US3395430A - Apparatus for flame singeing of textiles - Google Patents

Apparatus for flame singeing of textiles Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3395430A
US3395430A US532156A US53215666A US3395430A US 3395430 A US3395430 A US 3395430A US 532156 A US532156 A US 532156A US 53215666 A US53215666 A US 53215666A US 3395430 A US3395430 A US 3395430A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
fabric
pocket
flame
singeing
rolls
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
US532156A
Inventor
Randle Jack
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.)
Ernst Turner & Co (salford) Ltd
Ernst Turner & Co Salford Ltd
Original Assignee
Ernst Turner & Co Salford 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 Ernst Turner & Co Salford Ltd filed Critical Ernst Turner & Co Salford Ltd
Priority to US532156A priority Critical patent/US3395430A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3395430A publication Critical patent/US3395430A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06CFINISHING, DRESSING, TENTERING OR STRETCHING TEXTILE FABRICS
    • D06C9/00Singeing
    • D06C9/02Singeing by flame

Definitions

  • the invention is an improvement upon flame singeing machines of the type commonly stationed in a line of ap paratus arranged to treat cloth that moves continuously and emerges from the line as finished cloth.
  • the machine frame 2 comprises a pair of spaced prefabricated steel box members 4 rigidly connected near their respective mid-points by a braced 'bed 6.
  • the internal faces of the box members provide mountings for a front pair of rolls 8 just above the frame bed 6 and a rear pair of rolls 10 just above the frame bed. These constitute the lower rolls.
  • the rolls are steel cylinders of 3 inch outer diameter.
  • each side plate 4 Midway between the centre upper roll 12 and the rearmost and foremost rolls 8 and 10 there are in each side plate 4, slots 16 through which stroker wires 18 run.
  • the stroker wires 18 primarily exist to cause the fibres of the fabric to project from the surface of the fabric so that they may be more easily removed by singeing.
  • the secondary purpose of the wires is to create a diverging pocket when the fabric is threaded over the rolls.
  • the right hand box member 4 houses an air supply conduit (not shown).
  • the conduit is supplied with air at a pressure of 450 millimeters of water by an electrically driven compressor (not shown).
  • the same box member also houses a conduit which conducts town gas to a mixing valve (not shown) where the gas is mixed with suitable proportions of air.
  • the gas supply contains a solenoid operated valve capable of closing off the gas supply, the reason for which will appear later in this description.
  • the air conduit has front and rear outlet pipes 20 and 22 which feed air to a front burner bar 24 and a rear burner bar 2-6 each being situated between and beneath the front and rear lower rolls 8 and 10, respectively.
  • the burners 24 and 26 extend transversely over the whole width of the rolls and each has a slotted neck in the upper surface so as to produce a flat sheet of flame which passes up between the respective pair of rolls.
  • the left hand box member 4 houses a centrifugal fan 28 having capacity of 4000 cubic feet per minute, the inlet 29 of which communicates with the interior of the member 4.
  • the inlet 29 also communicates with the interior of the right hand box member by means of a duct 30 joining the two members.
  • Both box members have a pair .of inlets 32 situated on their respective internal faces, just above the uppermost fabric run.
  • the products of combustion which are produced within the pockets 34 and 36 may only escape from the sides of the pockets and as they do so they are drawn into the inlets 32 by the surrounding air which during operation, moves past the sides of the pockets.
  • each pocket there is a scavenger pipe 38, 48 which is supplied with air under pressure.
  • Each pipe is located parallel to the rolls and toward the upper part of the respective pocket.
  • the scavenger pipes each have a slot therein, facing their respective burners and the pressure of the air emanating from the slot is adjusted so as to confine the flame to the lower part of the pocket and to spread it over the fabric and furthermore to create an excess pressure within the pocket thereby causing the products of combustion to leave the pocket, whereupon they are collected by the fan.
  • the space from which the fan draws air is reduced by arranging feed rolls 42 for the incoming fabric, above the machine and threading the fabric over them to form a large pocket with the open end facing the exit side of the machine.
  • the products of combustion usually include fine soot and it is important that this be directed toward the inlets of the box members.
  • the singeing machine is stationed in a line of apparatus, each unit of the apparatus being employed to provide a separate function or perform a separate phase of the treatment of the cloth web.
  • a pair of driven draw nip rolls which have the task of pulling the cloth through the machines in advance of it.
  • the cloth for example, is first drawn from a plaited stack over three staggered drying cylinders, then through a brush box which raises the nap on both faces of the cloth, then through the singeing machine then over two plates of a plate singeing machine, then through a water-mist spray unit then through a steam box, then finally through a water box situated next to the draw nip rolls.
  • the fabric defining the first part of the pocket is dried as it recedes from the first burner and is singed as it approaches the first burner on the return journey.
  • the reverse face of the fabric is subjected to similar treatment during a double journey over the second burner.
  • the heat used in driving moisture from the fabric and the heat absorbed by the fabric itself constitute a load that is shared by the two burners and an even singe on both faces results. Should the speedometer detect movement which is slower than a preselected minimum the solenoid valve is actuaetd automatically and the gas supply to the burner is cut off.
  • the degree of control possible on the machine permits eflicient singeing of synthetic fabrics of low melting point, for example, materials of acrylic fibre. Throughput speeds of up to 200 yds./minute are possible.
  • a textile flame singeing machine of the type comprising a plurality of sets of spaced rollers arranged to support a textile fabric for travel through the machine, a set of said rollers disposed at the entrance and at the exit of the machine, and an intervening set of rollers therebetween, the fabric being trained around the rollers to form two pockets, the first pocket at the entrance end and the second pocket 4 at the exit. end, respectively, of the machine with one portion of the fabric forming a common wall between the pockets, and

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Treatment Of Fiber Materials (AREA)

Description

6, 1968 J. RAN DLE 3,395,430
APPARATUS FOR FLAME SINGEING OF TEXTILES Filed March 7, 1966 JACK RANDLE BY w l j ot 3,395,430 l a "APPARATUS FOR FLAME SINGEING i F TEXTILES Jack Randle, Bury, Eugland,;assignor to Ernest Turner & Co. (Salford) Limited, Salford, Lancashire,.England Filed Mar. 7, 1966, Ser. No. 532,156 3 Claims. l- 2 -3 ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE This invention relates to flame-singeing machines for i the treatment of textile materials.
In the past it has been usual to singe runs of textile fabric by passing them over sets of three staggered rolls or guides to form either a shallow inverted V with a singeing flame playing directly onto the body of the material at the apex of the V or adeep pocket the length of which was many times the depth of the pocket and into which pocket the singeing flame was played.
Such apparatus-was only capable of singeing one side of the material at one pass and apparatus using two sets of rolls and two flames was employed to singe both faces at one pass. In practice, to singe both faces evenly at one pass is difficult. The reason for this difliculty lies in the fact that the moisture in the fabric entering the machine retards the rise in temperature of the material such that only partial singeing is possible as the material passes through the first flame.
When the dried material is reversed and meets the second flame the temperature rise is faster and the material is singed more thoroughly on the reversed surface.
It is an object of this invention to show how this disadvantage may be overcome.
It is another object of this invention to enable synthetic fabrics with relatively low melting points to be singed successfully.
The invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawing which is a schematic diagram of a side elevation of the singeing machine.
The invention is an improvement upon flame singeing machines of the type commonly stationed in a line of ap paratus arranged to treat cloth that moves continuously and emerges from the line as finished cloth.
The machine frame 2 comprises a pair of spaced prefabricated steel box members 4 rigidly connected near their respective mid-points by a braced 'bed 6. The internal faces of the box members provide mountings for a front pair of rolls 8 just above the frame bed 6 and a rear pair of rolls 10 just above the frame bed. These constitute the lower rolls. There are three upper rolls :12 similarly supported, midway between the front and rear rolls and two to three feet above the latter. The rolls are steel cylinders of 3 inch outer diameter.
Midway between the centre upper roll 12 and the rearmost and foremost rolls 8 and 10 there are in each side plate 4, slots 16 through which stroker wires 18 run. The stroker wires 18 primarily exist to cause the fibres of the fabric to project from the surface of the fabric so that they may be more easily removed by singeing. The secondary purpose of the wires is to create a diverging pocket when the fabric is threaded over the rolls.
The right hand box member 4 houses an air supply conduit (not shown). The conduit is supplied with air at a pressure of 450 millimeters of water by an electrically driven compressor (not shown). The same box member also houses a conduit which conducts town gas to a mixing valve (not shown) where the gas is mixed with suitable proportions of air. The gas supply contains a solenoid operated valve capable of closing off the gas supply, the reason for which will appear later in this description.
The air conduit has front and rear outlet pipes 20 and 22 which feed air to a front burner bar 24 and a rear burner bar 2-6 each being situated between and beneath the front and rear lower rolls 8 and 10, respectively. The burners 24 and 26 extend transversely over the whole width of the rolls and each has a slotted neck in the upper surface so as to produce a flat sheet of flame which passes up between the respective pair of rolls.
The left hand box member 4 houses a centrifugal fan 28 having capacity of 4000 cubic feet per minute, the inlet 29 of which communicates with the interior of the member 4. The inlet 29 also communicates with the interior of the right hand box member by means of a duct 30 joining the two members. Both box members have a pair .of inlets 32 situated on their respective internal faces, just above the uppermost fabric run.
The products of combustion which are produced within the pockets 34 and 36 may only escape from the sides of the pockets and as they do so they are drawn into the inlets 32 by the surrounding air which during operation, moves past the sides of the pockets.
The extractive action of the fan is enhanced in two ways. Firstly, in each pocket there is a scavenger pipe 38, 48 which is supplied with air under pressure. Each pipe is located parallel to the rolls and toward the upper part of the respective pocket. The scavenger pipes each have a slot therein, facing their respective burners and the pressure of the air emanating from the slot is adjusted so as to confine the flame to the lower part of the pocket and to spread it over the fabric and furthermore to create an excess pressure within the pocket thereby causing the products of combustion to leave the pocket, whereupon they are collected by the fan.
Secondly, the space from which the fan draws air is reduced by arranging feed rolls 42 for the incoming fabric, above the machine and threading the fabric over them to form a large pocket with the open end facing the exit side of the machine. The products of combustion usually include fine soot and it is important that this be directed toward the inlets of the box members.
In one example of the use of the invention, the singeing machine is stationed in a line of apparatus, each unit of the apparatus being employed to provide a separate function or perform a separate phase of the treatment of the cloth web. At the exit end of the line, there is a pair of driven draw nip rolls which have the task of pulling the cloth through the machines in advance of it.
In an assembly of such apparatus, the cloth, for example, is first drawn from a plaited stack over three staggered drying cylinders, then through a brush box which raises the nap on both faces of the cloth, then through the singeing machine then over two plates of a plate singeing machine, then through a water-mist spray unit then through a steam box, then finally through a water box situated next to the draw nip rolls.
When the cloth begins to move through the assembly, such movement is detected by a speedometer which is linked to the solenoid operated valve in the air/ gas supply. Once the cloth is moving above a preselected velocity the supply is available and ignited by a push-button control. Uniform flames immediately issue from the two burners 3 and these are adjusted for size according to the rate of throughput of the cloth. The stroker wires augment this control by allowing the distance between the flame and the cloth downstream of the flame to be varied. The width of each flame is adjustable from both ends to accommodate differing widths of cloth.
I have found the advantages of the above embodiment to be as follows. The creation of two pockets both having a common wall allows heat from both burners to play upon the common fabric wall.
The fabric defining the first part of the pocket is dried as it recedes from the first burner and is singed as it approaches the first burner on the return journey. The reverse face of the fabric is subjected to similar treatment during a double journey over the second burner.
The heat used in driving moisture from the fabric and the heat absorbed by the fabric itself constitute a load that is shared by the two burners and an even singe on both faces results. Should the speedometer detect movement which is slower than a preselected minimum the solenoid valve is actuaetd automatically and the gas supply to the burner is cut off.
The degree of control possible on the machine permits eflicient singeing of synthetic fabrics of low melting point, for example, materials of acrylic fibre. Throughput speeds of up to 200 yds./minute are possible.
What I claim is:
1. A textile flame singeing machine of the type comprising a plurality of sets of spaced rollers arranged to support a textile fabric for travel through the machine, a set of said rollers disposed at the entrance and at the exit of the machine, and an intervening set of rollers therebetween, the fabric being trained around the rollers to form two pockets, the first pocket at the entrance end and the second pocket 4 at the exit. end, respectively, of the machine with one portion of the fabric forming a common wall between the pockets, and
a burner at the entrance of each pocket to play a flame on the opposed interior walls of the pocket, whereby the burner at the'entrance to the first pocket simultaneously singes two separate areas on one face of the fabric and the burner at the entrance to the second' pocket simultaneously singes' two separate areas on the other face of the fabric whereby an even singe is obtained on both faces of the fabric.
2. The improvement according to claim 1, further including means positioned within each pocket to remove gases from the pocket.
3. The improvement according to claim 2, further including a stroker wire situated in each pocket to bear on the face of the fabric and raise its fibers, the stroker wire being movable transversely to the face upon which the wire bears.
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,714,410 5/1929 Turner 26-3 1,878,236 9/1932 Grifiin 34-l59 2,414,891 1/1947 Often 2633 FOREIGN PATENTS 576,916 5/1924 France.
384,013 12/1932 Great Britain.
331,589 1/1921 Germany.
466,215 10/ 1928 Germany.
252,3 l4 3/ 1927 Italy.
ROBERT R. MACKEY, Primary Examiner.
US532156A 1966-03-07 1966-03-07 Apparatus for flame singeing of textiles Expired - Lifetime US3395430A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US532156A US3395430A (en) 1966-03-07 1966-03-07 Apparatus for flame singeing of textiles

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US532156A US3395430A (en) 1966-03-07 1966-03-07 Apparatus for flame singeing of textiles

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3395430A true US3395430A (en) 1968-08-06

Family

ID=24120584

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US532156A Expired - Lifetime US3395430A (en) 1966-03-07 1966-03-07 Apparatus for flame singeing of textiles

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3395430A (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6338187B1 (en) * 1999-03-22 2002-01-15 Gerold Fleissner Method and device for producing perforated nonwovens by hydrodynamic needing

Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE331589C (en) * 1915-04-27 1921-01-10 Osthoff Fa Walter Flue gas burner for gas flame burners
FR576916A (en) * 1924-01-15 1924-08-28 Process for extinguishing burning plots at the exit of the fabric flambéing or scorching machines
DE466215C (en) * 1928-10-04 Eduard Timr Tissue cutting machine
US1714410A (en) * 1924-11-08 1929-05-21 Turner Ernest Flame singeing machine
US1878236A (en) * 1930-07-07 1932-09-20 Carew Mfg Company Paper making
GB384013A (en) * 1931-09-25 1932-12-01 Ernest Turner Improvements in or relating to fabric singeing machines
US2414891A (en) * 1944-02-19 1947-01-28 Offen Bernard Means for drying webs

Patent Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE466215C (en) * 1928-10-04 Eduard Timr Tissue cutting machine
DE331589C (en) * 1915-04-27 1921-01-10 Osthoff Fa Walter Flue gas burner for gas flame burners
FR576916A (en) * 1924-01-15 1924-08-28 Process for extinguishing burning plots at the exit of the fabric flambéing or scorching machines
US1714410A (en) * 1924-11-08 1929-05-21 Turner Ernest Flame singeing machine
US1878236A (en) * 1930-07-07 1932-09-20 Carew Mfg Company Paper making
GB384013A (en) * 1931-09-25 1932-12-01 Ernest Turner Improvements in or relating to fabric singeing machines
US2414891A (en) * 1944-02-19 1947-01-28 Offen Bernard Means for drying webs

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6338187B1 (en) * 1999-03-22 2002-01-15 Gerold Fleissner Method and device for producing perforated nonwovens by hydrodynamic needing
US6405416B1 (en) 1999-03-22 2002-06-18 Gerold Fleissner Method and device for producing perforated nonwovens by hydrodynamic needling

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2682116A (en) Method and apparatus for treating fibrous sheet material by superheated steam or vapors
US3460731A (en) Filament deflecting apparatus
US3503134A (en) Process and apparatus for the treatment of materials,comprising tensioning and sieve drum means
GB1310576A (en) Process and device for heat treatment of heavy porous textile webs
US3340617A (en) Web drying
US4392309A (en) Apparatus for heat treating a continuously moving web
US3279091A (en) Apparatus for drying a moving web over a non-rotating shell
US2494807A (en) Decating machine
US3395430A (en) Apparatus for flame singeing of textiles
ES340424A1 (en) Ventilating dryers
US3686903A (en) Apparatus for the contact-free treatment of materials which can be stressed in a lengthwise direction
US3939536A (en) Apparatus for imparting a random wrinkled or crushed appearance to pile fabrics
US3770374A (en) Process for the continuous steam treatment of staple fiber
US3925865A (en) Fabric bulking unit
US4052796A (en) Process and apparatus for the continuous finishing of webs of textiles, artificial leather and the like
US3440735A (en) Apparatus for the heat-treatment of materials
US2422481A (en) Means for and method of applying heat to ironing machines
CN203320289U (en) Combined singeing machine
GB1122313A (en) Process and apparatus for imparting coherence to a mass of fibers
GB1116761A (en) Apparatus and process for making deposits of fibrous material
US2597490A (en) Apparatus for treating textile materials
US3713219A (en) Apparatus for shrinking continuous lengths of textile materials
US3585729A (en) Process and apparatus for the treatment of lengths of materials
GB1085339A (en) Singeing machine
US3837051A (en) Apparatus for singeing textile fabrics