US1741916A - Loom for weaving pile fabrics - Google Patents

Loom for weaving pile fabrics Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1741916A
US1741916A US282781A US28278128A US1741916A US 1741916 A US1741916 A US 1741916A US 282781 A US282781 A US 282781A US 28278128 A US28278128 A US 28278128A US 1741916 A US1741916 A US 1741916A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
pile
wires
sley
loom
dents
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
US282781A
Inventor
Britton Robert
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.)
John Crossley and Sons Ltd
Original Assignee
John Crossley and Sons Ltd
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 John Crossley and Sons Ltd filed Critical John Crossley and Sons Ltd
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1741916A publication Critical patent/US1741916A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D03WEAVING
    • D03DWOVEN FABRICS; METHODS OF WEAVING; LOOMS
    • D03D39/00Pile-fabric looms
    • D03D39/02Axminster looms, i.e. wherein pile tufts are inserted during weaving

Definitions

  • This invention relates to looms for weaving pile fabrics, of the kind in which the pile is formed from warp threads which are wound spirally or looped upon wires extending in the direction of the length of the fabric being woven, by means carried by, or moving with, the sley and co-acting means on the said wires.
  • the means carried by the sley for co-action with the pilewires is stationary with respect to the said sley and so formed that the movements of the sley, eifect the spiral winding of the pile warps on the said pile-wires.
  • I extend the inner or rear end of each pile-wire upwardly and in the plane of the said wire, and then forwardly to form a short forward projection but bent laterally at a slight angle tothe said plane, say, to the so right, looking from the front of the loom.
  • Each dent of the reed working in a plane to the right of each pile-wire is formed at the front with a short projection bent laterally at a slight angle to the left and designed to engage beneath an upper pile warp of theshed during the forward movement of the sley and form a bight therein above the pile-wire, the
  • Each pile-wire is provided with a fixed cutting blade having an inclined cutting edge against which the loops of the pile-warps are drawn in the known manner, to be out.
  • the pile-wires may be reciprocated longitudinally to obtain a Inore rapid cutting of the loops, and which movement may be such that the pile-loops may be formed on a slant on the pilewires, thereby making them of greater length than the height of the said wires.
  • a cam and lever mechanism are advantageously employed with means for varying such reciprocations and consequently the slant of the loops and the height of the pile.
  • Figure 1 is a side view of a portion of a loom for weaving pile fabrics in accordance with the invention:
  • Figure 2 is a sectional plan of a part of the mechanism shown in Figure 1.
  • Figures 3 and 4 are, respectively, a side View and a plan view of one of the pile-wires.
  • Figures 5 and 6 are, respectively, a side elevation and a front elevation of one of the dents of the reed.
  • Figure 7 is a view similar to Figure 1, but illustrating another position of the parts and Figure 8 is a sectional plan of Figure 7, but drawn to a larger scale.
  • Figure 9 is an elevation of a portion of Figure 8 and Figure 10 is a View looking in the direction of the arrow, Figure 9.
  • a, a are the pile-wires having the cutting or knife-blades b, b the said wires being advantageously secured in grooves in a rack a by means of a coyer plate a
  • c are the pile warps and d is the usual breast-roller at the 1 front of the loom, on to which the woven pilefabric is wound in the usual manner.
  • g is the lathe bed, and h, h the dents of the sley carried thereby, for beating up the weft in theusual way.
  • i, i are the projections'on the fronts of the dents h, which projections are bent laterally at a slight angle to the left, as shown clearly in Figures '6, 8 and 10.
  • j, j are the dents of the second sley or reed arranged behind the dents h but with its reed spaces off-set or displaced with respect to those of the said dents h, as shown clearly in Figure 8, so that the warps c, are caused to bear against the left sides of the dents 71,.
  • the racks a may be stationary so that the crank-shaft when weaving a three-shot fabric and at one-half that speed when weaving a two-shot fabric. By this mechamsm the p1lewires a are given a reciprocating movement, U
  • variable connection between the lever m and the link a is shown as comprising a pin 9 and a slot 1" in which the pin can be adjusted and clamped in position by a nut or other suitable means.
  • a loom as claimed in claim '1 wherein the means on said sley comprise dents, the rear end of each pile wire being bent to form a forward projection, said dents also being provided with forward projections,,the latter being adapted to engage the upper set of pile warps of each shed, and to coact during the forward and rearward movements of said sley, withsaid forward projections of said pile wires, to wind one of said pile warps spirally thereon to form pile loops.
  • a loom as claimed in claim 3 including means to import a reciprocating movement to said pile wires, and further means for regulating the height of the loop to produce variations in the height of the pile.
  • a loom as claimed in claim 3 including means to impart a reciprocating movement to said pile Wires, further means for regulating the height of the loop, to produce variations in the height of the pile, and knife blades secured in said pile wlres.
  • a loom of the kind described comprising pile Wires and a reciprocating sley, dents on said sley, forward projections on said dents and pile Wires, bent laterally in opposite directions respectively, and knife blades secured in said pile Wires.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Looms (AREA)

Description

Dfi'i. 31, 1929. BRITTQN 1,741,916
LOOM FOR WEAVING FILE FABRICS Filed June 4, 1928 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 I Dec. 31, 1929.
R. BRITTON 1,741,916
LOOM FOR WEAVING FILE FABRICS Filed June 1928 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 st mgpun lnwmton 68M 6M Patented Dec. 31, 1929 UNITED STATES PATENT ()FFICE ROBERT BRITTON, OF HALIFAX, ENGLAND, ASSIGNOR TO JOHN CROSSLEY & SONS LTD.,
. OF HALIFAX, ENGLAND LOOM FOR WEAVING PILE FABRICS Application filed June 4, 1928, Serial No. 282,781, and. in Great Britain June 9, 1927.
This invention relates to looms for weaving pile fabrics, of the kind in which the pile is formed from warp threads which are wound spirally or looped upon wires extending in the direction of the length of the fabric being woven, by means carried by, or moving with, the sley and co-acting means on the said wires.
Hitherto, the presenting element carried by the sley has been moved relatively to the latter by auxiliary means to effect the co-action with the pile-wires. This relative movement has, however, necessitated the employment of special cam mechanism and it is the object of this invention to dispense with such mechanism and thus simplify the pile forming devices.
, According to the invention, the means carried by the sley for co-action with the pilewires is stationary with respect to the said sley and so formed that the movements of the sley, eifect the spiral winding of the pile warps on the said pile-wires.
In a suitable arrangement for carrying out the invention, I extend the inner or rear end of each pile-wire upwardly and in the plane of the said wire, and then forwardly to form a short forward projection but bent laterally at a slight angle tothe said plane, say, to the so right, looking from the front of the loom.
Each dent of the reed working in a plane to the right of each pile-wire is formed at the front with a short projection bent laterally at a slight angle to the left and designed to engage beneath an upper pile warp of theshed during the forward movement of the sley and form a bight therein above the pile-wire, the
portion of the bight extending upwardly from the pile-wire tothe projection on the dent'being, by the forward movement of the sley, brought past the right side of the inturned end of the pile-wire in a vertical plane so as to brush and ride against the said inturned end, the said upward portion of the bight in the next rearward movement of the sley engaging with the left hand side of the said end which acts as a kind of switch. To ensure the engagement of the projections on the reed with the upper pile-warps of the shed, it is necessary to cause the latter to bear against the left sides of the dents. This is ad vantageously eifected by the employment of a second sley or reed placed at the rear of the main sley or that having the projections, but with its reed spaces oif-set or displaced with respect to those of the latter reed.
Each pile-wire is provided with a fixed cutting blade having an inclined cutting edge against which the loops of the pile-warps are drawn in the known manner, to be out. 'Or, the pile-wires may be reciprocated longitudinally to obtain a Inore rapid cutting of the loops, and which movement may be such that the pile-loops may be formed on a slant on the pilewires, thereby making them of greater length than the height of the said wires. For reciprocating the pile-Wires a cam and lever mechanism are advantageously employed with means for varying such reciprocations and consequently the slant of the loops and the height of the pile.
To enable the invention to be fully under stood I will describe it by reference to the accompanying drawing, in which Figure 1 is a side view of a portion of a loom for weaving pile fabrics in accordance with the invention:
Figure 2 is a sectional plan of a part of the mechanism shown in Figure 1.
Figures 3 and 4 are, respectively, a side View and a plan view of one of the pile-wires.
Figures 5 and 6 are, respectively, a side elevation and a front elevation of one of the dents of the reed.
Figure 7 is a view similar to Figure 1, but illustrating another position of the parts and Figure 8 is a sectional plan of Figure 7, but drawn to a larger scale.
Figure 9 is an elevation of a portion of Figure 8 and Figure 10 is a View looking in the direction of the arrow, Figure 9.
a, a are the pile-wires having the cutting or knife-blades b, b the said wires being advantageously secured in grooves in a rack a by means of a coyer plate a 0, c are the pile warps and d is the usual breast-roller at the 1 front of the loom, on to which the woven pilefabric is wound in the usual manner.
6 is the upward extension of the inner or rear end of each pile-wire 64 arranged in the plane of the said wire and f is the short forward projection of the said end which is bent laterally to the right looking from the front of the loom, at a slight angle to the said plane, as clearly shown in Figures 4, 8 and 10.
g is the lathe bed, and h, h the dents of the sley carried thereby, for beating up the weft in theusual way. i, i are the projections'on the fronts of the dents h, which projections are bent laterally at a slight angle to the left, as shown clearly in Figures '6, 8 and 10. j, j are the dents of the second sley or reed arranged behind the dents h but with its reed spaces off-set or displaced with respect to those of the said dents h, as shown clearly in Figure 8, so that the warps c, are caused to bear against the left sides of the dents 71,.
'lVith the described arrangement, assume the parts to be in the position shown in Figures 1 and 2, in which the shed of the pilewarps 0, c is open and the sley is in its rearlnost position. If, now, a weft be shot through the open shed and the sley be moved forwards to beat it into the web of fabric being woven, it will be seen that the projections 2' will, owing to their inclination to the left, intersect'the planeof the upper warps of the open shed, andengage or hook beneath the said upper warps and form bights therein, the portions 0 of the bights extending from the said projections z to the pile-wires a coming into contact with and being slightly deflected laterally by the right side of the bent projections f of the said pile-wires in passing, the parts then assuming the position shown in Figures 7, 8, 9 and 10, in which the sley is at the limit of its forward movement, and the portions 0 of the bights are in such a position that on the backward movement of the sley the said portionswill come into con tact with the left sides of the ends 7 of the pile-wires. In this position of the parts, it will be noticed that the projection i on each dent is arranged will in advance of the front edge of the latter in order, that the portion 0 of the warp shall be forward of the projection f on the co-acting pile-wire a. As the pilewarps are reversed again to form the shed as the sley moves to its rearmost position, the upper set thereof in engagement with the projections i by the tension therein will be comedisengaged therefrom as the said set is moved down by such reversal. During such downward movement the upper pile-warps ride against the left sides of the extensions 6. Another weft is now shot and the cycle of operations just described repeated, the beating upof the weft bringing the pile warps that have just been manipulated to form loops on the wires a against the rounded edges 6 of the extensions 6 which guide them into the weaving position beneath the pile wires in the usual manner.
The racks a may be stationary so that the crank-shaft when weaving a three-shot fabric and at one-half that speed when weaving a two-shot fabric. By this mechamsm the p1lewires a are given a reciprocating movement, U
being moved towards the front of the loom immediately after the last set of pile loops is formed and then moved backwardly to impart a quick cutting stroke to the blades Z) prior to the next set of loops being formed. By causing the wires or to be moved rearwardly till the rounded edges 6 thereof are beyond the weaving point, the loops 0 will be formed on the slant so as to be of greater length than the height of the said wires. By varying the point of connection between the lever m and the link a it will be seen that the reciprocating movement of the wires a can be altered, the variation in the height of pile being governed by the extra traverse imparted to the said wires. The variable connection between the lever m and the link a is shown as comprising a pin 9 and a slot 1" in which the pin can be adjusted and clamped in position by a nut or other suitable means.
Claims:
1. In a loom comprising pile wires and a reciprocating sley, dents on said sley, and means on said dents, stationary with respect thereto and coacting with means on said pile wires, adapted to effect the spiral winding of .the pile warps on said pile wires, with the movement of said sley.
2. A loom as claimed in claim '1, wherein the means on said sley comprise dents, the rear end of each pile wire being bent to form a forward projection, said dents also being provided with forward projections,,the latter being adapted to engage the upper set of pile warps of each shed, and to coact during the forward and rearward movements of said sley, withsaid forward projections of said pile wires, to wind one of said pile warps spirally thereon to form pile loops.
3. In a loom of the kind described, comprising pile wires and a reciprocating sley, dents on said sley, said pile wires and dents being provided with forward projections bent laterally in opposite directions respectively.
4:- A loom as claimed in claim 3, wherein a second sley is provided, the latter being offset with respect to the main sley, whereby the warps are caused to bear against one side of the dents.
5. A loom as claimed in claim 3, including means to impart a reciprocating movement to said pile Wires.
6. A loom as claimed in claim 3, including means to import a reciprocating movement to said pile wires, and further means for regulating the height of the loop to produce variations in the height of the pile.
7. A loom as claimed in claim 3, including means to impart a reciprocating movement to said pile Wires, further means for regulating the height of the loop, to produce variations in the height of the pile, and knife blades secured in said pile wlres.
8. A loom of the kind described, comprising pile Wires and a reciprocating sley, dents on said sley, forward projections on said dents and pile Wires, bent laterally in opposite directions respectively, and knife blades secured in said pile Wires.
20 ROBERT BRITTON.
US282781A 1927-06-09 1928-06-04 Loom for weaving pile fabrics Expired - Lifetime US1741916A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB15424/27A GB282294A (en) 1927-06-09 1927-06-09 Improvements in looms for weaving pile fabrics

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1741916A true US1741916A (en) 1929-12-31

Family

ID=10058881

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US282781A Expired - Lifetime US1741916A (en) 1927-06-09 1928-06-04 Loom for weaving pile fabrics

Country Status (2)

Country Link
US (1) US1741916A (en)
GB (1) GB282294A (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2570348A (en) * 1949-09-03 1951-10-09 Kahn Benjamin Device for making pile fabrics
US3070983A (en) * 1958-03-19 1963-01-01 Firth Carpet Company Looper with sliding cutter
US20080115852A1 (en) * 2006-11-17 2008-05-22 N.V. Michael Van De Wiele Weaving machine for weaving pile fabrics, and set at least two spacers provided to be mounted next to one another in a weaving machine for weaving pile fabrics

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2570348A (en) * 1949-09-03 1951-10-09 Kahn Benjamin Device for making pile fabrics
US3070983A (en) * 1958-03-19 1963-01-01 Firth Carpet Company Looper with sliding cutter
US20080115852A1 (en) * 2006-11-17 2008-05-22 N.V. Michael Van De Wiele Weaving machine for weaving pile fabrics, and set at least two spacers provided to be mounted next to one another in a weaving machine for weaving pile fabrics
US7451786B2 (en) * 2006-11-17 2008-11-18 N.V. Michel Van De Wiele Weaving machine for weaving pile fabrics, and set of at least two spacers provided to be mounted next to one another in a weaving machine for weaving pile fabrics

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB282294A (en) 1927-12-22

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3428095A (en) Cloth motion in looms
US4485848A (en) Terry weaving machine having a deflecting mechanism for warp yarns
US1741916A (en) Loom for weaving pile fabrics
US2808072A (en) Loop-pile-forming wires for looms
US791678A (en) Pile-fabric loom.
US2346803A (en) Loom
US3450167A (en) Looms for weaving cut-pile fabrics
US1561282A (en) Loom for weaving pile fabrics
US1661339A (en) Loom
US3409051A (en) Pile fabric loom
US1910946A (en) Pattern forming reed for looms
US3009485A (en) Method and apparatus for making patterned rough textured pile fabric floor covering
US778363A (en) Loom for weaving pile fabric.
US1661340A (en) Loom
US2468572A (en) Loom for weaving pile fabrics
US2509776A (en) Loom for weaving pile fabrics
US1859952A (en) Loom and method of weaving
US1944121A (en) Tuft pile fabric loom
US1499603A (en) Loom shuttle
US6192943B1 (en) Carpet loom for weaving warp pile fabric
US1704620A (en) Loom
US1575305A (en) Loom for weaving fine fabrics
US2482975A (en) Weft tension take-up for looms
US960171A (en) Loom for weaving pile fabric.
US2570348A (en) Device for making pile fabrics