Ok, I'm not afraid to admit that I've been sewing since I was in elementary school. It's actually a really good skill to have, IMHO.
I had previously used my mother's normal household sewing machine for any gear and equipment needs, but now that I'm on my own, 3 hours from home, and getting into sewing webbing and heavier fabrics etc I decided I needed my own heavy duty machine. So I did a bit of research. Without going to a true industrial machine that cost $1k-4k, the old-school Singer's are the next best option. Most recommend the Singer 15-91 because it is heavy-duty, has a vertical bobbin, and uses a direct drive motor (vs belt drive). I found one for a decent deal, cleaned it up, re-wired it, and I'm going to try to find some heavy-duty stuff to sew with it tonight just to see how it does. I ended up buying 2 old Singers in a package deal, plus my expenses in repairing both of them and still came out money ahead on buying a regular walmart special sewing machine with a plastic frame and plastic gears. My old, 1953 Singer 15-91 is nearly 100% metal...
I should be able to sell the other Singer machine I have and recoup most of my expenses on the whole deal.
Just to give others an idea on cost here. I have just over $100 in both machines (both came with the original table/cabinet as well), plus my expenses in rebuilding them. I should be able to sell the other one for around $100 or maybe a bit less because it's in cosmetically rough condition.
I had previously used my mother's normal household sewing machine for any gear and equipment needs, but now that I'm on my own, 3 hours from home, and getting into sewing webbing and heavier fabrics etc I decided I needed my own heavy duty machine. So I did a bit of research. Without going to a true industrial machine that cost $1k-4k, the old-school Singer's are the next best option. Most recommend the Singer 15-91 because it is heavy-duty, has a vertical bobbin, and uses a direct drive motor (vs belt drive). I found one for a decent deal, cleaned it up, re-wired it, and I'm going to try to find some heavy-duty stuff to sew with it tonight just to see how it does. I ended up buying 2 old Singers in a package deal, plus my expenses in repairing both of them and still came out money ahead on buying a regular walmart special sewing machine with a plastic frame and plastic gears. My old, 1953 Singer 15-91 is nearly 100% metal...

I should be able to sell the other Singer machine I have and recoup most of my expenses on the whole deal.
Just to give others an idea on cost here. I have just over $100 in both machines (both came with the original table/cabinet as well), plus my expenses in rebuilding them. I should be able to sell the other one for around $100 or maybe a bit less because it's in cosmetically rough condition.