GB2027069A - Shuttleless Looms - Google Patents

Shuttleless Looms Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2027069A
GB2027069A GB7923171A GB7923171A GB2027069A GB 2027069 A GB2027069 A GB 2027069A GB 7923171 A GB7923171 A GB 7923171A GB 7923171 A GB7923171 A GB 7923171A GB 2027069 A GB2027069 A GB 2027069A
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Prior art keywords
weft thread
throwing
wheel
carriers
accumulator chamber
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GB7923171A
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MOLLICA Srl
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MOLLICA Srl
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Publication date
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Publication of GB2027069A publication Critical patent/GB2027069A/en
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D03WEAVING
    • D03DWOVEN FABRICS; METHODS OF WEAVING; LOOMS
    • D03D47/00Looms in which bulk supply of weft does not pass through shed, e.g. shuttleless looms, gripper shuttle looms, dummy shuttle looms
    • D03D47/12Looms in which bulk supply of weft does not pass through shed, e.g. shuttleless looms, gripper shuttle looms, dummy shuttle looms wherein single picks of weft thread are inserted, i.e. with shedding between each pick
    • D03D47/24Looms in which bulk supply of weft does not pass through shed, e.g. shuttleless looms, gripper shuttle looms, dummy shuttle looms wherein single picks of weft thread are inserted, i.e. with shedding between each pick by gripper or dummy shuttle

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

Abstract

A shuttleless loom comprises a weft thread carrier throwing device (7) and a recovering device (15), and providing for a substantial halting of each of the weft thread carriers (14) prior to the throwing thereof, the throwing device (7) includes a rotary member (8) set for substantially continuous rotation and cooperating with a fixed casing (9) to define an open throwing track (10) for the weft thread carriers (14). An accumulator chamber (13) is located substantially adjacent to the inlet end of the weft thread carrier and operative to withhold one weft thread carrier supplied by the recovering device. A feeder is located substantially between the accumulator chamber (13) and the open throwing track and operative to insert the weft thread carriers one by one from the chamber into the track. <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Shuttleless Loom This invention relates to an improved shuttleless loom, in particular of the type which utilizes one or more weft thread carriers.
As is known, shuttleless looms, also called shuttleless Sulzer looms, have important advantages over traditional looms of the shuttle type. In fact, since the thread-carrying cop no longer needs be carried through the shed in the shuttle, it becomes possible to considerably reduce the size of the weft thread carriers and, accordingly, the moving masses involved, which results in an increase of the throw velocity and of the production output over traditional looms.
Also known is, however, that along with such advantages, shuttleless or Sulzer-type looms have some significant drawbacks.
First of all, they require energy in considerabie amounts: both the weft thread carrier throwing and above all, the cyclic actuation of the throwing members-the latter invoiving particularly high momenta-imply a waste of energy which remains for the most part unused because the weft thread carriers and throwing members have to be brought back to rest after each throw.
Another drawback, and one of great practical importance, is the noisy operation of such looms, as due primarily to the fast reciprocating masses, which are continuously subjected to sudden restarts and stops.
Previous studies by the same Inventor have substantially solved such problems. For example, U.S. Patent No. 4,015,642 discloses a loom wherein a weft thread carrier is redirected as it emerges from the shed, i.e. after being passed through the warp threads, along a return travel guide which takes it back without discontinuities of motion over a continuous closed path, at the shed entering area, exactly to the starting point.
The solutions disclosed in the cited patent have resulted in a surprisingly advantageous loom as regards efficiency, silent operation, reduced energy expenditure, and above all operating speed. In other terms, a loom has been provided which affords a much higher performance level than the best of conventional shuttleless looms.
However, the cost of the loom proved to be directly related to its performance, namely a high one, and, furthermore specially critical was the tuning of those members which provide for the synchronization of the weft thread carrier throwing to the sley movements.
In actual practice, the synchronization of the weft thread carrier throws requires expensive and quite sophisticated control devices, which are indeed practicable, as the numerous tests carried out have proved, but are unsuitable for application to looms which are not intended for specially high performance.
Anbther problem, also connected with the solutions taught in the cited patent by this same Inventor, is that such a loom is unsuitable for adaptation ofprior or existing shuttleless looms, since the latter are inadequate to provide the required performance level, and too many and important are the machine members in need of being modified and replaced.
Thus, it can be seen that the conventional art has remarkably important disadvantage, namely, there are no looms available which, for one aspect, can overcome at least most of the serious drawbacks connected with said conventional shuttleless looms, which require a considerable expenditure of energy for the intermittent operation of their members, in particular of their throwing members, and are too noisy in operation, and for another aspect, are not particularly so very expensive and complicated to tune, many looms being not intended for particularly high performance levels.
In practice, the current state of the art provides for no possibility to update with simple and inexpensive operations the large number of oldtype shuttleless looms present in the field, in agreement with modern requisites which forbid excessive energy consumption and noise emission.
This invention sets out to fill said want in the art, by providing a shuttleless loom which mostly eliminates the drawbacks mentioned above and lends itself to a more general utilization, even where no specially high performance is sought, and where as reduced investment and running expenses as possible are contemplated.
According to one aspect of this invention, there is provided an improved shuttleless loom comprising a weft thread carrier throwing device and recovering device, and providing for a substantial halting of each of said weft thread carriers prior to the throwing, characterized in that said throwing device includes a rotary member set for substantially continuous rotation and cooperating with a fixed casing to define an open throwing track for said weft thread carriers provided with an inlet and an outlet end open to the region of insertion through the loom shed, and further includes an accumulator chamber located substantially adjacent to said inlet end and operative to withhold at least one weft thread carrier supplied by said recovering device, and a feeder located substantially between said accumulator chamber and said open throwing track and operative to insert said weft thread carriers one by one from said chamber into said track, said feeder being actuated such that each weft thread carrier is inserted into said open throwing track in advance with respect to the correct time for the insertion of said weft thread carrier through the loom shed by an amount dependent on the time period required to span said open throwing track.
Further features and advantages will be more clearly apparent from the following description of a preferred, though not restrictive, embodiment of this invention, illustrated by way of example only in the accompanying drawings, where;
Figure lísasaqematS sideviEtSfthe sliuttie/ess /ooin dJCOfO'/fl'g' to Figure 2 is a schematical and partly sectional front view of the loom of Figure 1, illustrating in particular the members provided by this invention; Figure 3 evidences in plan view one element according to this invention; Figure 4 shows in an enlarged scale with respect to the preceding figures a variation of a portion of Figure 2 illustrating members according to this invention; Figure 5 is a side view of Figure 4, taken along the section line V-V of Figure 4;; Figure 6 shows an element according to this invention constituting a variation of the element of Figure 3; Figure 7 shows a further element of the loom; and Figures 8 and 9 show, in two sectional views perpendicular to each other, a further variation of the element of Figure 3.
With reference to the drawing figures, the loom has a structure which is for many aspects similar to that of conventional looms. For instance, it comprises, as shown in Figures 1 and 2, a supporting frame 1; a main shaft 2; a sley 3 which can be induced to oscillate about a lower pivot 3a under control of a cam 4 keyed to the main shaft 2 and acting on a cam follower 5 rigid with the sley 3; heddles, not shown; and a roller 6 for redirecting the finished fabric, as produced by weft and warp threads criss-crossing one another.
According to this invention, the shuttleless loom shown includes a unique and particularly advantageous weft thread carrier throwing device. Specifically, with reference to Figures 1 to 3, there is provided, in a first embodiment of the invention, a weft thread carrier throwing device, generally indicated at 7, which comprises the following elements: A rotary member 8, comprising substantially a wheel or flywheel, rotatably engages a shaft which in this example happens to be horizontal, and it may be rotatively driven by an electric motor of its own. The wheel 8 has a diameter and angular velocity such that a tangential peripheral velocity is attained which is equal to or higher than the desired throwing velocity sought for the weft thread carriers that take the weft thread through the loom shed, i.e. substantially through the warp threads.Around the rotary member or wheel 8, there is provided a fixed casing 9 which is shaped to define, between the wheel 8 and casing 9 itself, an open throwing track 10 the cross section dimensions whereof are similar to the cross section dimensions of the weft thread carriers being employed.
The open throwing track 10, according to the embodiment shown, has a circular pattern which extends, over a shorter length than the circumference of the wheel 8, between an inlet end 11 and an open outlet end 12. More specifically, the open outlet 12 opens, without obstacles or interruptions, into the loom shed insertion region through an inlet channel 1 2a tangent to the wheel 8 and aligned with the path line through the warp threads. In this embodiment, the open outlet end 12 is located substantially at the lower end of the wheel 8, whereas the inlet end 11 is located higher up. The direction of rotation of the wheel 8 is naturally from the inlet 11 to the open outlet 12 along the open throwing track 1 0.
Substantially adjacent the inlet 1 there is provided according to this invention an accumulator chamber 13 adapted for receiving and withholding the weft thread carriers, indicated at 14, which are to be thrown into the open track 10. The accumulator chamber 13 receives the weft thread carrier 14 from the recovering device, generally indicated at 1 5. The introduction of the weft thread carriers 14 into the accumulator chamber 13 is carried out through the top of the chamber 13 itself, devices being advantageously provided for damping the faii and movement of the weft thread carriers 14, e.g. devices comprising flexible elastic partitions, indicated at 1 6 in Figures 2 and 4.Alternatively, and advantageously, there may be provided damping means (Figure 7) which would comprise a braked wheel 21 effective to take up the kinetic energy of the weft thread carriers 14 which are being returned after inserting the weft thread. The braked wheel 21 takes up, at its top portion, the impact and the rotational and translational velocity of the weft thread carriers to start a controlled rotational movement. The rotation of the braked wheel 21 may be controlled by means of any frictional brake, such as a shoe or disk brake, or the like, associated for example, to the shaft or axle 22 of the braked wheel itself.
In a novel manner, the action of the wheel on the arriving weft thread carriers 14 can be adjusted by varying the area of the passage 1 5a one wall whereof is defined by the wheel itself. To this aim, the shaft or axle 22 of the braked wheel 21 is carried in a slide 23 which is guided by fixed fins 24 in the direction of the arrows 25 in Figure 7, namely in a direction to more or less throttle the passage 1 spa.
The accumulator chamber 13 tapers towards the bottom such as to convey one by one the weft thread carriers 14 towards the inlet 11 of the open throwing track 10.
At the bottom of the accumulator chamber 13, adjacent to the inlet 1 1, there is provided, according to this invention, a feeder 1 7 which comprises, according to the embodiment illustrated in Figures 1 to 3, a feeding wheel having its axis perpendicular to the rotation axis of the wheel or flywheel 8 and provided with peripheral pegs 1 7a defining a plurality of angular sectors. In Figure 2, only the termination ends of the pegs 1 7a are shown. The distance between two successive pegs will be directly related to the size of the weft thread carriers being employed, thereby as shown in Figure 3, permitting to only one weft thread carrier 14 to insert itself between two consecutive pegs and be sent, by rotation of the feeding wheel 17, to the inlet 11 and hence to the open throwing track 10.
As evidenced in particular in Figures 1 and 2, the feeding wheel 1 7 is driven directly off the main shaft 2 through a bevel gear pair 18 and a vertical shaft 19. The bevel gears 18 are so proportioned as to result in a one pitch distance movement of the pegs 1 7a induced by the feeding wheel 17, per revolution of the main shaft 2. The movement may be either continuous, as shown in the drawings, or intermittent, if desired.
Figures 4, 5 and 6 illustrate a further embodiment of the feeding wheel 14. In this second embodiment, the wheel is arranged with its rotation axis parallel to that of the flywheel 8, and the pegs 1 7a are replaced by teeth 1 7b, between which teeth the weft thread carriers will again be inserted for introduction into the open throwing track 10 through the inlet 11. In order to allow the feeding wheel 1 7 of Figure 4 to rotate without causing undesired returns of the weft thread carriers 14 to the accumulator chamber 13, there is provided a cutout 20 in the casing 9 for the passage therethrough of the teeth 1 7b returning to the accumulator chamber 13.It will be appreciated that the feeding wheel 1 7 of the second embodiment, having a horizontal axis of rotation, is driven synchronously with the rotation of the main shaft 2, as in the first embodiment described hereinabove.
Figures 8 and 9 illustrate a further advantageous variation of the feeder 1 7. In this embodiment, at the bottom of an accumulator chamber 13 substantially configurated as a vertical loader and adjacent the wheel 8 but offset with respect thereto because contained by a different plane, a feeder 1 7 is arranged adapted for shifting the weft thread carriers 14 axially, to take them from the plane of the accumulator chamber 13 to the plane of the wheel 8. More in detail, in Figures 8 and 9 a piston 26 and related rod 27 can be observed, which are movable axially in a direction parallel to the axis of the wheel 8. The piston 26 and rod 27 are driven by a lever 27a which derives its motion from the main shaft 2 and acts against the bias of a spring 28 tending to bring the piston 26 to close the accumulator chamber 13.
Advantageously, opposite the piston 26 and close to the wheel 8, there is provided a prerotation device 29 operative to impart to each weft thread carrier 14 a rotation speed close to the one it will acquire upon contacting the wheel or flywheel 8. The device comprises an electric motor 30 operative to rotate a friction disk 31 which is located opposite the feeder 1 7 with a weft thread carrier 14 interposed therebetween, and more specifically opposite the piston 26 when urged to its travel end by the spring 28. To prevent the piston 26 from also rotating, which would disturb the accumulation of weft thread carriers 14 in the accumulator chamber 13, the piston 26 is formed of at least two portions: a first or front portion 26a of plate-like shape, and a second or rear portion 26b, associated with the rod 27.A bearing 26c is interposed between the two portions 26a and 26b.
Advantageously, as a further aspect of this invention, it is arranged, as shown in the drawing figures, that the improved shuttleless loom described in the foregoing can accept substantially cylindrical weft thread carriers 14 having a central groove, which are specially easy to drive and inexpensive and involve reduced losses of kinetic energy during their movements.
Such weft thread carriers are disclosed in U.S.
Patent No. 4,098,300.
When such weft thread carriers are used, the open throwing track 10 may have a constant cross-section throughout, and the wheel or flywheel 8 may have a regular circular peripheral profile.
In particular, by providing said weft thread carriers 14 shaped as explained, the inlet 11 to the open throwing track 10 may be a simple port tapering slightly towards the track inside, substantially to the diameter dimension of the carriers 14, which will be inserted with their axis parallel to the axis of the wheel or flywheei 8. For a fast entrainment of the weft thread carriers 14, it will be sufficient that the wheel or flywheel 8 be provided at its periphery with a lining of a high frictional coefficient material, such as rubber.
Figure 8 shows in particular a rubber foil 8a or foil of a similar material, which is inserted in the central groove of the weft thread carriers 14 emerging from the wheel or flywheel 8.
As mentioned, the wheel or flywheel 8 has an angular velocity and a diameter such as to result in a tangential velocity which is equal to or higher than the desired throwing velocity of the weft thread carriers -14. In fact, depending on the type of weft thread carriers employed, on the lining and shape of the wheel or flywheel 8, the weft thread carriers will acquire, along the open throwing-track 10 of a strictly preset length, a final velocity which is equal to or lower than the tangential velocity of the wheel. In the event of their exiting at a lower velocity, in order to achieve the desired throwing velocity, it will be sufficient to rotate the wheel 8 at a tangential velocity proportionally higher than the throwing velocity sought.
Advantageously, by providing a throwing device 7 of this invention, it becomes possible, while using an open throwing track 10 O of strictly predetermined length, to obtain in practice any throwing velocity; it is in fact possible to vary not only the rotational speed of the wheel or flywheel 8, as explained above, but also the diameter thereof, and accordingly the length of the open throwing track 10, or alternatively to provide the wheel 8 in the shape of a drum and make the weft thread carriers follow an open throwing track 10 of spiral configuration. In that case, it will thus be possible to cause the weft thread carriers 14 to execute several turns about the wheel axis before they are ejected through the outlet 1 2.
According to this invention, any recovering devices may be utilized for recovering the weft thread carriers 14. Thus, the objective of minimizing as far as possible any alterations of existing loom structures, is accomplished while achieveing substantial and fundamental advantages, as explained hereinafter. However, it is an added advantage of the invention that with the throwing device 7 just described there can be associated a recovering device 1 5 of extreme simplicity and functionality. This recovering device comprises, as shown in Figure 2, fixed guides which receive the weft thread carriers 14 after they have been passed through the warp threads, and redirect them back to the throwing device 7, and precisely to the accumulator chamber 13.The recovering device 1 5 having fixed guides is particularly effective when used in combination with substantially cylindrical weft thread carriers 14, but could also be employed with other type weft thread carriers. In all cases, any known conveyor may be utilized, provided that it takes the weft thread carriers back to the accumulator chamber 1 3.
The operation of the improved shuttleless loom according to this invention will be apparent from the foregoing description. Leaving out the operation of the conventional members, because known from the prior art, it will be explained how the weft thread carriers 14 are thrown through the shed.
From the accumulator chamber 13, gradually and by gravity, the weft thread carriers 14 are dropped to the bottom of the chamber, and line up until they are engaged by the feeding device 17, which inserts them, gradually and one by one, through the inlet end 11 of the open throwing track 10. Upon being inserted through said inlet 11, each weft thread carrier contacts the outer peripheral surface of the wheel or flywheel 8, which is advantageously coated with a high frictional coefficient material 8a, and is then entrained along the track 10. The rotational speed of the wheel or flywheel 8 is substantially constant, owing among others to the large mass thereof, but the velocity of the weft thread carriers along the track 10 increases from zero to the desired throwing velocity.However, the acceleration is not instantaneous as with conventional shuttleless looms, wherein an impact is actually applied to accelerate the weft thread carrier. Especially when the pre-rotation device 29 is used, which imparts to each weft thread carrier 14 a rotational velocity proximate to that imparted by the wheel 8.
The feeder 17 is coordinated in its rotation to the rotation of the main shaft 2 of the loom, which means that for each revolution of the main shaft 2 and accordingly for each complete oscillation of the sley 3 there corresponds the insertion of one weft thread carrier 14 in the open throwing track 10. In order to cause the weft thread carriers to be thrown through the warp threads, draging a weft thread therealong, at the appropriate time, the feeder 1 7 will introduce the weft thread carriers 14 in the track 10 at an advance with respect to said appropriate throwing time which is equal or directly related to the time lapse required to span the track 10.After inserting the weft thread through the shed, the weft thread carriers 14 are caused to run along a recovering device 15, and after engagement with said damping means, are returned to the accumulator chamber 13.
The invention achieves its objects.
In fact, this inventive shuttleless loom consumes far less energy inasmuch as the throwing device operates continuously, thereby no energy need be expended to restart it. In view of the latter consideration, the loss of energy due to the weft thread carriers being halted each time prior to throwing becomes a secondary factor.
Anyhow, by providing the recovering device 1 5 with fixed guides, the kinetic energy of the weft thread carriers is utilized to spontaneously return, without any added devices, the carriers themselves to the accumulator chamber 13.
The loom is also remarkably silent in operation, by virtue of the continuously operated throwing device 7 and because the weft thread carriers are being accelerated gradually rather than almost instantaneously. The surface of the wheel or flywheel 8, which is coated with a high frictional coefficient material, such as rubber, contributes then materially to the noiseless operation bathe loom.
But above all, the improved shuttleless loom of this invention is unique in its construction and operation simplicity, which affords an extremely reduced manufacturing cost and cost of adaptation of existing looms. Indeed, the throwing device 7 is very simple in construction and the throwing track is at all times open, while the throw synchronization occurs by inserting one weft thread carrier into the track at the appropriate time.
In practice, a shuttleless loom has been provided which, while stopping the weft thread carriers at each throw, nevertheless minimizes the energy waste, by using throwing devices which rotate continuously, and reduce the noise emission level, without introducing any constructional complication. On the contrary, when the loom is constructed for example in the form shown in Figure 2, it is much simpler than any other shuttleless loom of conventional design.
The invention as described is susceptible to many modifications and variations, all of which are intended to fall within the scope of the instant inventive concept. Moreover, all of the details may be replaced by other technically equivalent elements.
In practicing the invention, the materials and dimensions used may be any ones to suit individual applicational requirements.

Claims (12)

Claims
1. An improved shuttleless loom comprising a weft thread carrier throwing device and a recovering device, and providing for a substantial halting of each of said weft thread carriers prior to the throwing thereof, characterized in that said throwing device includes a rotary member, set for substantially continuous rotation and cooperating with a fixed casing to define an open throwing track of said weft thread carriers, provided with an inlet and an outlet end open to the region of insertion through the loom shed, and further includes an accumulator chamber located substantially adjacent to said inlet end and operative to withhold one weft thread carrier supplied by said recovering device, and a feeder located substantially between said accumulator chamber and said open throwing track and operative to insert said weft thread carriers one by one from said chamber into said track, said feeder being actuated such that each weft thread carrier is inserted into said open throwing track in advance with respect to the correct time for the insertion of said weft thread carrier through the loom shed by an amount dependent on the time period required to span said open throwing track.
2. A shuttleless loom according to Claim 1, characterized in that said feeder comprises a feeding wheel equipped with peripheral pegs for engaging and guiding therebetween said weft thread carriers and having a rotation axis perpendicular to the rotation axis of said rotating member, said feeding wheel being rotatively driven by the main shaft of the loom, said main shaft being also operative to control the oscillations of the sley.
3. A shuttleless loom according to Claim 1, characterized in that said feeder comprises a feeding wheel provided with teeth on the outside, between said teeth there being inserted and driven said weft thread carriers, said feeding wheel being arranged with the axis thereof substantially parallel to the rotation axis of said rotary member and driven to rotate by the loom main shaft.
4. A shuttleless loom according to Claim 1, characterized in that said feeder comprises an axially movable piston under control of a lever actuated by the loom main shaft, adapted for displacement from a position of engagement of the lower end of said accumulator chamber and of proximity to said rotary member to a position farther apart from said rotary member, with disengagement of said accumulator chamber, said piston axially feeding at each forward step towards said rotary member one of said weft thread carriers after picking it up from the bottom of said accumulator chamber.
5. A shuttleless loom according to Claim 4, characterized in that said piston, when occupying said position of proximity to said rotary member, causes one of said weft thread carriers to engage with a pre-rotation device adapted to impart to said weft thread carrier a rotational speed about its own axis, close to the one imparted to said weft thread carrier in said throwing track.
6. A shuttleless loom according to Claim 1, characterized in that said feeder is arranged at the bottom of said accumulator chamber and supplies said feeding wheel by gravity.
7. A shuttieless loom according to Claim 1, characterized in that said rotary member comprises a coated wheel or flywheel, the lining of said wheel or flywheel being made of a high frictional coefficient material and provided at the contact area with said weft thread carriers.
8. A shuttleless loom according to Claim 1, characterized in that said recovering device comprises a fixed guide adapted for receiving one weft thread carrier after it has been passed through the loom shed and for redirecting it to return it, by utilizing the kinetic energy of the weft thread carrier itself, towards said accumulator chamber.
9. A shuttleless loom according to Claim 8, characterized in that between said recovering device and said accumulator chamber there are provided means for damping the kinetic energy of the arriving weft thread carriers.
10. A shuttleless loom according to Claim 9, characterized in that said damping means comprise a braked wheel defining, with a peripheral portion thereof, one wall of a passage for said weft thread carriers, and in that said braked wheel can be positioned such as to vary the area of said passage.
11. An improved shuttleless loom, substantially as herein described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
12. Any novel element, or combination of elements, herein described and/or shown in the accompanying drawings, irrespective of whether the present claim is within the scope of, or relates to the same invention as, any of the preceding claims.
GB7923171A 1978-07-03 1979-07-03 Shuttleless Looms Withdrawn GB2027069A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
IT25274/78A IT1099305B (en) 1978-07-03 1978-07-03 FRAME WITHOUT SHUTTLE PERFECTED

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB2027069A true GB2027069A (en) 1980-02-13

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ID=11216198

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB7923171A Withdrawn GB2027069A (en) 1978-07-03 1979-07-03 Shuttleless Looms

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JP (1) JPS5512898A (en)
AR (1) AR218142A1 (en)
AU (1) AU4882879A (en)
BE (1) BE877416A (en)
BR (1) BR7904098A (en)
CA (1) CA1107609A (en)
DE (1) DE2926690A1 (en)
ES (1) ES481895A1 (en)
FR (1) FR2430468A1 (en)
GB (1) GB2027069A (en)
IT (1) IT1099305B (en)
LU (1) LU81450A1 (en)
NL (1) NL7905134A (en)
PT (1) PT69864A (en)
YU (1) YU158979A (en)

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Publication number Publication date
JPS5512898A (en) 1980-01-29
FR2430468A1 (en) 1980-02-01
AR218142A1 (en) 1980-05-15
NL7905134A (en) 1980-01-07
CA1107609A (en) 1981-08-25
BE877416A (en) 1979-11-05
DE2926690A1 (en) 1980-01-17
IT7825274A0 (en) 1978-07-03
AU4882879A (en) 1986-06-19
IT1099305B (en) 1985-09-18
ES481895A1 (en) 1980-02-16
BR7904098A (en) 1980-03-11
YU158979A (en) 1982-10-31
LU81450A1 (en) 1979-10-30
PT69864A (en) 1979-08-01

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