US2828795A - Apparatus for making non-woven cloth - Google Patents

Apparatus for making non-woven cloth Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2828795A
US2828795A US538706A US53870655A US2828795A US 2828795 A US2828795 A US 2828795A US 538706 A US538706 A US 538706A US 53870655 A US53870655 A US 53870655A US 2828795 A US2828795 A US 2828795A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
yarn
cloth
threads
rollers
bars
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US538706A
Inventor
Fred W Hartstein
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US538706A priority Critical patent/US2828795A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2828795A publication Critical patent/US2828795A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D04BRAIDING; LACE-MAKING; KNITTING; TRIMMINGS; NON-WOVEN FABRICS
    • D04HMAKING TEXTILE FABRICS, e.g. FROM FIBRES OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL; FABRICS MADE BY SUCH PROCESSES OR APPARATUS, e.g. FELTS, NON-WOVEN FABRICS; COTTON-WOOL; WADDING ; NON-WOVEN FABRICS FROM STAPLE FIBRES, FILAMENTS OR YARNS, BONDED WITH AT LEAST ONE WEB-LIKE MATERIAL DURING THEIR CONSOLIDATION
    • D04H3/00Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of yarns or like filamentary material of substantial length
    • D04H3/02Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of yarns or like filamentary material of substantial length characterised by the method of forming fleeces or layers, e.g. reorientation of yarns or filaments
    • D04H3/05Non-woven fabrics formed wholly or mainly of yarns or like filamentary material of substantial length characterised by the method of forming fleeces or layers, e.g. reorientation of yarns or filaments in another pattern, e.g. zig-zag, sinusoidal

Definitions

  • My invention is an apparatus for producing cloth that can be used for a variety of purposes; for example, in making a floor rug comprising a body or piece of textile material having piles or tufts of yarn on the upper or wearing surface thereof.
  • rugs are commonly known as chenille rugs.
  • the chief object of this -invention is to provide an apparatus for making a sheet of cloth that is less costly than fabric woven on a loom and having warp and weft threads crossing and interlaced with one another throughout.
  • Another object is to provide means by which a sheet of cloth can be wrought with layers of cord or yarn that are not interwoven, but superposed instead; the layers being lirmly secured to one another, and the lines of yarn, cord or thread occupying the entire area of the sheet; so that the sheet -is continuous over its whole extent, and virtually without interstices or crevices opening through both faces of the cloth.
  • a further object is to devise means for turning out a sheet of cloth having the above mentioned design and capable of being formed and finished far more rapidly than cloth obtained from a loom with a shuttle operating in the usual well-known manner.
  • An additional object is to provide a mechanical unit for manufacturing a sheet of cloth, at a rate of production that is independent of the width of the cloth, so that perfectly made cloth of relatively great width can be obtained as quickly and easily as cloth having smaller widths.
  • Still another object is to provide a means for manufacturing cloth with the above-mentioned characteristics that will engage and securely hold piles or tufts of yarn when the cloth is employed in rug making and serves as the body thereof.
  • lt is also an object to provide apparatus for making cloth which contains yarn or cord in layers that are superposed and securely joined together and not interwoven, and which is well adapted for bagging and wrapping uses.
  • Figure l is an end elevation of apparatus in which my invention is incorporate-d;
  • Figure 2 is a side elevation, viewed from the left in Figure l;
  • Figure 3 is a top plan thereof
  • Figure 5 shows diagrammatically the structure of the cloth as it is wrought in accordance with my invention
  • Figures 1 and 2 show a combination of rollers 1, 2, 3 and 4 disposed to draw and press cloth between them.
  • the rollers are mounted in any suitable framework 0r supports and one or more, such as rollers 2 :and 3, 'can be rotated by connections to a source of power.
  • From a number of cops 5 lines of yarn 6 are pulled between rollers 1. and 2, passing first into a tank 7 containing adhesive and mounting properly located idle rolls d and 9 which guide the threads into the tank.
  • lines of yarn l1 are drawn between the rollers 1 and 2 and from -a third set of cops 12 additional lines of thread 13 are pulled between thev rollers 2 and 3.
  • the threads or yarn From a number of cops 5 lines of yarn 6 are pulled between rollers 1. and 2, passing first into a tank 7 containing adhesive and mounting properly located idle rolls d and 9 which guide the threads into the tank. From other cops 10, lines of yarn l1 are drawn between the rollers 1 and 2, and from -a third set of cops 12 additional lines
  • the threads 4 6 are all of the same size and so are threads 11 and 13, but if ⁇ desired the uniform threads 11 may be of a thickness -diterent from the thickness of the threads 13, andi the threads 1i and 13 may be ofa thickness different;
  • The'cops 5, 1? and 12 are the usual conical balls; ⁇
  • the rolls are heated during the operation to a tem-4 perature of, say, 250 degrees F., for example, and the heating connections (not shown) are of the usual type: employed for heating rollers in such machines. But heat-A ingunder all conditions is not necessary.
  • the lines of yarn 6 each pass through the apparatus in a single plane and areA straight,k except as they are curved in passing overthe 'cylindrical ⁇ surfaces of the rollers, but the lines of yarn 11 andv 13 arerepeatedly -bent from side to side in anundulatory or zigzag pattern, and cross the lines 6 and make contact at a multitude of points. All three layers of yarn are pressed together by the rollers, and .are joined Iat all points of contact by the adhesive on the lines ⁇ ofyarn 6. The zigzagportions are indicated at 1d, connected by 'bends 15.
  • the lines of yarn 11 and 13 are pulled sidewise in one direction and then in the opposite direction by guide bars 16 and 17, parallel to the rollers and having guide slots i8 in the upper edge.
  • These two layers of yarn lie, each layer in theV slots' 18 of one of the guide bars, which are moved first to the right and then reversely by suitable means such as cranks 19 and 20 and connecting rods pinned to the bars 16' and 17, and as the barsare reciprocated and in shuttle-wise movement, the yarns v11 and 13 are pulled to one endandthen to the other end of their direction of travel.
  • the guide bars are placed. atvthelcorrect distance fromY the rolls, and the slots 18 have the necessary outlineand depth to givethe desired result.
  • crank 19 must rst pull the rod 21 back far enough for its pin 23 to engage the bar 16 at the other end of the slot 24 therein; and thus for a brief interval the bar 16 is motionless. Then the crank 19 and rod 21 begin to pull the bar 16 on its return movement, and during said interval the bends joining the zigzag portions 14 are formed. As soon as the pin 23 on the rod 21 reaches the other end ot the slot 24 in the bar 16, said bar is actuated to reverse the diagonal direction of the threads 11 passing to rollers from the slots 18 of the bar 16. A similar operation is performed by the other crank in the movement of the bar 17.
  • the cranks, connecting rods and slots 23 are so dimensioned and the cranks are rotated at such speed that the diagonal direction of the threads 11 and 13 is changed as quickly as is necessary between the momentary stops of the bars 16 and 17 at each end of their range of travel.
  • the two cranks are mounted on the same shaft as indicated at on Figure 3, or they may be on diierent shafts connected to turn at the same speeds, and the cranks will be angularly adjusted with reference to their common axis of rotation so that the bars 17 for the yarn 13 will cause the bends 15 in the zigzag lines of yarn 13 on the layer of yarn 6 to fall always in the spaces between the bends 15 of the yarn 11 on the opposite face of the middle layer of yarn 6.
  • the bars 16 and 17 being parallel to the rollers, these bars 16 and 17 are always at the same distance from the points at which the yarns 11 and 13 meet the yarn 6 between the rollers 1 and 2 and 2 and 3.
  • the bends 15 may be rounded or peaked and the length o the diagonal portions 14 between the bends will vary according to the speed of rotation of the rollers 2 and 3, for a given speed of the shaft 25.
  • Other connections to obtain proper reciprocation of the bars 16 and 17 may be used.
  • Figure 5 shows the relative positions of the yarn 6, 11 and 13 in the three layers of the completed sheet.
  • the yarn 6 runs lengthwise through the cloth without being bent from side to side, and the layer 11 on one face of the layer of yarn 6 has the undulatory or diagonal portions 14 with bends 15 along and over the whole layer,
  • the yarn 13 on the other face of the middle layer has the similar portions 14 with bends 15 that lie between the bends of the yarn 11.
  • the three layers of threads cross one another at so many places and the threads in the two outer layers are so close together over the entire extent of the cloth sheet that the cloth has no orifices through it, and any spaces in the yarn 11 between bends 15 thereof are overlaid by the yarn 13 and the bends 15 therein.
  • the threads 11 and. 13 must be kept taut at all times and means for keeping them under constant tension are disposed between the bars 16 and 17 and the cops 10 and 12.
  • Such means can have the form of a bar 29 extending across each set of threads 11 and 13 and pressing thereon.
  • Each bar has transversely bent portions 30 at its ends and terminal portions 31 parallel to the length of the bar, and the portions 31 are mounted in fixed bearings 32 adjacent the lines of threads 11 and 13.
  • Springs 33 axed to the bearings at one end engage the portions 30 so as to exert pressure on the bars, and hold the threads 11 and 13 taut.
  • the length of the diagonal portions 14 of these threads between the adjacent bends 15 is greater than the distance of the bars 16 and 17 from the points where the threads 11 and 13 make contact with the rolls 2 and 3.
  • the tension members 29 were omitted, the portions 14 of the yarn 11 and 13 between the bars 16 and 17 and the rollers would be slackened as the bars go through the mid-points of their travel and portions of the threads 11 between the bends 15 and similar portions of the threads 13 would overlap and make cloth uneven and lumpy in many places.
  • the devices 29 prevent slackness in the yarn 11 and 13 and the cloth is smooth and hat throughout.
  • the bars 16 and 17 are supported, for instance, by grooved wheels 34 loosely mounted ou xed journals 35 under the bars. Thus friction is avoided.
  • the number of threads 11 and 13 in each outer layer is not more than half the number of threads 6, and the slots 18 in the guide bars are spaced at intervals of about twice the distance between adjacent threads 6.
  • Stationary guide members may be mounted for the threads 11 and 13 between the tension bars 29 and the guide bars 16 and 17, as indicated at 36.
  • the apparatus can be operated many times faster than the operation of a loom, because of the short range of travel of the guide bars 16 and 17.
  • the shuttle carrying warp threads must travel from the one side of a loom to the other, and the wider the cloth the more time is required.
  • a single machine according to the apparatus described above can be run as fast as a chenille rug-making machine and deliver all the cloth that the rug-making machine requires; but when woven cloth is used in chenille rugs, a loom cannot be operated fast enough and a number of looms must be depended upon for enough cloth to supply a single rug-making unit. The cost of equipment and material is therefore much greater.
  • Figure 6 shows apparatus comprising three rollers only, but the process is the same and the final product is no different from the sheeting above described.
  • the roller 26 has a pair of rollers 27 and 28 cooperating therewith and the lines of yarn 6 are passed under the roller 27 and between it and the roller 26.
  • the lines of yarn 11 are drawn -between rollers 26 and 27 and laid against one face of the layer of the threads 6, and the lines of yarn 13 are passed between the rollers 26 and 28 and laid on the opposite face of the middle layer of yarn 6.
  • the layers of yarn 11 and 13 are put on in a zigzag or undulatory pattern as before, and guide bars with slots are employed in the mechanism to guide the yarn 11 and 13 diagonally in one direction and then diagonally in another direction to be laid on the middle layer 6 as explained in connection with Figure 3.
  • the cranks 19 and Ztl, guide members 35 and tension members 29 are also included.
  • the yarn 6 is passed from the cops bearing it through adhesive in a tank 7.
  • a sheet of cloth turned out in accordance with this invention can be utilized for many purposes and a single apparatus will operate much faster and deliver an output equal to the yardage of many looms, thus cutting down greatly on the cost of equipment and the material yielded by it.
  • cloth of greater or less width can be made with ease and at the same rate of speed for the rollers, and on the same apparatus, and in all widths, the tension on all threads being uniform.
  • a loom must operate more or less slowly when turning out Very wide cloth, because the shuttle must travel farther, and at the same time the tension on the transverse weft threads is increased.
  • the apparatus herein set forth can also be used to produce cloth in two layers only for any of the uses above mentioned.
  • This kind of cloth may contain only two groups of lines of yarn, both having zigzag portions, or one with zigzag portions and the other group or layer containing lines of yarn without such portions and bends.
  • the apparatus will operate eciently to superpose lines of yarn in two layers or groups as well as with yarn for three layers as above set forth; as one set of cops 10 or 12 will then simply be omitted.
  • cranks 19 and 26 may also be mounted so as to operate at different speeds, depending on the nature of the yarn.
  • the bars 16 and 17 will cause the diagonal portions 14 of the lines of yarn 11, for example, to be longer or shorter than the portions 14 of the lines of yarn 13 in the layer on the other face ot the middle layer containing the lines of yarn 6.
  • cloth can be made with spaces between the diagonal portions 14 of the zigzag yarn of each outer layer.
  • the cloth will then be like mesh cloth with open spaces, and can be utilized as netting and as cloth for stiening or reinforcing. Cloth of this kind with two layers only can be made and delivered as above described.
  • Apparatus for making cloth comprising a roller, and a pair of additional roller members spaced apart and in cooperating relation with the first-named member and parallel thereto, and means for guiding threads between each additional roller and the first-named roller, said means including a guide bar adjacent each additional roller, and parallel thereto, and means for reciprocating said bars in alternation.
  • Apparatus for making cloth comprising' a roller, and a pair of additional roller members spaced apart and in cooperating relation with the first-named member and parallel thereto, and means for guiding threads between each additional roller and the first-named roller, said means including a guide bar adjacent each additional roller, and parallel thereto, and means for reciprocating said bars in alternation, said apparatus including means for preventing slackening of yarn moving between the inst-named rollers and the additional rollers.
  • Apparatus for making cloth comprising a roller and a pair of additional roller members all located in cooperative parallel relation, said rollers being arranged one above another in a vertical tier, means for guiding threads between the first-named roller and each additional roller, means for guiding additional threads in one direction between the first-named roller and the adjacent additional roller, and means for guiding additional threads in the opposite direction between said additional rollers, said means including a guide bar for each set of additional threads, said Abars being located at opposite sides of said rollers, and parallel thereto.

Description

2 Sheets-Sheet l Filed Oct. 5, 1955 lll III. IIIIIIII lllllll Il Il April 1, 1958 F. w. HARTsTElN APPARATUS FOR MAKING NoN-WOVEN CLOTH Filed oct. 5, 1955 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 n U E:
INVENToR. Y W52 w. #AP75 rE//v United States Patent APPARATUS FR MAKNG NGN-WOVEN CLOTH Fred W. Hnrtstein, Summit, N. l'.
Application October 5, 1955, Serial No. 538,706
3 Claims. (Cl. 154-1.7)
My invention is an apparatus for producing cloth that can be used for a variety of purposes; for example, in making a floor rug comprising a body or piece of textile material having piles or tufts of yarn on the upper or wearing surface thereof. Such rugs are commonly known as chenille rugs.
The chief object of this -invention is to provide an apparatus for making a sheet of cloth that is less costly than fabric woven on a loom and having warp and weft threads crossing and interlaced with one another throughout.
Another object is to provide means by which a sheet of cloth can be wrought with layers of cord or yarn that are not interwoven, but superposed instead; the layers being lirmly secured to one another, and the lines of yarn, cord or thread occupying the entire area of the sheet; so that the sheet -is continuous over its whole extent, and virtually without interstices or crevices opening through both faces of the cloth.
A further object is to devise means for turning out a sheet of cloth having the above mentioned design and capable of being formed and finished far more rapidly than cloth obtained from a loom with a shuttle operating in the usual well-known manner.
An additional object is to provide a mechanical unit for manufacturing a sheet of cloth, at a rate of production that is independent of the width of the cloth, so that perfectly made cloth of relatively great width can be obtained as quickly and easily as cloth having smaller widths.
Still another object is to provide a means for manufacturing cloth with the above-mentioned characteristics that will engage and securely hold piles or tufts of yarn when the cloth is employed in rug making and serves as the body thereof.
lt is also an object to provide apparatus for making cloth which contains yarn or cord in layers that are superposed and securely joined together and not interwoven, and which is well adapted for bagging and wrapping uses.
The foregoiru7 and other objects and advantages are made clear in the following specification and the novel features of the invention are defined in the claims. Un the drawings, some embodiments of the invent-ion are illustrated, but numerous changes can be adopted in details of shape, size and arrangement of parts without deviation from the general plan in which the invention resides.
in the drawings:
Figure l is an end elevation of apparatus in which my invention is incorporate-d;
Figure 2 is a side elevation, viewed from the left in Figure l;
Figure 3 is a top plan thereof;
Figure 4 presents a structural detail;
Figure 5 shows diagrammatically the structure of the cloth as it is wrought in accordance with my invention;
fb (Ll Figure 6 is `an end view of another form of the invention.
Figures 1 and 2 show a combination of rollers 1, 2, 3 and 4 disposed to draw and press cloth between them. The rollers are mounted in any suitable framework 0r supports and one or more, such as rollers 2 :and 3, 'can be rotated by connections to a source of power. From a number of cops 5 lines of yarn 6 are pulled between rollers 1. and 2, passing first into a tank 7 containing adhesive and mounting properly located idle rolls d and 9 which guide the threads into the tank. From other cops 10, lines of yarn l1 are drawn between the rollers 1 and 2, and from -a third set of cops 12 additional lines of thread 13 are pulled between thev rollers 2 and 3. The threads or yarn. 1i and 13 are superposed upon oppositefaces of the yarn 6, and the three layers of yarn are finally passed between the rollers 3 and 4 and delivered lby the apparatus as a finished sheet. The threads 4 6 are all of the same size and so are threads 11 and 13, but if `desired the uniform threads 11 may be of a thickness -diterent from the thickness of the threads 13, andi the threads 1i and 13 may be ofa thickness different;
fromthe thickness 'of the threads 6.
The'cops 5, 1? and 12 are the usual conical balls;`
mounted on fixed studs and presenting their smaller ends; towards the rollers, and spirally wound so that the yarn; can easily be pulled off. In textile machinery such cops.' are usually on frames which support a large number of. cops in tiers or rows.
The rolls are heated during the operation to a tem-4 perature of, say, 250 degrees F., for example, and the heating connections (not shown) are of the usual type: employed for heating rollers in such machines. But heat-A ingunder all conditions is not necessary. The lines of yarn 6 each pass through the apparatus in a single plane and areA straight,k except as they are curved in passing overthe 'cylindrical `surfaces of the rollers, but the lines of yarn 11 andv 13 arerepeatedly -bent from side to side in anundulatory or zigzag pattern, and cross the lines 6 and make contact at a multitude of points. All three layers of yarn are pressed together by the rollers, and .are joined Iat all points of contact by the adhesive on the lines `ofyarn 6. The zigzagportions are indicated at 1d, connected by 'bends 15.
The lines of yarn 11 and 13 are pulled sidewise in one direction and then in the opposite direction by guide bars 16 and 17, parallel to the rollers and having guide slots i8 in the upper edge. These two layers of yarn lie, each layer in theV slots' 18 of one of the guide bars, which are moved first to the right and then reversely by suitable means such as cranks 19 and 20 and connecting rods pinned to the bars 16' and 17, and as the barsare reciprocated and in shuttle-wise movement, the yarns v11 and 13 are pulled to one endandthen to the other end of their direction of travel. yThe guide bars are placed. atvthelcorrect distance fromY the rolls, and the slots 18 have the necessary outlineand depth to givethe desired result. When the bars 'are at one .end of their range of movement, the lines of yarn 11 and 13 are so held that they `travel diagonally in one direction asvthey'are drawn between the rollers, and whenthe bars are at the oppositeend of their range, the same yarns are held bythe guide slots 18 so that they are drawn intothe rollers in a diagonal direction that crosses the aforesaid ydiagonal direction. The bends 15 in the zigzag pattern of the yarns 11 and 13 Yare thus im posed on these yarns asthe barsreach each end of 'their respective movements and the bends are placed in the portions of said yarns which happenftobe between the rolls at the instant when the bars reverse-their motion.
In order toreffect the required movement of the ybars 16 and 17, they are connected torotarycranksflQand 20, respectively, by rods 271,:anvd 22, respectively. 'These 3 rods are joined to the pins of the cranks at one end and to the bars 16 and 17 at the other end by pins 23 in slots 24 in the adjacent extremities of the bars 16 and 17. As the cranks revolve and the bar 16 is pushed to the right, for example, with the parts in the positions shown in Figure 2, the connecting bar 21 thrusts against one end of the slot 24 in the bar 16 till this bar reaches the end of its travel and is about to move in the opposite direction. But the crank 19 must rst pull the rod 21 back far enough for its pin 23 to engage the bar 16 at the other end of the slot 24 therein; and thus for a brief interval the bar 16 is motionless. Then the crank 19 and rod 21 begin to pull the bar 16 on its return movement, and during said interval the bends joining the zigzag portions 14 are formed. As soon as the pin 23 on the rod 21 reaches the other end ot the slot 24 in the bar 16, said bar is actuated to reverse the diagonal direction of the threads 11 passing to rollers from the slots 18 of the bar 16. A similar operation is performed by the other crank in the movement of the bar 17. The cranks, connecting rods and slots 23 are so dimensioned and the cranks are rotated at such speed that the diagonal direction of the threads 11 and 13 is changed as quickly as is necessary between the momentary stops of the bars 16 and 17 at each end of their range of travel.
The two cranks are mounted on the same shaft as indicated at on Figure 3, or they may be on diierent shafts connected to turn at the same speeds, and the cranks will be angularly adjusted with reference to their common axis of rotation so that the bars 17 for the yarn 13 will cause the bends 15 in the zigzag lines of yarn 13 on the layer of yarn 6 to fall always in the spaces between the bends 15 of the yarn 11 on the opposite face of the middle layer of yarn 6. The bars 16 and 17 being parallel to the rollers, these bars 16 and 17 are always at the same distance from the points at which the yarns 11 and 13 meet the yarn 6 between the rollers 1 and 2 and 2 and 3. The bends 15 may be rounded or peaked and the length o the diagonal portions 14 between the bends will vary according to the speed of rotation of the rollers 2 and 3, for a given speed of the shaft 25. Other connections to obtain proper reciprocation of the bars 16 and 17 may be used.
Figure 5 shows the relative positions of the yarn 6, 11 and 13 in the three layers of the completed sheet. The yarn 6 runs lengthwise through the cloth without being bent from side to side, and the layer 11 on one face of the layer of yarn 6 has the undulatory or diagonal portions 14 with bends 15 along and over the whole layer,
from side to side and end to end, and the yarn 13 on the other face of the middle layer has the similar portions 14 with bends 15 that lie between the bends of the yarn 11. The three layers of threads cross one another at so many places and the threads in the two outer layers are so close together over the entire extent of the cloth sheet that the cloth has no orifices through it, and any spaces in the yarn 11 between bends 15 thereof are overlaid by the yarn 13 and the bends 15 therein.
The threads 11 and. 13 must be kept taut at all times and means for keeping them under constant tension are disposed between the bars 16 and 17 and the cops 10 and 12. Such means can have the form of a bar 29 extending across each set of threads 11 and 13 and pressing thereon. Each bar has transversely bent portions 30 at its ends and terminal portions 31 parallel to the length of the bar, and the portions 31 are mounted in fixed bearings 32 adjacent the lines of threads 11 and 13. Springs 33 axed to the bearings at one end engage the portions 30 so as to exert pressure on the bars, and hold the threads 11 and 13 taut. The length of the diagonal portions 14 of these threads between the adjacent bends 15 is greater than the distance of the bars 16 and 17 from the points where the threads 11 and 13 make contact with the rolls 2 and 3. Hence, if the tension members 29 were omitted, the portions 14 of the yarn 11 and 13 between the bars 16 and 17 and the rollers would be slackened as the bars go through the mid-points of their travel and portions of the threads 11 between the bends 15 and similar portions of the threads 13 would overlap and make cloth uneven and lumpy in many places. The devices 29 prevent slackness in the yarn 11 and 13 and the cloth is smooth and hat throughout.
The bars 16 and 17 are supported, for instance, by grooved wheels 34 loosely mounted ou xed journals 35 under the bars. Thus friction is avoided. The number of threads 11 and 13 in each outer layer is not more than half the number of threads 6, and the slots 18 in the guide bars are spaced at intervals of about twice the distance between adjacent threads 6. Stationary guide members may be mounted for the threads 11 and 13 between the tension bars 29 and the guide bars 16 and 17, as indicated at 36.
The apparatus can be operated many times faster than the operation of a loom, because of the short range of travel of the guide bars 16 and 17. In a loom, the shuttle carrying warp threads must travel from the one side of a loom to the other, and the wider the cloth the more time is required. In the making of rugs, a single machine according to the apparatus described above can be run as fast as a chenille rug-making machine and deliver all the cloth that the rug-making machine requires; but when woven cloth is used in chenille rugs, a loom cannot be operated fast enough and a number of looms must be depended upon for enough cloth to supply a single rug-making unit. The cost of equipment and material is therefore much greater.
Figure 6 shows apparatus comprising three rollers only, but the process is the same and the final product is no different from the sheeting above described. The roller 26 has a pair of rollers 27 and 28 cooperating therewith and the lines of yarn 6 are passed under the roller 27 and between it and the roller 26. The lines of yarn 11 are drawn -between rollers 26 and 27 and laid against one face of the layer of the threads 6, and the lines of yarn 13 are passed between the rollers 26 and 28 and laid on the opposite face of the middle layer of yarn 6. The layers of yarn 11 and 13 are put on in a zigzag or undulatory pattern as before, and guide bars with slots are employed in the mechanism to guide the yarn 11 and 13 diagonally in one direction and then diagonally in another direction to be laid on the middle layer 6 as explained in connection with Figure 3. The cranks 19 and Ztl, guide members 35 and tension members 29 are also included. The yarn 6 is passed from the cops bearing it through adhesive in a tank 7.
As already stated, a sheet of cloth turned out in accordance with this invention can be utilized for many purposes and a single apparatus will operate much faster and deliver an output equal to the yardage of many looms, thus cutting down greatly on the cost of equipment and the material yielded by it.
Another advantage gained in making cloth as above described is that cloth of greater or less width can be made with ease and at the same rate of speed for the rollers, and on the same apparatus, and in all widths, the tension on all threads being uniform. In contrast, a loom must operate more or less slowly when turning out Very wide cloth, because the shuttle must travel farther, and at the same time the tension on the transverse weft threads is increased.
The apparatus herein set forth can also be used to produce cloth in two layers only for any of the uses above mentioned. This kind of cloth may contain only two groups of lines of yarn, both having zigzag portions, or one with zigzag portions and the other group or layer containing lines of yarn without such portions and bends. The apparatus will operate eciently to superpose lines of yarn in two layers or groups as well as with yarn for three layers as above set forth; as one set of cops 10 or 12 will then simply be omitted.
The cranks 19 and 26 may also be mounted so as to operate at different speeds, depending on the nature of the yarn. In such a case the bars 16 and 17 will cause the diagonal portions 14 of the lines of yarn 11, for example, to be longer or shorter than the portions 14 of the lines of yarn 13 in the layer on the other face ot the middle layer containing the lines of yarn 6.
Also, with fewer lines of yarn 11 and 13, cloth can be made with spaces between the diagonal portions 14 of the zigzag yarn of each outer layer. The cloth will then be like mesh cloth with open spaces, and can be utilized as netting and as cloth for stiening or reinforcing. Cloth of this kind with two layers only can be made and delivered as above described.
With reference to Figure 5, it is to be understood that the two layers made up of the yarns 11 and 13 are shown as if displaced sidewise in opposite directions from the middle layer of the cords 6. In the iinished cloth the zigzag yarns 11 lie on one face of the middle layer and the zigzag yarns 13 lie on the opposite face of the middle layer as indicated in Figure 2.
Having described my invention, what I believe to be new is:
1. Apparatus for making cloth comprising a roller, and a pair of additional roller members spaced apart and in cooperating relation with the first-named member and parallel thereto, and means for guiding threads between each additional roller and the first-named roller, said means including a guide bar adjacent each additional roller, and parallel thereto, and means for reciprocating said bars in alternation.
2. Apparatus for making cloth comprising' a roller, and a pair of additional roller members spaced apart and in cooperating relation with the first-named member and parallel thereto, and means for guiding threads between each additional roller and the first-named roller, said means including a guide bar adjacent each additional roller, and parallel thereto, and means for reciprocating said bars in alternation, said apparatus including means for preventing slackening of yarn moving between the inst-named rollers and the additional rollers.
3. Apparatus for making cloth comprising a roller and a pair of additional roller members all located in cooperative parallel relation, said rollers being arranged one above another in a vertical tier, means for guiding threads between the first-named roller and each additional roller, means for guiding additional threads in one direction between the first-named roller and the adjacent additional roller, and means for guiding additional threads in the opposite direction between said additional rollers, said means including a guide bar for each set of additional threads, said Abars being located at opposite sides of said rollers, and parallel thereto.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,618,903 Ammann-Haberszich Feb. 22, 1927 2,696,243 Holland Dec. 7, 1954 2,704,734 Draper et al. Mar. 22, 1955 2,732,885 Van Der Hooven Ian. 31, 1956 2,738,298 David et a1 Mar. 13, 1956
US538706A 1955-10-05 1955-10-05 Apparatus for making non-woven cloth Expired - Lifetime US2828795A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US538706A US2828795A (en) 1955-10-05 1955-10-05 Apparatus for making non-woven cloth

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US538706A US2828795A (en) 1955-10-05 1955-10-05 Apparatus for making non-woven cloth

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2828795A true US2828795A (en) 1958-04-01

Family

ID=24148072

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US538706A Expired - Lifetime US2828795A (en) 1955-10-05 1955-10-05 Apparatus for making non-woven cloth

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2828795A (en)

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3632463A (en) * 1967-08-23 1972-01-04 Emerson Electric Co Apparatus for making electric resistance heating mats
US4061524A (en) * 1975-09-24 1977-12-06 Milliken Research Corporation Adjustable traverse tire belt winding apparatus
US4769202A (en) * 1985-11-29 1988-09-06 The B. F. Goodrich Company Process of making a conveyor belt
US4981542A (en) * 1987-11-30 1991-01-01 Compagnie Generale Des Etablissements Michelin - Michelin & Cie Device and process for applying threads on a support
US5242520A (en) * 1990-10-22 1993-09-07 Compagnie Generale Des Etablissements Michelin - Michelin & Cie Method and device for applying threads on a support using a drum with rows of fixed and movable teeth
US5393364A (en) * 1991-01-04 1995-02-28 Compagnie Generale Des Etablissements Michelin - Michelin & Cie Method and device for applying a plurality of threads to a support with the aid of flexible teeth

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1618903A (en) * 1927-02-22 Ernst ammann-haberstich
US2696243A (en) * 1951-02-19 1954-12-07 Jack W Holland Method and apparatus for making scrim
US2704734A (en) * 1949-11-16 1955-03-22 Glass Fibers Inc Method for producing non-woven glass fabric
US2732885A (en) * 1956-01-31 Method and apparatus for producing
US2738298A (en) * 1953-10-07 1956-03-13 Minnesota Mining & Mfg Nonwoven decorative ribbons

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1618903A (en) * 1927-02-22 Ernst ammann-haberstich
US2732885A (en) * 1956-01-31 Method and apparatus for producing
US2704734A (en) * 1949-11-16 1955-03-22 Glass Fibers Inc Method for producing non-woven glass fabric
US2696243A (en) * 1951-02-19 1954-12-07 Jack W Holland Method and apparatus for making scrim
US2738298A (en) * 1953-10-07 1956-03-13 Minnesota Mining & Mfg Nonwoven decorative ribbons

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3632463A (en) * 1967-08-23 1972-01-04 Emerson Electric Co Apparatus for making electric resistance heating mats
US4061524A (en) * 1975-09-24 1977-12-06 Milliken Research Corporation Adjustable traverse tire belt winding apparatus
US4769202A (en) * 1985-11-29 1988-09-06 The B. F. Goodrich Company Process of making a conveyor belt
US4981542A (en) * 1987-11-30 1991-01-01 Compagnie Generale Des Etablissements Michelin - Michelin & Cie Device and process for applying threads on a support
US5134024A (en) * 1987-11-30 1992-07-28 Compagnie Generale Des Etablissements Michelin - Michelin & Cie Reinforcing ply for a penumatic tire containing reinforcing fibers in a sinusoidal pattern
US5242520A (en) * 1990-10-22 1993-09-07 Compagnie Generale Des Etablissements Michelin - Michelin & Cie Method and device for applying threads on a support using a drum with rows of fixed and movable teeth
US5393364A (en) * 1991-01-04 1995-02-28 Compagnie Generale Des Etablissements Michelin - Michelin & Cie Method and device for applying a plurality of threads to a support with the aid of flexible teeth

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3426804A (en) High speed bias weaving and braiding
US3360410A (en) Method and apparatus for making non-woven twill webs
US2772718A (en) Apparatus and method for making reinforced sheet material
US3365918A (en) Simulated non-woven corduroy fabric and method of forming the same
US5540260A (en) Multi-axial yarn structure and weaving method
US3091199A (en) Method and apparatus of tufting pile fabric
US2828795A (en) Apparatus for making non-woven cloth
US2110371A (en) Product and process for the manufacture thereof
US3001359A (en) Method of producing threads of foamed material
US3790426A (en) Yarn separator
US3921265A (en) Method and apparatus to produce non-woven fabric
US2005951A (en) Manufacture of fabrics
US2055412A (en) Method and apparatus for forming web material
US2912945A (en) High and low pattern attachment for tufted pile fabrics
US2810471A (en) Tufting machine
US3341386A (en) Method of making frieze effect fabrics
US3621780A (en) Production of random dyed pile textiles
US2592201A (en) Manufacture of pile fabrics
US2013230A (en) Method and apparatus for making textile product
US1952407A (en) Pile fabric and its manufacture
US1346136A (en) Machine for and method of producing knitted puttees and the like
US2750652A (en) Pile rug and rug base
US2781007A (en) Apparatus for making pile fabrics
US3659439A (en) Yarn treatment apparatus
US3781181A (en) Process for the manufacture of a carpet with pile that is vertically lined up in rows and with ribbon-shaped interlayers which run through part of the height of the pile and are attached to the rows of pile