TITLE:
BI-COMPONENT/BINDER FIBER INSOLE
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application derives and claims priority from United
States patent application 61/228,043 filed July 23, 2009, incorporated herein by reference.
TECHNICAL FIELD
This invention relates to shoe insoles and in particular to the manufacture of a low cost shoe insole.
Numerous attempts have been made to provide a low cost insoles for shoes, and any number of allegedly low cost insoles have been suggested in the prior art. Among the lowest costs ones developed in the prior art are plastic extruded insoles which are utilized in a number of applications. Another widely used technique involves the use of non woven material which is saturated with a suitable binder and allowed to cure. As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, nonwoven fabrics are commonly formed as a web or sheet of fibers bonded together by entangling fiber of filaments mechanically, thermally or chemically. In the shoe industry non- woven material has been used for insole manufacturing, but the procedure for its use generally is complicated. See for example, shoe insole and manufacturing method shown and described in United States Patent 4,603,442.
The invention described hereinafter provides an insole construction which preferably comprises approximately 100% of bi component fiber, i.e., a fiber which is manufactured with two components, one of which is a first polyester fiber, for example, having a relatively high melting point, which is coated with a second
polyester fiber component, for example, having a relatively lower melting point. That s to say, a bi-component fibers conventionally are known in the art as extruding two polymers from the same spinneret with both polymers contained within the same filament. In particular, the process hereinafter is a simplified method of providing an insole at lower cost than previously available in the prior art. The bi-component fiber is layered in a convention way, and then preferably needle punched to form a fabric. The fabric is then heated to a temperature so that the lower temperature component of the bi-component filter fiber melts and the second component of the bi-component fiber is softened, which causes the fabric to form a cohesive mass. The fabric is then nipped between calendared rollers which compacts the material into a dense non woven mass having some preselected thickness. The material structure is still porous and can absorb water but because it is capable of compaction into a dense mass, it provides a material which makes an excellent insole material for shoes, for example, at substantially less cost then extruded plastic insoles having a similar material thickness.
One aspect of this disclosure is that insole thickness can be varied simply by altering the diameter of the bi component fiber while the weight of material of the nonwoven insole would remain the same. For example, a 24 oz. by weight insole material made with thinner bi-component fibers could pass through the rollers to compact the material down to some desired predetermined thickness, for example, .095 inches, while the same 24 oz. weight of the nonwoven made with thicker bi-component fibers would be compressed to .15 thousandths of an inch, for example. Those
skilled in the art will recognize other material thickness and/or material weights maybe employed if desired.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In accordance with this disclosure, generally stated, a shoe insole is provided, preferably constructed preferably with approximately a 100% bi-component polyester fabric made from the bi-component fibers. The bi-component fiber, which in the preferred embodiment comprising of a two-part polyester having different melting points that is heated to a temperature which melts the lower melting component of the fiber but merely softens or relatively does not affect the higher temperature component of the fiber. The fibers are carded and cross lapped or layered in a convention manner and the resultant layered mass is then needle punched to form a non woven material. In accordance with the present disclosure, the material is heated to a temperature which melts the lower melting component of the fiber but merely softens or relatively does not affect the higher melt point temperature component. After heating, the material is calendared so that it compacts and becomes dense, and the melted component fuses the material structure into a cohesive mass. In another aspect of the disclosure, the weight of bi component fibers utilized for the fabric can remain relatively constant, while the thickness of the bi-component fibers is altered to provide a range of thickness for the compacted material while maintaining a generally similar weight of the compacted material per insole. In another aspect of the disclosure, the weight of the compacted material is increased while the thickness of the material remains constant, again by varying the thickness to the bi component fibers forming the material.
-A-
The foregoing and other objects, features, and advantages of the invention as well as presently preferred embodiments thereof will become more apparent from the reading of the following description in connection with the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
In the accompanying drawings which form part of the specification:
Figure 1 is a diagrammatic view of one illustrative embodiment for construction of the insole of the present invention.
Corresponding reference numerals indicate corresponding parts throughout the several figures of the drawings.
BEST MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION
The following detailed description illustrates the invention by way of example and not by way of limitation. The description clearly enables one skilled in the art to make and use the invention, describes several embodiments, adaptations, variations, alternatives, and uses of the invention, including what is presently believed to be the best mode of carrying out the invention.
Referring now to Figure 1 , one illustrative method of producing the insole of the present invention is shown in diagrammatic form. As there shown, suitable polymer materials are extruded in the form of bi-component fibers as represented by the reference numeral 1. The fibers are introduced to a carding machine 2 to create a batt of material. The batt of material is then transferred in a conventional way to an entanglement station which entangles the fibers to create a nonwoven material. As will be apparent to those skilled in the art, entanglement can be accomplished in a number of ways, including high pressure water systems (sometimes referred to as spun-laced nonwovens), or in
the preferred construction of the present invention by needle punching the batt with an oscillating needle to mechanically entangle the fibers. Other methods of fiber entanglement may be used, if desired. There after, the nonwoven is passed though a heat chamber 4. The chamber 4 preferably is a gas or electrically operated chamber furnace maintained at a predetermined temperature which is sufficient to melt one of the polymers of the bi- component fiber while not affecting the structural integrity of the other polymer of the bi-component fiber. Preferably, the chamber 4 operates at temperature of 300 to 350 degrees F. The operating temperature will depend upon the melting points of the bi- component fiber chosen initially, but ambient temperatures in shoe factories, for example will require the lower melting component of the fiber to have a melting point above the temperatures normally encountered in shoe manufacturing operations.
After heating, the material is passed through one or more rollers 5 to reduce the thickness of the material to some predetermined thickness. Insole material commonly has a thickness between .030 .and .160 inches which are achieved by compressing various thicknesses of nonwoven base weight material typically having a weight between 12 oz. and 35 oz. per square yard. It is a particular feature of the present disclosure that the finished product specifications can be obtained by varying the thickness of the bi- component fibers initially. Thus, employing a thicker fiber will produce a thicker final product assuming the rolling process is consistent in each instance.
After rolling, the material is allowed to cool at 6 and the finished mater 7 is formed into sheets or rolls which are then formed into insoles at 8 and applied in shoe manufacturing at 9.
As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, preferred embodiment of the present disclosure uses substantially all bi- component fibers. The percentage of bi-component fibers can be altered, if desired. However, reducing the percentage or bi- component fiber below approximately thirty percent lessens the likely hood of obtaining suitable material for insole use without the addition of additional manufacturing procedures to insure proper binding of the fibers. Likewise, additional additives, for example color additives or other filler material may be used for particular purposes. For the purposes of this disclosure, the tern "substantially 100 percent" when applied to bi-component fibers means a percent of bi-component fibers sufficient to form suitable insole material without additional bonding manufacturing steps for the material other than entanglement, heating and roll forming the material.
In view of the above, it will be seen that the several objects of the invention are achieved and other advantageous results are obtained. As various changes could be made in the above constructions without departing from the scope of the invention, it is intended that all matter contained in the above description or shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.