US3511064A - Manufacture of slub effect fabrics - Google Patents

Manufacture of slub effect fabrics Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3511064A
US3511064A US701902A US3511064DA US3511064A US 3511064 A US3511064 A US 3511064A US 701902 A US701902 A US 701902A US 3511064D A US3511064D A US 3511064DA US 3511064 A US3511064 A US 3511064A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
yarn
fabric
knitting
extra
slub
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
US701902A
Inventor
John Major
Berwyn Cedric Thomas
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.)
Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd
Original Assignee
Imperial Chemical Industries 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 Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd filed Critical Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3511064A publication Critical patent/US3511064A/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
    • D04BKNITTING
    • D04B1/00Weft knitting processes for the production of fabrics or articles not dependent on the use of particular machines; Fabrics or articles defined by such processes
    • D04B1/14Other fabrics or articles characterised primarily by the use of particular thread materials
    • D04B1/16Other fabrics or articles characterised primarily by the use of particular thread materials synthetic threads
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D04BRAIDING; LACE-MAKING; KNITTING; TRIMMINGS; NON-WOVEN FABRICS
    • D04BKNITTING
    • D04B1/00Weft knitting processes for the production of fabrics or articles not dependent on the use of particular machines; Fabrics or articles defined by such processes
    • D04B1/14Other fabrics or articles characterised primarily by the use of particular thread materials
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D04BRAIDING; LACE-MAKING; KNITTING; TRIMMINGS; NON-WOVEN FABRICS
    • D04BKNITTING
    • D04B35/00Details of, or auxiliary devices incorporated in, knitting machines, not otherwise provided for
    • D04B35/22Devices for preparatory treatment of threads

Definitions

  • the present invention is concerned with improvements in the manufacture of slub effect fabrics and in particular to a novel slub effect fabric and method and apparatus for the production thereof.
  • Fabrics having a slub effect are normally produced from a specially prepared slub yarn.
  • the preparation of this yarn involves a number of folding/ twisting operations and is hence more expensive than standardyarns. It is usually prepared from staple fibre yarns in preference to continuous filament yarns.
  • a slub effect fabric can be simply and economically produced on a weft knitting machine, especially, a circular knitting machine, from a basically 100% standard continuous filament yarn.
  • the effect is obtained by feeding an extra yarn, preferably a staple yarn, to the needles of a knitting machine whilst these are knitting the basic fabric, and arranging that the extra yarn break at frequent intervals to produce a slub effect in the fabric.
  • the extra yarn can be introduced at any predetermined number of feed points, preferably where both cylinder and dial needles are knitting, without affecting the rate at which the. basic fabric is knitted.
  • the slub effect can be varied by varying the number of points at which it is fed into the basic fabric, by varying the yarn denier and by varying the manner in which it is fed into the fabric.
  • the present invention provides a weft knitted slub effect fabric comprising a base fabric formed from one yarn and containing an extra yarn which is knitted in with the aforementioned yarn at intervals along fabric courses, said extra yarn being discontinuous in the knitted fabric.
  • the fabric is formed from a bulked continu ous filament yarn and preferably also the extra yarn is a staple yarn of the same type.
  • the present invention provides a process for the manufacture. of a fabric having a slub effect wherein a yarn is knitted into a base fabric comprising a plurality of knitted courses, an extra yarn introduced to the knitting elements during the knitting of one course of the fabric and knitted in with the aforementioned yarn for a plurality of stitches, the said extra yarn broken 3,511,064 Patented May 12, 1970 and subsequently reintroduced to the elements to be knitted into the fabric again further along the course or in a subsequent course, the introduction of the extra yarn to the elements and the breaking thereof being repeated at intervals during the knitting of the fabric.
  • the extra yarn may be introduced to the knitting needles via a positive feed attachment to the knitting machine, which attachment incorporates a tube through which are blown to forward the yarn to the knitting needles and which has a cutting edge at the end nearest the. needles.
  • the invention provides an attachment for a weft knitting machine adapted to forward an extra yarn to the knitting elements thereof, comprising positive feed means and a tube located between the feed means and the knitting elements the said tube being adapted to receive a stream of air to forward yarn from the positive feed means therethrough and having a cutting edge at the end nearest the knitting elements.
  • the positive feed means may comprise a paif of nip rolls one of which is driven.
  • the driven roll may consist of two portions, an outer roll and an inner roll, the former being freely rotatable about the latter within limits determined by spring or pin means.
  • FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic representation of a portion of a needle bed of a circular weft knitting machine and an attachment according to the present invention.
  • FIG. 2 illustrates one form of a driven nip roll which allows a varying rate of yarn feed.
  • FIG. 3 illustrates a further form of a driven nip roll.
  • FIG. 4 is a representation of a portion of knitted fa-bric according to the present invention.
  • a needle bed 1 of a circular weft knitting machine has cylinder and dial latch needles 2 and 3 respectively which knit the base fabric from the yarn 4.
  • An extra yarn 5 is positively fed to an air ejector 6 by the nip rolls 7 and 8, the latter being a driven roll.
  • the air ejector has a throat 9, compressed air inlet 10 and an outlet end 11 which is sharpened to give a cutting edge 12.
  • the needles 2 and 3 knit a base fabric from the yarn 4 in the normal manner.
  • the extra yarn 5 is positively fed by the nip rolls 7 and 8 to the air ejec tor 6 at a speed slower than the needles 2 and 3 take the yarn 4 from the supply.
  • the yarn 5 passes through the throat 9 of the ejector and is forwarded by the air supply through the outlet end thereof and introduced to the needles 2 and 3 which then knit in this yarn with the yarn 4. Since the positive feed allows less yarn to pull through the nip than the needles require, yarn 5 is tensioned between the needles and the nip roll and is brought into contact with the cutting edge 12 of the outlet end of the ejector. When this tension is sufficiently great the yarn 5 is cut and the needles continue knitting yarn 4 only. As the positive feed forwards more yarn a fresh end is introduced to the needles and the sequence of events is repeated.
  • the positive feed should be adapted to forward the yarn 5 to the knitting elements at an irregular rate. This can be achieved in a number of ways.
  • the speed of the drive roll can be varied in a predetermined manner, or by varying the pressure between the nip rolls to allow the yarn 5 to occasionally slip through under the tension applied by the needles or the nip may be positively opened by cams operating on either or both rolls.
  • either or both of the rolls may have small flat portions machined thereon so that the yarn may be released at intervals.
  • the flat portions should not be more than /s apart, to prevent the appearance of uncontrolled one or two stitch slubs appearing in the fabric.
  • the length of a slub is determined by the length of the fiat portions on the roll and the peripheral speed thereof.
  • the frequency of slubs in a fabric course is determined by the number of fiat portions in the roll and the relative speeds of the knitting machine and the nip rolls.
  • the above methods of varying the rate of feed of the extra yarn may also affect the length of the slub which is also dependent upon the distance between the knitting elements and the cutting edge of the air ejector, the distance between the positive feed and the knitting elements, and elasticity of the yarn.
  • the density of the slubs in the fabric depends on the speed of the yarn forming the base fabric compared with the average speed of the extra yarn, the relative denier of these yarns and the number of attachements per knitting position in action.
  • FIGURE 2 the driven nip roll 8 of FIG. 1 is replaced by a composite roll comprising inner and outer portions 20 and 21, inner portion 20 being driven and outer portion 21 freely rotatable about the inner portion 20 within limits defined by the extension of the spring 22 which is attached to both portions 20 and 21.
  • the outer portion 21 tends to oscillate around the inner portion 20 thus having a varying circumferential speed. This results in a randomly varying rate of yarn fed to the knitting elements.
  • the varying rate of feed causes the distance between the slubs and the slub length to vary also. Since the mean speed of the outer portion of the roll 21 is that of the driven inner portion 20, the amount of slub yarn fed into any yardage of knitted fabric is constant.
  • FIG. 4 is an alternative form of driven roll.
  • the outer portion 21 also surrounds the outer end of the driven portion 20 and contains slots 23, 24 and 25 cut through the face thereof to reveal inner portion 20, stud 26 passes through one of these slots, for example 23, and is located in the driven portion 20.
  • this roll' is similar to that of the driven roll of FIG. 3 except that the extent of oscillation is controlled by the length of the slot through which the stud 26 passes.
  • EXAMPLE 1 In this example the attachment employed is that described with reference to FIG. 1 of the drawings.
  • the nip rolls are 1 7 diameter and the driven roll 8 has flats /2" long cut in the periphery thereof.
  • a basic yarn of 150 denier 30 filaments Crimplene is fed to the knitting elements at a speed of 350 ft. per minute with the machine running at 13 r.p.m.
  • the extra yarn, a singles 36 worsted count low twist Terylene staple fibre is forwarded to the air ejector and then to the knitting elements via the nip rolls, the driven nip roll rotating at 100 r.p.m.
  • This yarn is maintained with a high tension between the nip rolls and the yarn containing bobbin.
  • the amount released by the fiats in the driven nip roll is irregular and hence a fabric is produced having a random slub effect.
  • FIG. 4 is a representation of a typical portion of knitted fabric, 30, produced by the process just described, the bars 31 representing the slubs.
  • EXAMPLE 2 The knitting machine is set up and operated as described in Example 1 and a 270 denier 20 filament polyhexamethylene adipamide yarn is knitted to form the base fabric and the slubs formed from a singles 36 Worsted count polyhexamethylene staple fibre yarn.
  • the fabric of this invention is preferably formed from a continuous filament bulked yarn, to form the base fabric, and a staple yarn as the extra yarn, staple yarn may also be employed in place of the continuous filament yarn and a continuous filament yarn in place of the staple yarn although this will be relatively much more difficult to break and may introduce considerable difficulty in knitting.
  • Varying fabric effects may be obtained by using yarns having different dye uptake or different filament crosssections as the base yarn and extra slub-forming yarn. Different fabric effects may also be obtained by using yarns having markedly different properties thus, for example, the base fabric may be formed from a bulked continuous filament polyhexamethylene adipamide yarn and the slub effect by a rayon staple fibre yarn.
  • An attachment for a weft knitting machine having a plurality of knitting elements, said attachment adapted to forward an extra yarn to the said knitting elements and comprising: a positive yarn feed means which includes a pair of nip rolls one of which is driven; and a tube located between the feed means and the knitting elements; means for delivering a stream of air to said tube for forwarding the yarn from said feed means through said tube; and means defining a yarn cutting edge at the end of said tube nearest the knitting elements.
  • driven roll comprises an outer and inner concentric roll, the former being freely rotatable about the latter, which is driven, within limits determined by a spring or pin means.
  • An attachment as in claim 1 including means associated with said nip rolls for forwarding the continuous extra yarn at a speed slower than the speed required by said knitting elements.
  • a process for manufacture of a weft knitted slub effect fabric comprising: knitting a yarn to form a base fabric which comprises a plurality of knitted courses; introducing an extra continuous yarn to the knitting elements during the knitting of one course of the fabric and knitting in with the first-mentioned yarn for a plurality of stitches; breaking and subsequently reintroducing the extra to the knitting elements to be knitted into the fabric again further along the course or in a subsequent course; and repeating at intervals the breaking and introduction of the extra yarn during the knitting of the fabric, the steps of introducing the extra yarn to the knitting elements and subsequently breaking and re-introducing the extra yarn being carried out by positively forwarding the extra yarn at a speed slower than the speed at which the knitting elements take the first-mentioned yarn, conducting the forward extra yarn with a fluid stream to the knitting elements whereby the extra yarn is tensioned, bringing the tensioned extra yarn into contact with a 6 cutting edge and subsequently reconducting the free end 2,130,770 9/1938 Lombardi 66-190

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Knitting Of Fabric (AREA)
  • Yarns And Mechanical Finishing Of Yarns Or Ropes (AREA)

Description

May 12, 1970 J.- MAJOR ET AL 3,511,064
MANUFACTURE OF SLUB EFFECT FABRICS Filed Jan. 51, 1968 lnoenlor: Jo H w M m/ 0 8 35mm Use/we 3/0:
United States Patent Int. c1. D04b 15/48 U.S. Cl. 66-125 Claims ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE A slub effect fabric is obtained by knitting in an extra yarn during the manufacture of warp knit fabric and arranging that this yarn be broken and repeatedly reintroduced to the needles according to a random pattern arrangement.
The present invention is concerned with improvements in the manufacture of slub effect fabrics and in particular to a novel slub effect fabric and method and apparatus for the production thereof.
Fabrics having a slub effect are normally produced from a specially prepared slub yarn. The preparation of this yarn involves a number of folding/ twisting operations and is hence more expensive than standardyarns. It is usually prepared from staple fibre yarns in preference to continuous filament yarns.
We have now found that a slub effect fabric can be simply and economically produced on a weft knitting machine, especially, a circular knitting machine, from a basically 100% standard continuous filament yarn. The effect is obtained by feeding an extra yarn, preferably a staple yarn, to the needles of a knitting machine whilst these are knitting the basic fabric, and arranging that the extra yarn break at frequent intervals to produce a slub effect in the fabric. The extra yarn can be introduced at any predetermined number of feed points, preferably where both cylinder and dial needles are knitting, without affecting the rate at which the. basic fabric is knitted.
The slub effect can be varied by varying the number of points at which it is fed into the basic fabric, by varying the yarn denier and by varying the manner in which it is fed into the fabric. i
Since the extra yarn giving the slub effect is knitted and not merely laid into the fabric it is firmly anchored and there is no tendency for it to be pulled out by plucking or snagging.
Accordingly therefore, from one aspect, the present invention provides a weft knitted slub effect fabric comprising a base fabric formed from one yarn and containing an extra yarn which is knitted in with the aforementioned yarn at intervals along fabric courses, said extra yarn being discontinuous in the knitted fabric.
The expression-being discontinuous in the knitted fabricmeans that there, is an absence of floats joining each portion of extra yarn knitted into the fabric.
Preferably the fabric is formed from a bulked continu ous filament yarn and preferably also the extra yarn is a staple yarn of the same type.
From another aspect the present invention provides a process for the manufacture. of a fabric having a slub effect wherein a yarn is knitted into a base fabric comprising a plurality of knitted courses, an extra yarn introduced to the knitting elements during the knitting of one course of the fabric and knitted in with the aforementioned yarn for a plurality of stitches, the said extra yarn broken 3,511,064 Patented May 12, 1970 and subsequently reintroduced to the elements to be knitted into the fabric again further along the course or in a subsequent course, the introduction of the extra yarn to the elements and the breaking thereof being repeated at intervals during the knitting of the fabric.
Conveniently the extra yarn may be introduced to the knitting needles via a positive feed attachment to the knitting machine, which attachment incorporates a tube through which are blown to forward the yarn to the knitting needles and which has a cutting edge at the end nearest the. needles.
from yet another aspect, therefore, the invention provides an attachment for a weft knitting machine adapted to forward an extra yarn to the knitting elements thereof, comprising positive feed means and a tube located between the feed means and the knitting elements the said tube being adapted to receive a stream of air to forward yarn from the positive feed means therethrough and having a cutting edge at the end nearest the knitting elements.
The positive feed means may comprise a paif of nip rolls one of which is driven. The driven roll may consist of two portions, an outer roll and an inner roll, the former being freely rotatable about the latter within limits determined by spring or pin means.
One method of carrying out the present invention will now be more fully described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
In the drawings:
FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic representation of a portion of a needle bed of a circular weft knitting machine and an attachment according to the present invention.
FIG. 2 illustrates one form of a driven nip roll which allows a varying rate of yarn feed.
FIG. 3 illustrates a further form of a driven nip roll.
FIG. 4 is a representation of a portion of knitted fa-bric according to the present invention.
In FIG. 1 a needle bed 1 of a circular weft knitting machine has cylinder and dial latch needles 2 and 3 respectively which knit the base fabric from the yarn 4. An extra yarn 5 is positively fed to an air ejector 6 by the nip rolls 7 and 8, the latter being a driven roll. The air ejector has a throat 9, compressed air inlet 10 and an outlet end 11 which is sharpened to give a cutting edge 12.
In operation the needles 2 and 3 knit a base fabric from the yarn 4 in the normal manner. The extra yarn 5 is positively fed by the nip rolls 7 and 8 to the air ejec tor 6 at a speed slower than the needles 2 and 3 take the yarn 4 from the supply. The yarn 5 passes through the throat 9 of the ejector and is forwarded by the air supply through the outlet end thereof and introduced to the needles 2 and 3 which then knit in this yarn with the yarn 4. Since the positive feed allows less yarn to pull through the nip than the needles require, yarn 5 is tensioned between the needles and the nip roll and is brought into contact with the cutting edge 12 of the outlet end of the ejector. When this tension is sufficiently great the yarn 5 is cut and the needles continue knitting yarn 4 only. As the positive feed forwards more yarn a fresh end is introduced to the needles and the sequence of events is repeated.
In order to obtain a random slubbing effect in the fabric the positive feed should be adapted to forward the yarn 5 to the knitting elements at an irregular rate. This can be achieved in a number of ways. The speed of the drive roll can be varied in a predetermined manner, or by varying the pressure between the nip rolls to allow the yarn 5 to occasionally slip through under the tension applied by the needles or the nip may be positively opened by cams operating on either or both rolls.
In a preferred embodiment either or both of the rolls, but most preferably only the driven roll, may have small flat portions machined thereon so that the yarn may be released at intervals. Preferably, again, the flat portions should not be more than /s apart, to prevent the appearance of uncontrolled one or two stitch slubs appearing in the fabric. In this embodiment the length of a slub is determined by the length of the fiat portions on the roll and the peripheral speed thereof. The frequency of slubs in a fabric course is determined by the number of fiat portions in the roll and the relative speeds of the knitting machine and the nip rolls.
It is clear that the more irregular the rate of feed of the yarn the more random the slubbing effect.
The above methods of varying the rate of feed of the extra yarn may also affect the length of the slub which is also dependent upon the distance between the knitting elements and the cutting edge of the air ejector, the distance between the positive feed and the knitting elements, and elasticity of the yarn.
The density of the slubs in the fabric depends on the speed of the yarn forming the base fabric compared with the average speed of the extra yarn, the relative denier of these yarns and the number of attachements per knitting position in action.
In FIGURE 2 the driven nip roll 8 of FIG. 1 is replaced by a composite roll comprising inner and outer portions 20 and 21, inner portion 20 being driven and outer portion 21 freely rotatable about the inner portion 20 within limits defined by the extension of the spring 22 which is attached to both portions 20 and 21.
As a result of the tension build up in the yarn caused by its being fed to the knitting elements at a slower rate than they require and the release of tension consequent upon the yarn being cut, the outer portion 21 tends to oscillate around the inner portion 20 thus having a varying circumferential speed. This results in a randomly varying rate of yarn fed to the knitting elements. The varying rate of feed causes the distance between the slubs and the slub length to vary also. Since the mean speed of the outer portion of the roll 21 is that of the driven inner portion 20, the amount of slub yarn fed into any yardage of knitted fabric is constant.
FIG. 4 is an alternative form of driven roll. In this form the outer portion 21 also surrounds the outer end of the driven portion 20 and contains slots 23, 24 and 25 cut through the face thereof to reveal inner portion 20, stud 26 passes through one of these slots, for example 23, and is located in the driven portion 20.
The operation of this roll'is similar to that of the driven roll of FIG. 3 except that the extent of oscillation is controlled by the length of the slot through which the stud 26 passes.
The following examples further illustrate the various aspects of the present invention.
EXAMPLE 1 In this example the attachment employed is that described with reference to FIG. 1 of the drawings. The nip rolls are 1 7 diameter and the driven roll 8 has flats /2" long cut in the periphery thereof.
With the knitting machine set to produce a double pique fabric and having one attachment, a basic yarn of 150 denier 30 filaments Crimplene is fed to the knitting elements at a speed of 350 ft. per minute with the machine running at 13 r.p.m. The extra yarn, a singles 36 worsted count low twist Terylene staple fibre is forwarded to the air ejector and then to the knitting elements via the nip rolls, the driven nip roll rotating at 100 r.p.m. This yarn is maintained with a high tension between the nip rolls and the yarn containing bobbin. As a result of the high tension in the yarn path the amount released by the fiats in the driven nip roll is irregular and hence a fabric is produced having a random slub effect.
4 FIG. 4 is a representation of a typical portion of knitted fabric, 30, produced by the process just described, the bars 31 representing the slubs.
EXAMPLE 2 The knitting machine is set up and operated as described in Example 1 and a 270 denier 20 filament polyhexamethylene adipamide yarn is knitted to form the base fabric and the slubs formed from a singles 36 Worsted count polyhexamethylene staple fibre yarn.
Although the fabric of this invention is preferably formed from a continuous filament bulked yarn, to form the base fabric, and a staple yarn as the extra yarn, staple yarn may also be employed in place of the continuous filament yarn and a continuous filament yarn in place of the staple yarn although this will be relatively much more difficult to break and may introduce considerable difficulty in knitting.
Varying fabric effects may be obtained by using yarns having different dye uptake or different filament crosssections as the base yarn and extra slub-forming yarn. Different fabric effects may also be obtained by using yarns having markedly different properties thus, for example, the base fabric may be formed from a bulked continuous filament polyhexamethylene adipamide yarn and the slub effect by a rayon staple fibre yarn.
What we claim is:
1. An attachment for a weft knitting machine having a plurality of knitting elements, said attachment adapted to forward an extra yarn to the said knitting elements and comprising: a positive yarn feed means which includes a pair of nip rolls one of which is driven; and a tube located between the feed means and the knitting elements; means for delivering a stream of air to said tube for forwarding the yarn from said feed means through said tube; and means defining a yarn cutting edge at the end of said tube nearest the knitting elements.
2. An attachment according to claim 1 wherein means is provided to vary the speed of the driven roll.
3. An attachment according to claim .1 wherein the nip may be positively open by cams operating on either or both rolls.
4. An attachment according to claim 1 wherein flat portions are machined on the peripheral surface or both of the nip rolls to allow yarn to be released at intervals.
5. An attachment according to claim 4 wherein the fiat portions are not more than A3" apart.
6. An attachment according to claim 1 wherein the driven roll comprises an outer and inner concentric roll, the former being freely rotatable about the latter, which is driven, within limits determined by a spring or pin means.
7. An attachment as in claim 1 including means associated with said nip rolls for forwarding the continuous extra yarn at a speed slower than the speed required by said knitting elements.
8. A process for manufacture of a weft knitted slub effect fabric comprising: knitting a yarn to form a base fabric which comprises a plurality of knitted courses; introducing an extra continuous yarn to the knitting elements during the knitting of one course of the fabric and knitting in with the first-mentioned yarn for a plurality of stitches; breaking and subsequently reintroducing the extra to the knitting elements to be knitted into the fabric again further along the course or in a subsequent course; and repeating at intervals the breaking and introduction of the extra yarn during the knitting of the fabric, the steps of introducing the extra yarn to the knitting elements and subsequently breaking and re-introducing the extra yarn being carried out by positively forwarding the extra yarn at a speed slower than the speed at which the knitting elements take the first-mentioned yarn, conducting the forward extra yarn with a fluid stream to the knitting elements whereby the extra yarn is tensioned, bringing the tensioned extra yarn into contact with a 6 cutting edge and subsequently reconducting the free end 2,130,770 9/1938 Lombardi 66-190 of the continuous extra yarn with the fluid stream to the 2,232,532 2/1941 Hunter 66-202 knitting elements. 2,260,117 10/ 1941 Marr 66-201 9. A process according to claim '8 wherein the yarn 3,099,907 8/1963 Ma ur l t 1, 66-125 XR forming the base fabric is a bulked contlnuous filament 5 FOREIGN PATENTS yarn and the extra yarn is a staple fibre yarn.
10. A process according to claim 8 wherein the extra ,069, 1 /1959 Germany. yarn is introduced to the knitting elements at an irregu- 926,857 5/ 1963 G e t Britain. lar rate. 597,024 8/ 1959 Italy.
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 462,470 11/1891 Conde 66-201 US. Cl. X.R. 1,831,964 11/1931 Lombardi 66-19() 6 132 2,011,538 8/1935 Hausman 66-169 RONALD FELDBAUM, Primary Examiner
US701902A 1967-02-13 1968-01-31 Manufacture of slub effect fabrics Expired - Lifetime US3511064A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB6768/67A GB1212978A (en) 1967-02-13 1967-02-13 Improvements in or relating to the manufacture of slub effect fabrics

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3511064A true US3511064A (en) 1970-05-12

Family

ID=9820403

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US701902A Expired - Lifetime US3511064A (en) 1967-02-13 1968-01-31 Manufacture of slub effect fabrics

Country Status (6)

Country Link
US (1) US3511064A (en)
BE (1) BE710729A (en)
DE (1) DE1635817A1 (en)
FR (1) FR1555974A (en)
GB (1) GB1212978A (en)
NL (1) NL6802052A (en)

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3774412A (en) * 1971-01-14 1973-11-27 Uniroyal Inc Jet tuft rib knitted fabric
US3813900A (en) * 1971-09-10 1974-06-04 Scott & Williams Inc Pneumatic yarn feeder device for knitting machines
US3890809A (en) * 1973-02-20 1975-06-24 Riccardo Tenconi Circular knitting machine with pneumatic thread feeding devices
US3955379A (en) * 1972-10-10 1976-05-11 Claude Corbiere High speed knitting machine
US4109491A (en) * 1975-07-14 1978-08-29 Manfred Schmid Thread guidance in mesh-forming machines with rotating thread guides
US4520636A (en) * 1979-11-28 1985-06-04 Burlington Industries, Inc. Woven-like warp knit fabric with tension control for top effect yarn
US5706676A (en) * 1995-07-20 1998-01-13 Mec-Mor S.P.A. Pneumatic thread feeder in knitting machines or the like
KR20190016034A (en) * 2016-06-15 2019-02-15 시프라 페턴트엔트위크렁스-운트 베테일리강스게젤샤프트 엠베하 Circular knitting machine

Families Citing this family (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JP6177054B2 (en) * 2013-08-29 2017-08-09 株式会社島精機製作所 Active warp feeding device for knitting machine and knitting machine

Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US462470A (en) * 1891-11-03 Knit fabric
GB926857A (en) * 1900-01-01
US1831964A (en) * 1930-12-30 1931-11-17 Lombardi Vincent Knitted fabric
US2011538A (en) * 1934-01-06 1935-08-13 Hillcrest Mills Inc Method of forming a knit fabric
US2130770A (en) * 1937-03-18 1938-09-20 Lombardi Knitting Machine Co I Knitted fabric
US2232532A (en) * 1940-05-29 1941-02-18 Du Pont Knit fabric
US2260117A (en) * 1938-10-24 1941-10-21 Zwicker Knitting Mills Art of ornamented knitted wearing apparel manufacture
DE1069813B (en) * 1955-08-03 1959-11-26 Terrot Söhne C Method and device for inserting and changing threads on circular knitting machines
US3099907A (en) * 1960-12-08 1963-08-06 Ind & Commerciale Paris Nord Process for obtaining textile end products using discontinuous fibers

Patent Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US462470A (en) * 1891-11-03 Knit fabric
GB926857A (en) * 1900-01-01
US1831964A (en) * 1930-12-30 1931-11-17 Lombardi Vincent Knitted fabric
US2011538A (en) * 1934-01-06 1935-08-13 Hillcrest Mills Inc Method of forming a knit fabric
US2130770A (en) * 1937-03-18 1938-09-20 Lombardi Knitting Machine Co I Knitted fabric
US2260117A (en) * 1938-10-24 1941-10-21 Zwicker Knitting Mills Art of ornamented knitted wearing apparel manufacture
US2232532A (en) * 1940-05-29 1941-02-18 Du Pont Knit fabric
DE1069813B (en) * 1955-08-03 1959-11-26 Terrot Söhne C Method and device for inserting and changing threads on circular knitting machines
US3099907A (en) * 1960-12-08 1963-08-06 Ind & Commerciale Paris Nord Process for obtaining textile end products using discontinuous fibers

Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3774412A (en) * 1971-01-14 1973-11-27 Uniroyal Inc Jet tuft rib knitted fabric
US3813900A (en) * 1971-09-10 1974-06-04 Scott & Williams Inc Pneumatic yarn feeder device for knitting machines
US3955379A (en) * 1972-10-10 1976-05-11 Claude Corbiere High speed knitting machine
US3890809A (en) * 1973-02-20 1975-06-24 Riccardo Tenconi Circular knitting machine with pneumatic thread feeding devices
US4109491A (en) * 1975-07-14 1978-08-29 Manfred Schmid Thread guidance in mesh-forming machines with rotating thread guides
US4287728A (en) * 1975-07-16 1981-09-08 Sulzer Morat Gmbh Thread guidance in mesh-forming machines with rotating thread guides
US4520636A (en) * 1979-11-28 1985-06-04 Burlington Industries, Inc. Woven-like warp knit fabric with tension control for top effect yarn
US5706676A (en) * 1995-07-20 1998-01-13 Mec-Mor S.P.A. Pneumatic thread feeder in knitting machines or the like
KR20190016034A (en) * 2016-06-15 2019-02-15 시프라 페턴트엔트위크렁스-운트 베테일리강스게젤샤프트 엠베하 Circular knitting machine
CN109642367A (en) * 2016-06-15 2019-04-16 Sipra专利发展合作股份有限公司 Circular knitter
US11332857B2 (en) 2016-06-15 2022-05-17 Sipra Patententwicklungs- Und Beteiligungsgesellschaft Mbh Circular knitting machine
KR102451256B1 (en) * 2016-06-15 2022-10-05 시프라 페턴트엔트위크렁스-운트 베테일리강스게젤샤프트 엠베하 circular knitting machine

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB1212978A (en) 1970-11-18
FR1555974A (en) 1969-01-31
BE710729A (en) 1968-08-13
DE1635817A1 (en) 1971-08-19
NL6802052A (en) 1968-08-14

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
KR101223343B1 (en) Knitted fabric, method and device for producing said fabric
JP2959771B2 (en) Decorative yarn, method for manufacturing the same, and apparatus for manufacturing the same
US3511064A (en) Manufacture of slub effect fabrics
US4219996A (en) Multi-component spun yarn
US2953912A (en) Method and mechanism for knitting pile fabrics
US3877254A (en) Method and apparatus for knitting fabric from untwisted staple fibers
US2033096A (en) Plain knitted fabric containing rubber-like strands
US4487040A (en) Spun polyester warp knit
US4160359A (en) Random signal generator for the manufacture of slub open end spun yarn
US2089239A (en) Apparatus for the treatment of artificial textile materials
EP0342424A3 (en) Process and device for producing designs on stockings in twin-cylinder circular knitting machines
US5014404A (en) Air entangled yarn
US4365145A (en) Random signal generator for the manufacture of slub open end spun yarn
CA1104888A (en) Slubbed open end spun yarn
US3688358A (en) Process for producing bulky yarn from multifilament yarn
KR20000057658A (en) Process for the production of wrap-knitted fabrics realised with discontinuous fibre yarns and apparatus for the realisation thereof
US5350626A (en) Textile base material for thermobonding interlining comprising in weft yarns texturized by air jet
US2072775A (en) Elastic yarn and fabric
US5211034A (en) Device for producing a yarn using fibers retained in a tubular knitted manufactured article
US4080808A (en) Pneumatic feed
US4682478A (en) Device for making a new type of yarn
US4551892A (en) Methods for preparing warp knitted fabrics
JPS6346174B2 (en)
KR100459327B1 (en) Slub yarn having split slub and a method for preparing the slub yarn
US3342153A (en) Tufted fabric having pile composed of roving or roping