mess and beyond CHEAPLY MADE.
Rhonda Morgan
Reviewed in the United States on November 5, 2024
Simple answer to winding a bobbin for the sewing machine. Great idea!!
ChasB
Reviewed in the United States on October 27, 2024
In my initial review of this winder I was critical of the ability of the machine to accept bobbins from Juki and Brother machines. It turns out the bobbins DO fit the winder shaft but they need to be pressed onto the shaft with a great deal of effort so that the top of the bobbin is parallel with the top of the driver shaft. Then the bobbins works as intended and will not fly off into neverland. In my case I still have to use a screw driver to pry the bobbin off the shaft when the winding is complete, but that works.Also, I found that the winder auto stop featue is based on an optical sensor (nice feature), and mine was set improperly so it didn't stop the winder before the thread overran the bobbin. To adjust the stop sensor I used a bobbin that had been loaded with thread to the desored fullness. Then I put it on the winder shaft and loosened the two philips screws on the U-shaped fixture containing the optical sensor adjacent to the bobbin. Move the fixture fuly away from the bobbin, press and hold the ON button and then slowly move the optical fixture slowly toward the moving bobbin until the wound thread obscures the optical path of the sensor and the drive motor automatically stops. Then tighten the two screws so the optical sensor fixture remains at the desired position for all future bobbin windings. The manual is entirely written in Chinese so this is pretty much a DIY operation, but now that I realize I need to manhandle the bobbins completly onto and off of the drive shaft, and that I can adjust the spiffy optical fill sensor, I'm satisfied with the performance of this inexpensive bobbin winder.