Brother PR1050X
Introduction
The Brother PR1050X is a high-end consumer and professional entry level embroidery machine.
In Switzerland, list price is 12'000 CHF, in Germany 11'000 Euros. Street prices can be less and even lesser for education.
I ordered such a model and by fall 2017 there should be more information in this page - Daniel K. Schneider (talk) 09:02, 4 July 2017 (CEST)
Specifications
- The machine can stitch up to 10 different colors with one needle at the time
- Size: 48 x 48 x 60cm ?
- Size of the box: ?
- Weight: 44 kg (60 kg in the box ?)
- Size of a table (add-on): 70 - 100 cm height, 49 cm length, 80 cm width
Connectivity
- USB host cable
- USB media slot
- SD card slot
Thread colors
- Default colors
- Each needle bar can be assigned a color through either the control panel or software (the latter is called manual color sequence).
- Thread colors in a design can be sorted at the control panel (this may mess up order of printing of course)
- Several manufacturers/makes color schemes are builtin. E.g. Madeira Poly, Sulky, R-A Poly.
Formats
The Machine can not directly stitch from design files like EMB or ART.
PES
- The PES format is the most important native machine instruction format for both small and semi-professional Brother embroidery machines. Designs can be somewhat modified.
- Several version of PES seem to exist. Newer versions may not work on older machines
- PES is the default format to export from your embroidery software.
PEN
- A Brother format that only works on some machines that can stitch "Disney" designs. Some machines can be registered to decrypt.
PEC
- An older Baby Lock/Brother/Deco format. Avoid.
PHC
- Older Brother format. Avoid.
DST
- DST is a Tajima data file and it does not include color information (therefore avoid)
Hoops
The machine has several frames for each of which several hoops can be attached.
Standard
You cannot stitch up the edges. Roughly speaking you can stitch the inner size minus 2cm vertically and minus 4cm horizontally.
Name | Embroidery size (width x height) | Physical Size inside (width x height) | Frame holder | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|
Extra-large | 36.0 x 20.0cm | 39.5 x 22.0cm | A | Use the table |
Large | 18.0 x 13.0 cm | 23.0 x 15.0 cm | A | none |
Medium | 10.0 x 10.0 cm | 14.0 x 12.0 cm | A | |
Small | 6.0 x 4.0 cm | 8 x 6.0 cm | A |
Compact Frame
Use of stabilizers
There are several types of stabilizers, e.g.
- Water soluble: Used for freestanding lace (FSL) and also as topping for some fabrics, e.g. towels
- Self-adhesive tear away: Used for heavy fabrics (but also lighter and softer ones with less good results since , but it is the most easy to use)
- Tear away: Medium-heavy woven fabrics and sturdy fabrics. This has to be ironed or glued to the fabric depending on the brand.
- Polyester mesh cut away: Used for T-shirts and similar
- Cut-away: pullovers and such
The Brother Operation manual (p. 254) recommends fabric/stabilizer combinations of which we reproduce some modified excerpts:
Fabric/Garment | No. of Backing Pieces | No. of Topping Pieces | Comments |
---|---|---|---|
Denim | 1 tear-away | None | Lower speed if problems |
Terry cloth (bath towels) | 1 tear-away | 1 water soluble | Increase density and avoid small lettering. |
Fine woven shirts | 1 tear-away | None | For high-density or highly detailed designs use two pieces of lightweight backing |
Golf shirt | 1 cut-away | Optional | |
Corduroy | 1 tear-away | 1 water-soluble | Use denser stitcher or denser/more understiches. |
Lingerie or silk | 1 or 2 lightweight tear-away | Optional | Reduce sewing speed |
Knitting (sweater) | 1 cut-away or adhesive tear-away | 1 water-soluble | Use tightly woven organza or curtain fabric in a matching color if knits have holes. |
Sweatshirt | 1 cut-away or adhesive tear-away | Optional | Two layers for detailed designs |
T-shirt | 1 light-weight cut-away or adhesive tear-away | Optional | Avoid stitch-heavy designs and make them low tension. |
As general rule:
- Any fabric needs a stabilizer. If you are lazy use at least the auto-adhesive one.
- Very small lettering needs topping on most fabrics.
- Fine fabrics should use cut-away stabilizers. These are nicer to wear and some offer extra stability.
The Touch Screen Interface
Embroidery Settings
(chapter 4 of the manual) Color settings (p 133, 143)
- On page 5 of the settings screen, set manual color sequence to
on
Machine Settings
The settings screen includes seven screens
Links
Official
- Manuals and Drivers
- Manuals in French