US3890811A - Padder-type apparatus for the continuous application of liquids to permeable materials - Google Patents

Padder-type apparatus for the continuous application of liquids to permeable materials Download PDF

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US3890811A
US3890811A US395441A US39544173A US3890811A US 3890811 A US3890811 A US 3890811A US 395441 A US395441 A US 395441A US 39544173 A US39544173 A US 39544173A US 3890811 A US3890811 A US 3890811A
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suction
sieve drum
zones
gas
permeable
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US395441A
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Hans Fleissner
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Vepa AG
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Vepa AG
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06BTREATING TEXTILE MATERIALS USING LIQUIDS, GASES OR VAPOURS
    • D06B11/00Treatment of selected parts of textile materials, e.g. partial dyeing
    • D06B11/0056Treatment of selected parts of textile materials, e.g. partial dyeing of fabrics
    • D06B11/0066Treatment of selected parts of textile materials, e.g. partial dyeing of fabrics by spaced contacts with a member carrying a single treating material
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S68/00Textiles: fluid treating apparatus
    • Y10S68/903Perforated drum and continuous textile feed and discharge

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  • ABSTRACT A padder-type apparatus for the continuous application of liquids to permeable, thick, voluminous webshaped textile materials which includes support means for the material to be wetted, the support means being capable of being placed under a suction draft at several series disposed narrow suction zones extending over the operating width of the support means and printing stencil means operatively associated with said zones positioned on the side facing the material conveyed across these zones for applying said liquids thereto.
  • This invention relates to a padder-type printing apparatus for the continuous application of liquids to permeable', preferablythick, voluminous web-shaped materials, such as tufted carpets and needled-felt carpets, or the like, which apparatus comprises a support, such as sieve drums, for the material to be wetted, which support can be placed under a suction draft at a plurality of narrow zones and a plurality of printing means associated with said zone.
  • the invention is based on the problem of developing an apparatus ensuring a thorough dyeing of thick pile even when employing the printing method.
  • the thus-posed problem is solved, in an apparatus of this invention, by placing the support on which the material is transported at several narrow zones extending over the operating width and arranged in series, under a suction draft; these zones are coupled with printing stencils, e.g. printing cylinders on the face side of the material conveyed over these zones for applying a colored liquid, e.g. a dye thereto.
  • these stencils are arranged at the beginning of each of the suction zones, in order to provide sufficient time over the subsequent suction zone for wetting the pile down to the roots, i.e. the base of the materials.
  • Another advantage of this apparatus is based on the fact that the material, during the printing step, is firmly held on the support. Thus, the material cannot move relatively to the printing stencils during the printing operation. As a consequence, the color patterns produced by different cylinders are well superimposed. The coincidence of the pattern is more accurate.
  • an inner cover within the sieve drum, forming a suction slot or slots is at least partially gas-permeable in a zone covered by the material.
  • the material is constantly held firmly on the support, i.e. the sieve drum, even if the material is not directly under the effect of a printing stencil, or travels over a suction slot.
  • This constructional detail is important for materials which are particularly sensitive to tension, such as, for example, hosiery or knitted carpets. I-Ieretofore, such materials were glued to a rubber sheet; for this purpose, a binder must first be applied to this sheet, and after the printing step must again be removed from the rubber sheet.
  • the consumption of water and adhesives can be avoided by this invention.
  • the material is held, during the conveyance over the printing apparatus, from the beginning to theend uniformly firmly and fixedly on the drum and is provided with the dye in the zone of the suction slots, where a more intense suction draft is effective.
  • the suction draft can be adjustable to be of different strengths at the inner cover in the zone covered by the material, in order to adapt this suction draft to the material to be treated in each particular case.
  • the inner cover could consist, in the zone covered by the material, of two perforated metal sheets or the like extending in parallel to each other, one of which can be displaced in order to cover the perforations of the other sheet.
  • FIG. 1 shows a color applicator apparatus in the form of a sieve drum under a suction draft in front of a festoon steamer
  • FIG. 2 shows the apparatus of FIG. 1 with a modification in the universal covering of the sieve drum
  • FIG. 3 shows an enlarged fragmentary view of the sieve drum shell in the zone of a printing stencil.
  • a padder-type printing apparatus in the form of a cylinder printing apparatus 2 is illustrated, consisting of a sieve drain 3 under a suction draft associated at its end face with a fan 4.
  • cover sheets are provided, of which the one designated by reference numeral 5 covers the zone not occupied by the textile material 6 to be printed, and the ones designated by reference numeral 7 leave vacant narrow suction slots 8 extending over the operating width of the drum.
  • one printing stencil is illustrated which, in the embodiment of FIGS. 1 and 2, consists of a printing cylinder 9 with a color doctor disposed therein and, in the example of FIG. 3, is a printing cylinder 9 with a coating blade arranged therein.
  • the numer of stencils corresponds to the respectively desired printing pattern.
  • the cover sheets 7 are fashioned to be gas-permeable, by making them perforated in a similar manner as the sieve drum 3. In this way, a holding force is effective on the material not only in the zone of the suction slots 8, formed between the cover sheets, but also in the entirety of the zone of the sieve drum covered by the material.
  • This has the advantage that also materials sensitive to tension can be perfectly well printed.
  • the cover according to FIG. 3 consists of two parallel-disposed cover sheets 10 and 11, which can be displaced mutually according to the arrow 12.
  • the amount of air passing through the sheet 10 can be varied with the aid of the sheet 11 to increase or decrease the flow area available.
  • a padder-type apparatus for the continuous application of liquid to permeable, thick voluminous, webshaped materials including tufted carpets and needledfelt carpets, plush and the like textile material comprising at least one sieve drum means having a gas-permeable surface with an operating width for supporting and for conveying the material to be wetted with said liquid, said sieve drum means having an interior placed under a suction draft and means within said interior for defining a plurality of series-disposed, narrow, suction zones extending across the operating width of said sieve drum means, and a plurality of printing stencil means each operatively associated with one of said suction zones positioned on one side of the material conveyed across said zones for applying said liquid thereto, whereby said liquid is drawn into the material by an intense suction draft applied at said suction zones.
  • each of the printing stencil means is arranged to apply said liquid onto said material as the material initially passes over the associated suction zone.
  • said means defining said narrow suction zones comprises cover sheet means providing vacant slots forming said suction zones extending across the operating width of the sieve drum means and providing sheet portions extending between said slots. said sheet portions being at least partially gas-permeable in a region of the sieve drum means covered by the textile material whereby a partial suction draft sufficient to hold said textile material against said gas-permeable surface is provided.
  • the sheet portions of the cover sheet means in the region of the sieve drum means covered by the material consists of two perforated metal sheets extending in parallel to each other, one of said sheets being displaceable in order to vary the amount of suction draft, by covering the perforations of the other sheet.
  • said interior of said sieve drum means also includes means for applying a suction draft to portions of the material being conveyed on said gas-permeable surface, less intense than the suction draft applied to the material overlying those portions of the gas-permeable surface superjacent to said suction zones, said less intense suction draft being sufficient to retain said material on said gas-permeable surface.

Abstract

A padder-type apparatus for the continuous application of liquids to permeable, thick, voluminous web-shaped textile materials which includes support means for the material to be wetted, the support means being capable of being placed under a suction draft at several series disposed narrow suction zones extending over the operating width of the support means and printing stencil means operatively associated with said zones positioned on the side facing the material conveyed across these zones for applying said liquids thereto.

Description

United States Patent [1 1 Fleissner [111 3,890,811 [451 June 24, 1975 154] PADDER-TYPE APPARATUS FOR THE CONTINUOUS APPLICATION OF LIQUIDS TO PERMEABLE MATERIALS [75] Inventor: I'Ians Fleissner, Egelsbach near Frankfurt am Main, Germany [73] Assignee: Vepa AG, Switzerland [22] Filed: Sept. 10, 1973 [21] Appl. No.: 395,441
[30] Foreign Application Priority Data Sept. 9, 1972 Germany 2244272 [52] U.S. CI. 68/200; 68/DIG. 5; 101/119; 1 18/213 [51] Int. Cl. B050 l/10 [58] Field of Search 68/200, 202, 203, DIG. 5, 68/205 R; 118/213, 230; 101/116, 119, 120;
[56] References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 776,197 11/1904 Nistle 34/122 1,625,054 4/1927 Rosato lOl/ll6 2,080,635 5/1937 Schramek et a1. 68/205 R 3,033,702 5/1962 Fenselam, 118/213 X 3,099,146 7/1963 Yamawaki 68/203 3,779,047 12/ 1973 Fleissner 68/DIG. 5
FOREIGN PATENTS OR APPLICATIONS 578,399 6/1933 Germany 34/122 Primary Examiner-Harvey C. Hornsby Assistant ExaminerPhilip R. Coe Attorney, Agent, or Firm-Craig & Antonelli [57] ABSTRACT A padder-type apparatus for the continuous application of liquids to permeable, thick, voluminous webshaped textile materials which includes support means for the material to be wetted, the support means being capable of being placed under a suction draft at several series disposed narrow suction zones extending over the operating width of the support means and printing stencil means operatively associated with said zones positioned on the side facing the material conveyed across these zones for applying said liquids thereto.
6 Claims, 3 Drawing Figures PATENTEI] JUN 24 I975 SHEET PADDER T fiQAi ARAT S FOR THE CONTINUOUS. APPLICATION O LIQUIDS T PERMEABLE MATERIALS This invention relates to a padder-type printing apparatus for the continuous application of liquids to permeable', preferablythick, voluminous web-shaped materials, such as tufted carpets and needled-felt carpets, or the like, which apparatus comprises a support, such as sieve drums, for the material to be wetted, which support can be placed under a suction draft at a plurality of narrow zones and a plurality of printing means associated with said zone.
In the textile field it is known that a padder consists of a trough with guide rolls, containing a liquid, the material'to be wetted being guided through this trough and then being mangled by means of a pair'of pressure rolls until the desired degree of moisture is obtained. If it is intended to wet only the surface of the material, rather than to saturate the materialwith afliquid, then the liquid can also be sprayed onto thematerial. In this connection, various color effects can also be obtained with different color hues. It-is only-difficult'to apply the sprays of color, particularly in case -of thick, voluminous materials, so that the pile is =thoroughly dyed through its entire t hickness. It is known from German Offenlegungsshrift 1,635,104 to eliminate this problem by placing thematerial under a suction draft during the spray application of the treatment agent. Thus, the suction draft 'is effective on the backside of the material to be dyed, while the material is sprayed, for example, on the'topside. r s i In general, color patterns are producedby means of the cylinder printing process. The apparatus necessary for this purpose consists of sieve drums which are used as stencils or templates for the pattern to be imprinted. One color doctor is provided within each of the sieve drums for squeezing the dye through the openings in the stencil onto the material to be imprinted. It is quite. clear that this dye penetrating through the openings wets only the surface of the web-shaped material, which results, in case of plushes and voluminous carpets, in an only partial dyeing of the pile.
Therefore, the invention is based on the problem of developing an apparatus ensuring a thorough dyeing of thick pile even when employing the printing method.
The thus-posed problem is solved, in an apparatus of this invention, by placing the support on which the material is transported at several narrow zones extending over the operating width and arranged in series, under a suction draft; these zones are coupled with printing stencils, e.g. printing cylinders on the face side of the material conveyed over these zones for applying a colored liquid, e.g. a dye thereto. Preferably, these stencils are arranged at the beginning of each of the suction zones, in order to provide sufficient time over the subsequent suction zone for wetting the pile down to the roots, i.e. the base of the materials.
Another advantage of this apparatus is based on the fact that the material, during the printing step, is firmly held on the support. Thus, the material cannot move relatively to the printing stencils during the printing operation. As a consequence, the color patterns produced by different cylinders are well superimposed. The coincidence of the pattern is more accurate.
Consequently, in one embodiment of the apparatus according to this invention, the provision is made that an inner cover within the sieve drum, forming a suction slot or slots, is at least partially gas-permeable in a zone covered by the material. Thereby, the material is constantly held firmly on the support, i.e. the sieve drum, even if the material is not directly under the effect of a printing stencil, or travels over a suction slot. This constructional detail is important for materials which are particularly sensitive to tension, such as, for example, hosiery or knitted carpets. I-Ieretofore, such materials were glued to a rubber sheet; for this purpose, a binder must first be applied to this sheet, and after the printing step must again be removed from the rubber sheet. The consumption of water and adhesives can be avoided by this invention. The material is held, during the conveyance over the printing apparatus, from the beginning to theend uniformly firmly and fixedly on the drum and is provided with the dye in the zone of the suction slots, where a more intense suction draft is effective. I
The suction draft can be adjustable to be of different strengths at the inner cover in the zone covered by the material, in order to adapt this suction draft to the material to be treated in each particular case. For this reason, the inner cover could consist, in the zone covered by the material, of two perforated metal sheets or the like extending in parallel to each other, one of which can be displaced in order to cover the perforations of the other sheet.
In the accompanying drawings various embodiments of the apparatus of this invention are illustrated, to wit:
FIG. 1 shows a color applicator apparatus in the form of a sieve drum under a suction draft in front of a festoon steamer;
FIG. 2 shows the apparatus of FIG. 1 with a modification in the universal covering of the sieve drum; and
FIG. 3 shows an enlarged fragmentary view of the sieve drum shell in the zone of a printing stencil.
In front of the festoon steamer 1, a padder-type printing apparatus in the form of a cylinder printing apparatus 2 is illustrated, consisting of a sieve drain 3 under a suction draft associated at its end face with a fan 4. On the inside of the sieve drum, cover sheets are provided, of which the one designated by reference numeral 5 covers the zone not occupied by the textile material 6 to be printed, and the ones designated by reference numeral 7 leave vacant narrow suction slots 8 extending over the operating width of the drum. Above or at the beginning of the suction zones provided by these suction slots 8, respectively, one printing stencil is illustrated which, in the embodiment of FIGS. 1 and 2, consists of a printing cylinder 9 with a color doctor disposed therein and, in the example of FIG. 3, is a printing cylinder 9 with a coating blade arranged therein. The numer of stencils corresponds to the respectively desired printing pattern.
By the suction draft produced by the fan 4, which must be adjusted to be very high, due to the relatively minor effective suction surface on the sieve drum 3, the dye applied by the stencil to the surface of the fibrous textile material 6 is sucked with great force to the root of the pile of the material. A flawless dyeing effect throughout the material is thus ensured.
In the embodiment of FIGS. 2 and 3, the cover sheets 7 are fashioned to be gas-permeable, by making them perforated in a similar manner as the sieve drum 3. In this way, a holding force is effective on the material not only in the zone of the suction slots 8, formed between the cover sheets, but also in the entirety of the zone of the sieve drum covered by the material. This has the advantage that also materials sensitive to tension can be perfectly well printed. In order to be able to adapt the suction draft effective in the zone of the cover 7 to the respective material 6, the cover according to FIG. 3 consists of two parallel-disposed cover sheets 10 and 11, which can be displaced mutually according to the arrow 12. Thus, the amount of air passing through the sheet 10 can be varied with the aid of the sheet 11 to increase or decrease the flow area available.
While the novel embodiments of the invention have been described, it will be understood that various omissions, modifications and changes in these embodiments may be made by one skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
What we claim is:
l. A padder-type apparatus for the continuous application of liquid to permeable, thick voluminous, webshaped materials including tufted carpets and needledfelt carpets, plush and the like textile material, said apparatus comprising at least one sieve drum means having a gas-permeable surface with an operating width for supporting and for conveying the material to be wetted with said liquid, said sieve drum means having an interior placed under a suction draft and means within said interior for defining a plurality of series-disposed, narrow, suction zones extending across the operating width of said sieve drum means, and a plurality of printing stencil means each operatively associated with one of said suction zones positioned on one side of the material conveyed across said zones for applying said liquid thereto, whereby said liquid is drawn into the material by an intense suction draft applied at said suction zones.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, in which each of the printing stencil means is arranged to apply said liquid onto said material as the material initially passes over the associated suction zone.
3. The apparatus of claim 2, in which said means defining said narrow suction zones comprises cover sheet means providing vacant slots forming said suction zones extending across the operating width of the sieve drum means and providing sheet portions extending between said slots. said sheet portions being at least partially gas-permeable in a region of the sieve drum means covered by the textile material whereby a partial suction draft sufficient to hold said textile material against said gas-permeable surface is provided.
4. The apparatus of claim 3, in which said sieve drum means is also provided with another cover sheet means which is not gas-permeable and which extends over a region of the sieve drum means free of contact with said material.
5. The apparatus of claim 3, in which the sheet portions of the cover sheet means in the region of the sieve drum means covered by the material consists of two perforated metal sheets extending in parallel to each other, one of said sheets being displaceable in order to vary the amount of suction draft, by covering the perforations of the other sheet.
6. The apparatus of claim 1, in which said interior of said sieve drum means also includes means for applying a suction draft to portions of the material being conveyed on said gas-permeable surface, less intense than the suction draft applied to the material overlying those portions of the gas-permeable surface superjacent to said suction zones, said less intense suction draft being sufficient to retain said material on said gas-permeable surface.

Claims (6)

1. A padder-type apparatus for the continuous application of liquid to permeable, thick voluminous, web-shaped materials including tufted carpets and needled-felt carpets, plush and the like textile material, said apparatus comprising at least one sieve drum means having a gas-permeable surface with an operating width for supporting and for conveying the material to be wetted with said liquid, said sieve drum means having an interior placed under a suction draft and means within said interior for defining a plurality of series-disposed, narrow, suction zones extending across the operating width of said sieve drum means, and a plurality of printing stencil means each operatively associated with one of said suction zones positioned on one side of the material conveyed across said zones for applying said liquid thereto, whereby said liquid is drawn into the material by an intense suction draft applied at said suction zones.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, in which each of the printing stencil means is arranged to apply said liquid onto said material as the material initially passes over the associated suction zone.
3. The apparatus of claim 2, in which said means defining said narrow suction zones comprises cover sheet means providing vacant slots forming said suction zones extending across the operating width of the sieve drum means and providing sheet portions extending between said slots, said sheet portions being at least partially gas-permeable in a region of the sieve drum means covered by the textile material whereby a partial suction draft sufficient to hold said textile material against said gas-permeable surface is provided.
4. The apparatus of claim 3, in which said sieve drum means is also provided with another cover sheet means which is not gas-permeable and which extends over a region of the sieve drum means free of contact with said material.
5. The apparatus of claim 3, in which the sheet portions of the cover sheet means in the region of the sieve drum means covered by the material consists of two perforated metal sheets extending in parallel to each other, one of said sheets being displaceable in order to vary the amount of suction draft, by covering the perforations of the other sheet.
6. The apparatus of claim 1, in which said interior of said sieve drum means also includes means for applying a suction draft to portions of the material being conveyed on said gas-permeable surface, less intense than the suction draft applied to the material overlying those portions of the gas-permeable surface superjacent to said suction zones, said less intense suction draft being sufficient to retain said material on said gas-permeable surface.
US395441A 1972-09-09 1973-09-10 Padder-type apparatus for the continuous application of liquids to permeable materials Expired - Lifetime US3890811A (en)

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DE2244272A DE2244272A1 (en) 1966-11-17 1972-09-09 Carpet screen printing machine - provided with perforate suction drum sections increasing dye depth absorption

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Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4056352A (en) * 1973-08-22 1977-11-01 Ciba-Geigy Ag Dry transfer of organic compounds to webs
US4843670A (en) * 1986-08-21 1989-07-04 Kanebo, Ltd. Method for coloring textile using a color supply drum and a color suction drum

Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US776197A (en) * 1904-08-06 1904-11-29 Everett W Brooks Paper-drying machine.
US1625054A (en) * 1926-01-13 1927-04-19 Rosato Victor Revolving stencil-cylinder machine
US2080635A (en) * 1933-06-07 1937-05-18 Baumwollspinnerei Gronau Device for mercerizing cellulose fibers of all kinds
US3033702A (en) * 1957-06-08 1962-05-08 Beiersdorf & Co Ag Process and apparatus for the application of pressure-sensitive adhesives to limitedareas of the carrier
US3099146A (en) * 1963-07-30 Roller type continuous dyeing apparatus
US3779047A (en) * 1969-05-24 1973-12-18 Vepa Ag Apparatus for the treatment of permeable textile materials

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3099146A (en) * 1963-07-30 Roller type continuous dyeing apparatus
US776197A (en) * 1904-08-06 1904-11-29 Everett W Brooks Paper-drying machine.
US1625054A (en) * 1926-01-13 1927-04-19 Rosato Victor Revolving stencil-cylinder machine
US2080635A (en) * 1933-06-07 1937-05-18 Baumwollspinnerei Gronau Device for mercerizing cellulose fibers of all kinds
US3033702A (en) * 1957-06-08 1962-05-08 Beiersdorf & Co Ag Process and apparatus for the application of pressure-sensitive adhesives to limitedareas of the carrier
US3779047A (en) * 1969-05-24 1973-12-18 Vepa Ag Apparatus for the treatment of permeable textile materials

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4056352A (en) * 1973-08-22 1977-11-01 Ciba-Geigy Ag Dry transfer of organic compounds to webs
US4843670A (en) * 1986-08-21 1989-07-04 Kanebo, Ltd. Method for coloring textile using a color supply drum and a color suction drum

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