Lynn---I'm with you, not against you. I come from old school thinking. Grandmother and my mother obviously rubbed off on me. They were thankful to be able to afford machines. Sending working machines out for attention would not have been prudent. They knew how to use the oil can and blow out the dust. My current machine, a Singer Industrial, has seen the repair man twice in 14 years and that within the first year. Notice repair man, not service man. Until I complained loud and hard to the Singer salesman from whom I purchased the machine I wasn't offered helpful advice. He set up a conference call with a technician clear across the country. His advice: The bobbin case could have been honed too tightly. Oil was the machine's best friend. With the change of every full bobbin of thread I was to give it two squirts of oil, one on either side of the bobbin chamber. I only encounter difficulty now when I have become complacent because it no longer needs the oil every change and have gone too long without this special oiling that is not mentioned in the manual. I give it oil, make sure all debris is gone, rev the motor and I am up and running. Of course, this is a work horse and not a fancy-shmatzy computer model that does everything for me. I know therein lies a big difference.