CA1091421A - Method of carding - Google Patents
Method of cardingInfo
- Publication number
- CA1091421A CA1091421A CA287,460A CA287460A CA1091421A CA 1091421 A CA1091421 A CA 1091421A CA 287460 A CA287460 A CA 287460A CA 1091421 A CA1091421 A CA 1091421A
- Authority
- CA
- Canada
- Prior art keywords
- lickerin
- cylinder
- speed
- feed
- nose
- 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
Links
Classifications
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D01—NATURAL OR MAN-MADE THREADS OR FIBRES; SPINNING
- D01G—PRELIMINARY TREATMENT OF FIBRES, e.g. FOR SPINNING
- D01G15/00—Carding machines or accessories; Card clothing; Burr-crushing or removing arrangements associated with carding or other preliminary-treatment machines
- D01G15/02—Carding machines
- D01G15/12—Details
- D01G15/34—Grids; Dirt knives; Angle blades
-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D01—NATURAL OR MAN-MADE THREADS OR FIBRES; SPINNING
- D01G—PRELIMINARY TREATMENT OF FIBRES, e.g. FOR SPINNING
- D01G15/00—Carding machines or accessories; Card clothing; Burr-crushing or removing arrangements associated with carding or other preliminary-treatment machines
- D01G15/02—Carding machines
- D01G15/12—Details
- D01G15/14—Constructional features of carding elements, e.g. for facilitating attachment of card clothing
- D01G15/20—Feed rollers; Takers-in
Landscapes
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Textile Engineering (AREA)
- Preliminary Treatment Of Fibers (AREA)
Abstract
Abstract of the Disclosure Significantly improved carding production capacity and materially lowered waste content in the resulting sliver is obtained by high-speed operation of the lickerin at a speed in the range of about 1400 to 2000 r.p.m. and related operation of the main cylinder at a speed such that the lickerin surface speed is in the order of 90% of the cylinder surface speed, with a stripper bar lickerin screen located specially below the lickerin.
Description
~e~
sackground of the_Invention In carding cotton fiber a good deal of both heavy and fine trash particles as well as undesirable short fiber and dust particles are characteristically present in the feed stock. The modern trend toward high-speed carding has substantially increased the difficulties encountered in cleaning the feed stock of such waste content in the course of carding, while the currently increasing use of open end spinning has made effective cleaning particularly important in preparing sliver for such spinning.
The present invention modifies conventional lickerin operating practice materially to improve waste cleaning results exceptionally during high-speed carding operation.
Summary of the Invention The improved carding results provided according to the present invention are obtained by increasing the lickerin operating speed so that it falls within the range of about 1400 to 2000 r.p.m. and operating the main cylinder in such relation that the lickerin surface speed is in the order of 90% of the cylinder surface speed, while employing the increased centrifugal force available at such lickerin speeds to remove any heavy trash particles from the feed stock below the lickerin and controlling the air currents generated by lickerin and cylinder opera-tion at these points above the lickerin so that the stock being fed for carding is predominantly freed of undesirable short fiber together with any fine trash and dust particles present but so that usable fiber contained in the feed stock is predominantly retained on the lickerin and cylinder roll surfaces.
Heavy trash is removed below the lickerin by a stripper bar set with a nose thereof facing opposite the ,:"~
,, ~ `~ 1~14:2~
direction of lickerin rotation and positioned in the range of about 30 to 45 from the point of fiber release at the J feed plate, and with the stripper bar nose set at about .olO"
to .022" from the lickerin surface and tapering forwardly to a clearing of about .110" from the lickerin surface.
Additionally, a lickerin screen is mounted below the lickerin with a nose facing in the same direction and positioned at about 90 from the point of fiber release at the feed plate and set at about .010" from the lickerin surface to remove somewhat lighter trash that may pass the stripper bar. The air currents about the lickerin are controlled by means such as is disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 3,737,952.
Carding operation according to the present inven-tion can be conducted equally well with either cotton or synthetic fiber feed stock. Successful representative operation with cotton feed stock has been conducted with a ,~ 50" maln cylinder running at 306 r.p.m. in relation to a 9- lickerin operated at 1570 r.p.m. with a resulting lickerin surface~speed corresponding to 92.4% of the cylinder surface speed. Production under these conditions was at the rate of 120 lbs./hr. with waste removal at approximately 4% and a sllver fiber array of average mean length equal to, or in excess of, the average means fiber length in the feed stock, while maintaining an operating efficiency of 95% or better and producing sliver of excellent evenness and containing waste at a level of about 0.6%.
~he carding operating arrangement employed is as described in further detail below in connection with the accompanying drawings that correspond to the following descrip-tion.
Description of the Drawings Fig. 1 is a more or less diagrammatic side elevation indicating the lickerin and main cylinder arrangement employed according to the present invention;
Fig. 2 is an enlarged generally corresponding side elevation showing the lickerin undercasing arrangement more in detail;
Fig. 3 is a plan detail of the lickerin screen;
and Fig. 4 is an enlarged fragmentary side elevation of the lickerin and related elements.
Detailed Description of the Invention Fig. 1 indicates the card feed plate at 10 over the front nose of which feed stock is delivered by the action of a feed roll 12 thereat to present the leading edge or fringe of the feed stock to the lickerin 14 for combing fiber there-from and transferring it to the main cylinder 16 at which the lickerin 14 runs tangent. Beneath lickerin 14 a stripper bar 18 is arranged as shown in spaced advance of a lickerin screen structure 20. At the high lickerin operating speed employed both the stripper bar 18 and the screen 20, par-ticularly the noses thereof, act successively by reason of the corresponding high centrifugal force available to remove heavy trash particles from the feed stock with great effec-tiveness.
Beyond the tangency point at main cylinder 16 respec-tive lickerin and cylinder cover plates 22 and 24 are installed in diverging relation with an air strip 26 lodged between their adjacent portions to block escape of air thereat so that the air currents generated by the high speed lickerin and cylinder operation are initially confined beneath these cover plates 22 and 24 to travel at the lickerin and cylinder surfaces and act to seat fiber carried at these surfaces in the clothing thereat.
A rear baffle member 28 is additionally disposed in lickerin covering relation at a spacing from the rear edge of cover plate 22 ahead of feed roll 12 and is formed with a nose portion 28 extending to overlap this rear edge also at a spacing. A front baffle member 30 is similarly disposed at cylinder 16 at a spacing beyond the top edge of cover plate 24 ahead of the card flats, indicated in Fig. 1 at 32, and is likewise formed with a spaced overlapping nose portion 30'.
Above lickerin 14 a hood structure 34 is arranged with a suction fitting at 36 so that extraction air currents are induced within hood structure 34 as indicated by the arrows in Fig. 1. This arrangement functions in the manner disclosed and claimed in U.S. Patent No. 3,737,952 to relieve this lickerin and cylinder air currents against "blow out" tendencies while reversing the direction in which the relief takes place so that objectionable short fiber together with smàll trash and dust particles are entrained and removed to an exceptionally advantageous extent from the seated fiber going forward on the lickerin and cylinder surfaces.
Figs. 2 and 3 show the lickerin undercasing arrangement in greater detail. As shown, the stripper bar 18 is supported by an adjustable bracket structure 38 spaced vertically rearward of a front baffle 40 that reaches upwardly behind the nose portion of lickerin screen structure 20. The screen 20 is of the bar type and is suitably fitted with a center brace 42 and end support pieces 44 arranged for adjustable mounting. Additionally, a rear baffle 46 is arranged vertically below the nose of feed plate 10.
Representative settings at the points indicated in Fig. 1 to provide the improved cleaning advantage obtainable according to the present invention are as follows:
4;~
Dimension setting In Inches Elements Involved A .022 Front baffle to wire B 0-.250 Hood to front baffle C .107 Cylinder cover plate to wire D . 625 Front baffle overlap space E . 250 Front baffle overlap extent F 1.00 Front baffle slot spacing G .125 Lickerin cover plate to wire H .125 Rear baffle slot spacing I .218 Rear baffle overlap extent J ,437 Rear baffle overlap extent K .017 Rear baffle to wire L .010-.022 Stripper bar nose to wire M .010-.125 Screen nose to wire Fig. 4 shows the lickerin 14 and related elements on an enlarged scale. The feed roll is shown at 12 and the feed plate at 10, while the stripper bar 18 is indicated as being available in various widths as represented in the range between 18 and 18' with the respective noses thereof posi-tioned in the range from about 30 (Rl) to 45 (R2) from the point of fiber release at the feed plate 10, while the Gap 1 setting corresponds to L (i.e., about .010 to .022) in the foregoing table and Gap 2 setting being about .110 as afore-said. The lickerin screen nose setting (Gap 3) corresponds to M (i.e., about .010 to .125) in the foregoing table and is positioned at about 90 from the point of fiber release at the feed plate 10, so as to remove somewhat lighter trash which takes longer to leave the lickerin 14 centrifugally.
The present invention has been described in detail above for purposes of illustration only and is not intended to be limited by this description or otherwise to exclude any variation or equivalent arrangement that would be apparent - from or reasonably suggested by the foregoing disclosure to the skill of the art.
sackground of the_Invention In carding cotton fiber a good deal of both heavy and fine trash particles as well as undesirable short fiber and dust particles are characteristically present in the feed stock. The modern trend toward high-speed carding has substantially increased the difficulties encountered in cleaning the feed stock of such waste content in the course of carding, while the currently increasing use of open end spinning has made effective cleaning particularly important in preparing sliver for such spinning.
The present invention modifies conventional lickerin operating practice materially to improve waste cleaning results exceptionally during high-speed carding operation.
Summary of the Invention The improved carding results provided according to the present invention are obtained by increasing the lickerin operating speed so that it falls within the range of about 1400 to 2000 r.p.m. and operating the main cylinder in such relation that the lickerin surface speed is in the order of 90% of the cylinder surface speed, while employing the increased centrifugal force available at such lickerin speeds to remove any heavy trash particles from the feed stock below the lickerin and controlling the air currents generated by lickerin and cylinder opera-tion at these points above the lickerin so that the stock being fed for carding is predominantly freed of undesirable short fiber together with any fine trash and dust particles present but so that usable fiber contained in the feed stock is predominantly retained on the lickerin and cylinder roll surfaces.
Heavy trash is removed below the lickerin by a stripper bar set with a nose thereof facing opposite the ,:"~
,, ~ `~ 1~14:2~
direction of lickerin rotation and positioned in the range of about 30 to 45 from the point of fiber release at the J feed plate, and with the stripper bar nose set at about .olO"
to .022" from the lickerin surface and tapering forwardly to a clearing of about .110" from the lickerin surface.
Additionally, a lickerin screen is mounted below the lickerin with a nose facing in the same direction and positioned at about 90 from the point of fiber release at the feed plate and set at about .010" from the lickerin surface to remove somewhat lighter trash that may pass the stripper bar. The air currents about the lickerin are controlled by means such as is disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 3,737,952.
Carding operation according to the present inven-tion can be conducted equally well with either cotton or synthetic fiber feed stock. Successful representative operation with cotton feed stock has been conducted with a ,~ 50" maln cylinder running at 306 r.p.m. in relation to a 9- lickerin operated at 1570 r.p.m. with a resulting lickerin surface~speed corresponding to 92.4% of the cylinder surface speed. Production under these conditions was at the rate of 120 lbs./hr. with waste removal at approximately 4% and a sllver fiber array of average mean length equal to, or in excess of, the average means fiber length in the feed stock, while maintaining an operating efficiency of 95% or better and producing sliver of excellent evenness and containing waste at a level of about 0.6%.
~he carding operating arrangement employed is as described in further detail below in connection with the accompanying drawings that correspond to the following descrip-tion.
Description of the Drawings Fig. 1 is a more or less diagrammatic side elevation indicating the lickerin and main cylinder arrangement employed according to the present invention;
Fig. 2 is an enlarged generally corresponding side elevation showing the lickerin undercasing arrangement more in detail;
Fig. 3 is a plan detail of the lickerin screen;
and Fig. 4 is an enlarged fragmentary side elevation of the lickerin and related elements.
Detailed Description of the Invention Fig. 1 indicates the card feed plate at 10 over the front nose of which feed stock is delivered by the action of a feed roll 12 thereat to present the leading edge or fringe of the feed stock to the lickerin 14 for combing fiber there-from and transferring it to the main cylinder 16 at which the lickerin 14 runs tangent. Beneath lickerin 14 a stripper bar 18 is arranged as shown in spaced advance of a lickerin screen structure 20. At the high lickerin operating speed employed both the stripper bar 18 and the screen 20, par-ticularly the noses thereof, act successively by reason of the corresponding high centrifugal force available to remove heavy trash particles from the feed stock with great effec-tiveness.
Beyond the tangency point at main cylinder 16 respec-tive lickerin and cylinder cover plates 22 and 24 are installed in diverging relation with an air strip 26 lodged between their adjacent portions to block escape of air thereat so that the air currents generated by the high speed lickerin and cylinder operation are initially confined beneath these cover plates 22 and 24 to travel at the lickerin and cylinder surfaces and act to seat fiber carried at these surfaces in the clothing thereat.
A rear baffle member 28 is additionally disposed in lickerin covering relation at a spacing from the rear edge of cover plate 22 ahead of feed roll 12 and is formed with a nose portion 28 extending to overlap this rear edge also at a spacing. A front baffle member 30 is similarly disposed at cylinder 16 at a spacing beyond the top edge of cover plate 24 ahead of the card flats, indicated in Fig. 1 at 32, and is likewise formed with a spaced overlapping nose portion 30'.
Above lickerin 14 a hood structure 34 is arranged with a suction fitting at 36 so that extraction air currents are induced within hood structure 34 as indicated by the arrows in Fig. 1. This arrangement functions in the manner disclosed and claimed in U.S. Patent No. 3,737,952 to relieve this lickerin and cylinder air currents against "blow out" tendencies while reversing the direction in which the relief takes place so that objectionable short fiber together with smàll trash and dust particles are entrained and removed to an exceptionally advantageous extent from the seated fiber going forward on the lickerin and cylinder surfaces.
Figs. 2 and 3 show the lickerin undercasing arrangement in greater detail. As shown, the stripper bar 18 is supported by an adjustable bracket structure 38 spaced vertically rearward of a front baffle 40 that reaches upwardly behind the nose portion of lickerin screen structure 20. The screen 20 is of the bar type and is suitably fitted with a center brace 42 and end support pieces 44 arranged for adjustable mounting. Additionally, a rear baffle 46 is arranged vertically below the nose of feed plate 10.
Representative settings at the points indicated in Fig. 1 to provide the improved cleaning advantage obtainable according to the present invention are as follows:
4;~
Dimension setting In Inches Elements Involved A .022 Front baffle to wire B 0-.250 Hood to front baffle C .107 Cylinder cover plate to wire D . 625 Front baffle overlap space E . 250 Front baffle overlap extent F 1.00 Front baffle slot spacing G .125 Lickerin cover plate to wire H .125 Rear baffle slot spacing I .218 Rear baffle overlap extent J ,437 Rear baffle overlap extent K .017 Rear baffle to wire L .010-.022 Stripper bar nose to wire M .010-.125 Screen nose to wire Fig. 4 shows the lickerin 14 and related elements on an enlarged scale. The feed roll is shown at 12 and the feed plate at 10, while the stripper bar 18 is indicated as being available in various widths as represented in the range between 18 and 18' with the respective noses thereof posi-tioned in the range from about 30 (Rl) to 45 (R2) from the point of fiber release at the feed plate 10, while the Gap 1 setting corresponds to L (i.e., about .010 to .022) in the foregoing table and Gap 2 setting being about .110 as afore-said. The lickerin screen nose setting (Gap 3) corresponds to M (i.e., about .010 to .125) in the foregoing table and is positioned at about 90 from the point of fiber release at the feed plate 10, so as to remove somewhat lighter trash which takes longer to leave the lickerin 14 centrifugally.
The present invention has been described in detail above for purposes of illustration only and is not intended to be limited by this description or otherwise to exclude any variation or equivalent arrangement that would be apparent - from or reasonably suggested by the foregoing disclosure to the skill of the art.
Claims (5)
OR PRIVILEGE IS CLAIMED ARE DEFINED AS FOLLOWS:
1. The method of carding cotton and synthetic fiber feed stock using carding apparatus that includes a main carding cylinder, a lickerin arranged adjacent the cylinder and a feed plate for the lickerin, which method comprises operating the lickerin at a speed in the range of about 1,400 to 2,000 r.p.m. and the cylinder at a speed such that the lickerin surface speed is in the order of 90% of the cylinder surface speed, while employing the increased centrifugal force avail-able at such lickerin speeds to remove any heavy trash particles from the feed stock below the lickerin beyond the feed plate and controlling the air currents generated by lickerin and cylinder operation at such speeds at points above the lickerin so that the stock being fed for carding is predominantly freed of undesirable short fiber together with fine trash and dust particles present but so that usable fiber contained in the feed stock is predominantly retained on the lickerin and cylinder roll surfaces.
2. The method defined in claim 1 wherein the lickerin is operated at a speed of 1,570 r.p.m., and its cylinder at a speed of 306 r.p.m., so that the lickerin surface speed was 92.4% of the cylinder surface speed.
3. The method defined in claim 1 wherein the lickerin is operated in relation to a stripper bar set below the lickerin with a nose facing in the direction opposite the direction of lickerin rotation and positioned in the range of about 30°
to 45° from the point of fiber release at the feed plate, and said stripper bar nose being set at about .010" to .022" from the lickerin surface and tapering forwardly to a clearance of about .110" from said lickerin surface.
to 45° from the point of fiber release at the feed plate, and said stripper bar nose being set at about .010" to .022" from the lickerin surface and tapering forwardly to a clearance of about .110" from said lickerin surface.
4. The method defined in claim 3 wherein the lickerin is operated additionally in relation to a lickerin screen set therebelow and having a nose facing in the direction opposite the direction of lickerin rotation and positioned at about 90° from the point of fiber release at the feed plate, and said lickerin screen nose being set at about .010" from said lickerin surface.
5. Carding apparatus for cotton and synthetic fiber feed stock comprising a feed roll and feed plate for said stock, a lickerin thereat operated at a speed in the range of about 1,400 to 2,000 r.p.m. and a related cylinder operated at a speed such that the lickerin surface speed is in the order of 90% of the cylinder surface speed, a stripper bar set below the lickerin with a nose facing in the direction opposite the direction of lickerin rotation and positioned in the range of about 30° to 45° from the point of fiber release at the feed plate, and said stripper bar nose being set at about .010" to .022" from the lickerin surface and tapering forwardly to a clearance of about .110" from said lickerin surface, a lickerin screen additionally set below said lickerin having a nose facing in the direction opposite the direction of lickerin rotation and positioned at about 90° from the point of fiber release at the feed plate, and said lickerin series nose being set at about .010" from said lickerin surface, whereby the centrifugal force available of such lickerin speeds acts to remove any heavy trash particles from the feed stock below the lickerin at said stripper bar and said lickerin series noses, and means for controlling the air currents gen-erated by said lickerin and cylinder operating at such speeds at points above the lickerin whereby the stock being fed for carding is predominantly freed of undesirable short fiber together with fine trash and dust particles present but so that usable fiber contained in the feed stock is predominantly retained on the lickerin and cylinder surfaces.
Applications Claiming Priority (4)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US72723376A | 1976-09-27 | 1976-09-27 | |
US727,233 | 1976-09-27 | ||
US05/809,618 US4135275A (en) | 1976-09-27 | 1977-06-24 | High speed card |
US809,618 | 1977-06-24 |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
CA1091421A true CA1091421A (en) | 1980-12-16 |
Family
ID=27111475
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
CA287,460A Expired CA1091421A (en) | 1976-09-27 | 1977-09-26 | Method of carding |
Country Status (11)
Country | Link |
---|---|
JP (1) | JPS5341524A (en) |
BR (1) | BR7706320A (en) |
CA (1) | CA1091421A (en) |
DE (1) | DE2743187A1 (en) |
EG (1) | EG12780A (en) |
GB (1) | GB1556601A (en) |
GR (1) | GR63699B (en) |
IN (1) | IN146462B (en) |
IT (1) | IT1087632B (en) |
MX (1) | MX143779A (en) |
TR (1) | TR19990A (en) |
Families Citing this family (14)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
ZA795305B (en) * | 1978-10-19 | 1980-09-24 | Univ Leeds Ind Service Ltd | Apparatus for feeding fibres to the carding cylinder of a carding machine and a carding machine incorporating such apparatus |
EP0022472B1 (en) * | 1979-07-04 | 1983-06-08 | Maschinenfabrik Rieter Ag | Preparation machine for spinning |
DE2931699A1 (en) * | 1979-08-04 | 1981-02-19 | Trützschler GmbH & Co KG, 4050 Mönchengladbach | METHOD AND DEVICE FOR SEPARATING WASTE FROM A FIBER-WASTE MIXTURE |
DE3127418A1 (en) * | 1981-07-11 | 1983-02-03 | Trützschler GmbH & Co KG, 4050 Mönchengladbach | DEVICE FOR SEPARATING IMPURITIES, LIKE DUST, TRASH OR THE LIKE. FROM FIBER GOODS |
EP0108229B1 (en) * | 1982-11-05 | 1987-11-11 | Maschinenfabrik Rieter Ag | Cleaning machine for fibre material |
DE3346335A1 (en) * | 1983-12-22 | 1985-07-18 | Hergeth Hollingsworth GmbH, 4408 Dülmen | METHOD AND DEVICE FOR PRODUCING A UNIFORM FIBER MATING IN THE FABRICATION ZONE BETWEEN TAMBOUR AND FIBER TAKEOVER ORGAN |
JP2520600B2 (en) * | 1986-05-30 | 1996-07-31 | コニカ株式会社 | Method for producing silver halide photographic light-sensitive material having good storage stability |
DE3644529C2 (en) * | 1986-12-24 | 1998-02-26 | Truetzschler Gmbh & Co Kg | Device for eliminating contaminants such as trash, shell parts and. Like. For a card or card |
GB2205590A (en) * | 1987-06-12 | 1988-12-14 | Carclo Eng Group Plc | Improvements in or relating to textile carding |
DE3827520A1 (en) * | 1988-08-12 | 1990-02-15 | Rieter Ag Maschf | SUCTIONED SIMULTANEOUS FEEDER FOR A CARD |
DE3902204C2 (en) * | 1989-01-26 | 2003-04-30 | Truetzschler Gmbh & Co Kg | Device on a card, cleaning machine or the like for cotton fibers, in which a support element is assigned to a roller |
DE3908834A1 (en) * | 1989-03-17 | 1990-09-20 | Hollingsworth Gmbh | DEVICE FOR ELIMINATING IMPURITIES OF A FIBER ASSEMBLY ON A CARD |
JP3417605B2 (en) * | 1993-07-20 | 2003-06-16 | 富士写真フイルム株式会社 | Photosensitive material drying control method and apparatus |
CN110373750B (en) * | 2019-07-29 | 2023-11-10 | 湖北百奥科技股份有限公司 | Ginned cotton cleaning device and process based on centripetal angle roller teeth cotton feeding roller |
-
1977
- 1977-09-21 BR BR7706320A patent/BR7706320A/en unknown
- 1977-09-26 DE DE19772743187 patent/DE2743187A1/en not_active Withdrawn
- 1977-09-26 CA CA287,460A patent/CA1091421A/en not_active Expired
- 1977-09-26 GR GR54427A patent/GR63699B/en unknown
- 1977-09-26 EG EG547/77A patent/EG12780A/en active
- 1977-09-26 GB GB40005/77A patent/GB1556601A/en not_active Expired
- 1977-09-26 JP JP11549777A patent/JPS5341524A/en active Pending
- 1977-09-27 TR TR19990A patent/TR19990A/en unknown
- 1977-09-27 MX MX170708A patent/MX143779A/en unknown
- 1977-09-27 IT IT27989/77A patent/IT1087632B/en active
- 1977-09-28 IN IN267/DEL/77A patent/IN146462B/en unknown
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
EG12780A (en) | 1979-12-31 |
BR7706320A (en) | 1978-05-09 |
TR19990A (en) | 1980-05-15 |
DE2743187A1 (en) | 1978-03-30 |
MX143779A (en) | 1981-07-13 |
IT1087632B (en) | 1985-06-04 |
JPS5341524A (en) | 1978-04-15 |
GR63699B (en) | 1979-11-30 |
IN146462B (en) | 1978-06-09 |
GB1556601A (en) | 1979-11-28 |
Similar Documents
Publication | Publication Date | Title |
---|---|---|
CA1091421A (en) | Method of carding | |
CA1127366A (en) | Fiber processing apparatus and method | |
US4135275A (en) | High speed card | |
US4258455A (en) | Method for classifying fibers | |
US4128917A (en) | Carding engines | |
GB1586940A (en) | Apparatus for treating fibrous material for subsequent processing | |
GB2228495A (en) | Separation of waste in a carding machine | |
US2788547A (en) | Carding machine | |
US3825975A (en) | Apparatus for forming a sliver from a fiber web produced in a card | |
US4805267A (en) | Device for separating impurities from fiber material during its treatment by a card | |
US2071438A (en) | Method of and means for producing slivers or ends of fibrous materials | |
JPH04504147A (en) | Equipment for removing impurities from card fiber mass | |
EP0909843B1 (en) | Fiber-guiding wedge for carders | |
EP0194850B1 (en) | Apparatus for the production of fibrous webs including wood pulp | |
US3205538A (en) | Fiber retriever | |
US3737952A (en) | Carding machine fiber and air control method and means | |
EP0295060A2 (en) | Improvements in or relating to textile carding | |
US4169699A (en) | Apparatus for classifying fibers | |
US20040016076A1 (en) | Method and device for cleaning the removal zone on a carder/carding machine | |
EP0338802B1 (en) | Carding engine | |
US3955244A (en) | Fiber retriever | |
EP0010881B1 (en) | Apparatus for feeding fibres to the carding cylinder of a carding machine and a carding machine incorporating such apparatus | |
US3483598A (en) | Method of cleaning fibers | |
US4224718A (en) | Pneumatic cleaning of the chamber carding elements of a textile machine | |
CN2125593U (en) | Cotton fibre carding machine |
Legal Events
Date | Code | Title | Description |
---|---|---|---|
MKEX | Expiry |