GB2182358A - Mechanism for effecting guide bar lapping movement in warp knitting machines - Google Patents

Mechanism for effecting guide bar lapping movement in warp knitting machines Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2182358A
GB2182358A GB08628648A GB8628648A GB2182358A GB 2182358 A GB2182358 A GB 2182358A GB 08628648 A GB08628648 A GB 08628648A GB 8628648 A GB8628648 A GB 8628648A GB 2182358 A GB2182358 A GB 2182358A
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GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
piston
mechanism according
cylinder
guide bar
arrangement
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.)
Granted
Application number
GB08628648A
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GB2182358B (en
Inventor
Itzchak Porat
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.)
Guilford Europe Ltd
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Guilford Europe 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
Priority claimed from GB848406466A external-priority patent/GB8406466D0/en
Application filed by Guilford Europe Ltd filed Critical Guilford Europe Ltd
Priority to GB08628648A priority Critical patent/GB2182358B/en
Publication of GB2182358A publication Critical patent/GB2182358A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2182358B publication Critical patent/GB2182358B/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D04BRAIDING; LACE-MAKING; KNITTING; TRIMMINGS; NON-WOVEN FABRICS
    • D04BKNITTING
    • D04B27/00Details of, or auxiliary devices incorporated in, warp knitting machines, restricted to machines of this kind
    • D04B27/10Devices for supplying, feeding, or guiding threads to needles
    • D04B27/24Thread guide bar assemblies
    • D04B27/26Shogging devices therefor
    • D04B27/28Shogging devices therefor with arrangements to reduce the number of members of pattern chains

Abstract

A mechanism for effecting guide bar lapping movement in warp knitting machines comprises a double-acting piston-in-cylinder servo arrangement 11 connected to the guide bar 12 by a rod 19 provided with spherical bearings 21 at both ends to accommodate the transverse swinging of the bar as it passes the guides between the needles but to give a zero-play connection in the lapping direction. A displacement transducer 22 is provided and the mechanism is controlled by a computer or data processor. The servo arrangement is connected to the rod 19 through a yoke 15 and rod 16. This enables plural guide bars driven by respective mechanisms to be located more closely together than the respective piston-cylinder devices. <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Mechanism for effecting guide bar lapping movement in warp knitting machines This invention relates to mechanism for effecting guide bar lapping movement in warp knitting machines.
Hydraulically operated mechanisms have been proposed for effecting the lapping movements of the guide bars of warp knitting machines, of varying degrees of complexity, all claiming to have substantial advantages over the conventional, practical lapping control mechanism, namely the pattern chain, orforsimpler patterns, pattern wheel.
Nevertheless the pattern wheel or chain is still regarded as the only practical means of patterning warp knitting machines (which, for present purposes, inciude stitch bonding and other machines that utilize the warp-knitting type guide bars). The inference must be that the claimed advantages of hydraulically operated mechanisms, for all their sophistication, are not realised in practice, or at least not fully.
The conventional pattern wheel or chain mechanism still, however, has all the problems and disadvantages that undoubtedly prompted the invention and development of the variously proposed hydraulic (and other) arrangements.
The present invention provides a new hydraulic solution to those problems with substantial advantages over prior art proposals interalia in its relative simplicity and cost effectiveness, its speed and reliabiiity of operation, and the ease and speed with which it can be programmed or reprogrammed to knit different patterns of warp knit fabric.
The invention comprises a mechanism for effecting guide bar lapping movement in warp knitting machines comprising a double-acting piston-in-cylinder servo arrangement connected to said guide bar through a connecting rod that accommodates transverse movements of said guide bar, said connecting rod being held to the piston-incylinder arrangement at one end and to the guide bar at the other end in spherical bearings, which permits the necessary motion to accommodate the swinging movements of the guide bar as it passes the guides between the needles, but gives an essentially zero play connection in the direction of the lapping movement.
Said piston-in-cylinder arrangements may comprise a double ended piston.
A displacement transducer may also be connected to the piston-in-cylinder arrangement.
Said displacement transducer may comprise a linear differential voltage tra nsducer -- such a transducer is inexpensive but adapted to give a reproducible output-the output is not necessarily as linear as may be required, but the invention further provides that the output of such a transducer can be calibrated for linearity.
The mechanism may further comprise electrically operated valve means for the piston-in cylinder arrangement. Said valve means may comprise a four port, torque motor valve. An electrical control signal driving the valve open to admit pressure fluid to one side of the piston (and simultaneously open to permit fluid to exhaust from the other side of the piston) may be balanced by an amplified signal from the displacement transducer when the measured displacement corresponds to the desired displacement.
The mechanism may also comprise an hydraulic accumulator connected to supply hydraulic fluid to said piston-in-cylinder requirements during any period when the said supply arrangement might be inadequate, for example when other mechanisms moving other guide bars are also demanding pressure fluid.
A mechanism for driving a plurality of guide bars in a warp knitting machine may comprise a plurality of piston-in-cylinder arrangements with associated yoke arrangements and rods connected thereby to the pistons, the piston-in-cylinder arrangements and rods connected thereby to the pistons, the piston-in-cylinder arrangements having a substantial width by comparison with the epacing of the guide bars intended to be driven thereby, the said rods being more closely located together than the piston-in-cylinder arrangements can be, because of their width, so that they can be more closely aligned with the said guide bars than could the piston-in-cylinder arrangments.
A piston-in cylinder arrangement with a maximum stroke of about 0.05 m will be adequate for most warp knitting machines, but some special machines might require maximum strokes of 0.10 m or even longer. It will be appreciated that any single displacement of a piston will usually be over only one or a small number of needles spaces, but during a pattern repeat a piston may need - as in the case of an Atlas construction -- to move over longer distances.
Although in general the piston will act intermediate the ends of the cylinder it might nevertheless on occasion come up against one or other end wall and it is preferred to relieve the piston or the cylinder in the case of a side-ported cylinder so as to avoid the possibility of the piston becoming jammed through there being no path for the fluid to pass from the port to the piston face.
Shaft encoder means, which may be magnetic or optical, may respond to the operation of the main shaft of the knitting machine whereby the movements of the guide bars may be synchronised with the movements of other knitting elements.
Dynamic response of the surface is important particularly at high operational speeds which are usually required in warp knitting and means may be provided activating said mechanism in accordance with the said movements of said other elements so as to compensate for changes in the speed of the knitting machine. Thus a delay of 1 ms between valve actuation and piston movement corresponds to guide bar movement lagging 3.6 behind main shaft position at 600 r.p.m. as compared to inching speed and 7.2 at 1200 r.p.m.
It can be arranged that the signals for valve actuation are given correspondingly earlier the higherthe main shaft speed.
Automatic means determining the operation of said piston-in-cylinder arrangement may comprise a computer or data processor programmable with the required lapping movement of the guide bar and operable to cause said piston-in-cylinder arrangement to effect such movement of said guide bar.
A mechanism for effecting guide bar lapping movement in warp knitting machines according to the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings in which: Figure 1 is a part-sectional side elevation of a mechanism showing its connection to a guide bar.
Figure 2 is a side elevation of a four guide bar arrangement, Figure 3 is a plan view of the arrangement shown in Figure 2, Figure 4 is a block diagram of the servo arrangement, and Figure 5 is a block diagram of the hydraulic arrangement.
The mechanism for effecting guide bar lapping movement in warp knitting machines illustrated in Figure 1 comprises a double-acting piston-incylinder servo arrangement 11 connected directly to the guide bar 12.
By "connected directly" is meant that there is a substantially rigid connection between the pistonin-cylinder arrangement 11 and the guide bar 12, and by double-acting in this context is then meant also that the piston-in-cylinder arrangement positively moves the guide bar in both directions.
The piston 13 of the piston-in-cylinder arrangement 11 is double ended having rod parts 13a, 13b projecting from cylinder 14 of the arrangement 11. The piston 13 is connected by these rod parts 13a, through a rigid yoke arrangement 15 to a rod slidable in linear bearings 17 in a block 18, and connected to said guide bar 12.
The connection to said guide bar 12 is through a connecting rod 19 that accommodates movements of said guide bar 12 transverse to the axis of the piston-in-cylinder arrangement 11. Said connecting rod 19 is joined to the rod 16 at one end and to the guide bar 12 at the other end by spherical bearings 21 that permit the front and back swing movements of the guide bar 12 while holding a rigid, substantially no play, connection so that movements of the piston 13 are reflected precisely in lapping movements ofthe guide bar 12.
A displacement transducer 22 is arranged with its cylinder 22a fixed in the machine and its piston 22b fixed to the yoke 15. Such transducers are relatively inexpensive and give a highly reproducible output, without necessarily being precisely linear. However, any non-linearity can be calibrated out electronically or by computing programming.
Electronically operated valve means 23, comprising a four port, torque motor valve, are attached to the piston-in-cylinder arrangement 11, two ports being inlet ports to opposite sides of the piston 13, the other two being outiet ports. A hydraulic accumulator 24 is connected to the valve means 23.
Figures 2 and 3 show how four piston-in-cylinder arrangements 11 a, 11 b, 1 Ic, 11 d as described with reference to Figure 1 may be mounted at one side of a warp knitting machine to effect the lapping movements of four guide bars 12a, 12b, 12c, 12d.
The guide bars are necessarily located close together, whereas the piston-in-cylinder arrangements have, by comparison, substantial width. They are accommodated by arranging them in upper and lower pairs,11a,11 b and 11c,11d respectively, of which pairs one of said arrangements, 11 a, 11 c respectively, is arranged axially displaced from the other, 11 b, 11 d, respectively. The tipper and iower arrangements are also inverted with respect to each other so that the attached hydraulic accumulators extend outwardly away from each other. The rods 16 driven through the yokes 15 can thus be all arranged substantially aligned with their respective guide bars.
The arrangement has several advantages over the principal one that the relatively bulky actuators can be accommodated in a relatively small space roughly equivalent to that ordinarily taken up by the conventional pattern wheel or chain equivalent (but much less, clearly than is required when long pattern chains are used) and, despite the close spacing of the guide bars, directly drive the same, thereby avoiding the need for complicated linkages that would permit more or less play and hence inaccuracies and irregularities in operation and evential wear and even failure of pivot bearings. By providing the separate linear bearings 17 for the rods 16, side ioads on the piston rod and hence in its bearings in the piston-in-cylinder arrangements 11 are avoided, leading to increased life of the arrangements 11.Moreover, in the event that a piston-in-cylinder arrangement goes faulty, it is relatively easily replaced.
The fluid pressure and the effective piston area of the piston-in-cylinder arrangement are such as to apply a force on the guide bar of the order of 2.5KN.
If the fluid pressure is approximately 800KN/m2, then the effective piston area will be about 0.0003m2.
The stroke length of the piston is about 0.05 m. In practice, the actual length of any one stroke of the piston 13 for a lapping movement of the guide bar will be very small, usually one or only a few needle spaces, which is to say one or a few millimetres. The arrangement may have to provide however for more substantial displacements as when an Atlas construction is being knitted.
Ocassionally, the piston 13 may be driven against one or the other end wall 31 of the cylinder 14 and, since the cylinder has side ports 32 the piston 13 might stick against the end wall 31. To avoid this possibility the cylinder 14 and the end bearings are relieved at 33 to permit fluid to flow from the port 32 to act against the piston face.
Figure 4 shows a diagram of the servo circuit. A voltage V is input from a control arrangement, to be described further below, to the torque-motor valve 23 through a summing arrangement 42 and an amplifier 43. The valve 23 provides fluid pressure to the piston-in-cylinder arrangement 11 which displaces the guide bar 12 and the piston of the displacement transducer 22. A displacement output voltage F is passed from the displacement transducer to the summing arrangement 42 so that in fact it is the voltage V-F that is fed from there to the amplifier 43. When V=F, the valve is shut. It should be understood of course that when the valve admits fluid to one side of the piston 13 the outlet port on the other side of the piston is open.
Figure 5 shows a more comprehensive block diagram of the arrangement. Hydraulic fluid from a reservoir 51 is pumped by a pump 52 through a fine filter 53 to a distributor 54 which feeds four similar piston-in-cylinder arrangements, only one, 11, of which is shown. There will in practice of course be as many piston-in-cylinder arrangements as there are guide bars on the machine. The components associated with such arrangement 11 are identified by the reference numerals used previously in Figures 1 to 3. Thus the distributor 54 supplies hydraulic fluid to the valve 23 with its connected accumulator 24.The double ended piston 13 drives the guide bar 12 through the connecting rod 19, and also displaces the piston 22b of the displacement transducer 22 which feeds a displacement signal to the summing arrangement 42 which is connected to the torque motor of the valve 23 through the amplifier 43.
Hydraulic fluid exhausted from the arrangement 11 (and from the other similar arrangements) passes to a collector 55 which returns it to the reservoir 51 via a shock absorber 56, a coarse filter 57 and a cooler 58.
Also connected to the summing arrangement 42 of a computer or data processor 59 programmed to give command signals as inputs to the amplifier which in turn actuates the valve 23 to effect movement of the guide bar 12. The processor 59 is connected to an optical or magnetic shaft encoder 61 connected to the main shaft of the knitting machine and which gives to the processor 59 precise information about the instantaneous position and the speed of the main shaft. The processor 59 is programmed to advance or retard the timing of its signals to the valve 23 in accordance with shaft speed to compensate for the dynamic response of the system.
The computer or processor 59 can also monitor other variables such for example as hydraulic pressure and fluid temperature, and of course can be programmed to execute different guide bar movements for different fabric constructions, as well as being operable to control specific movements for example for maintenance and setting up purposes.
Although guide bar movements will ordinarily be over distances corresponding to integral numbers of needle spaces, fractional movements may be required for initial setting up purposes and also to take account of needle bending under thread tensions especially when forming long underlaps.
Because of the precision with which the guide bars can be controlled through a computer or other processor, knitting can be carried out at high speeds with less downtime for fault correction than at present. And, of course, the setting up operation for a change of pattern is simplified as compared to the conventional pattern wheel or chain arrangements.
Moreover, because the number of moving and wearing parts is considerably reduced, maintenance requirements are reduced.

Claims (17)

1. A mechanism for effecting guide bar lapping movement in warp knitting machines comprising a double-acting piston-in-cylinder servo arrangement cdnnected to said guide bar through a connecting rod that accommodates transverse movements of said guide bar, said connecting rod being held to the piston-in-cylinder arrangement at one end and to the guide bar at the other end in spherical bearings, which permits the necessary motion to accommodate the swinging movements of the guide bar as it passes the guides between the needles, but gives an essentially zero play connection in the direction of the lapping movement.
2. A mechanism according to claim 1, said pistonin-cylinder arrangement comprising a double ended piston.
3. A mechanism according to claim 1, in which a displacement transducer is connected to the pistonin-cylinder arrangement.
4. A mechanism according to claim 3, wherein said displacement transducer comprises a linear differential voltage transducer.
5. A mechanism according to claim 3 or 5, in which said displacement transducer is calibrated for linearity.
6. A mechanism according to claim 1, comprising electronically operated valve means for the pistonin-cylinder arrangement.
7. A mechanism according to claim 6, said valve means comprising a four port, torque motor valve.
8. A mechanism according to claim 1, comprising a hydraulic accumulator connected to supply hydraulic fluid to said piston-in-cylinder arrangement.
9. A mechanism according to claim 1, for driving a plurality of guide bars, comprising a plurality of piston-in-cylinder arrangements with associated yoke arrangements and rods connected thereby to the pistons, the piston-in-cylinder arrangements having a substantial width by comparison with the epacing of the guide bars intended to be driven thereby, the said rods being more closely located together than the piston-in-cylinder arrangements can be, because of their width, so that they can be more closely aligned with the said guide bars than could the piston-in-cylinder arrangements.
10. A mechanism according to claim 1, in which the fluid pressure and the effective piston area of the piston-in-cylinder arrangement are such as to apply a force of the order of 2.5KN.
11. A mechanism according to claim 10, in which the fluid pressure is approximately 800kN/m2 and the effective piston area is approximately 0.0003m2.
12. A mechanism according to claim 1, in which the maximum stroke of the piston-in-cylinder arrangement is approximately 0.05m.
13. A mechanism according to claim 1, in which the piston-in-cylinder arrangement is relieved at at least one end whereby the piston can be traversed up to the end wall of the cylinder and yet hydraulic fluid can flow through the relieved part to between the piston and said end wall to move said piston away from said end wall.
14. A mechanism according to claim 1 comprising shaft encoder means responsive to the operation of the camshaft of a knitting machine whereby the movements of the guide bars may be synchronised with the movements of the knitting elements.
15. A mechanism according to claim 14, having an inertia, and means activating said mechanism in accordance with the said movements of said elements so as to compensate for changes in the speed of the knitting machine.
16. A mechanism according to claim 1, comprising automatic means determining the operation of said piston-in-cylinder arrangement.
17. A mechanism according to claim 16, said automatic means comprising a computer or data processor programmable with the required lapping movement of said guide bar and operable to cause said piston-in-cylinder arrangement to effect such movement of said guide bar.
GB08628648A 1984-03-13 1986-12-01 Mechanism for effecting guide bar lapping movement in warp knitting machines Expired GB2182358B (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB08628648A GB2182358B (en) 1984-03-13 1986-12-01 Mechanism for effecting guide bar lapping movement in warp knitting machines

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB848406466A GB8406466D0 (en) 1984-03-13 1984-03-13 Mechanism for effecting movement
GB08628648A GB2182358B (en) 1984-03-13 1986-12-01 Mechanism for effecting guide bar lapping movement in warp knitting machines

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GB2182358A true GB2182358A (en) 1987-05-13
GB2182358B GB2182358B (en) 1987-12-16

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Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1989003443A1 (en) * 1987-10-08 1989-04-20 Liba Maschinenfabrik Gmbh Warp knitting machine with guide bars adjustable by means of racking motors
CN105986360A (en) * 2014-11-04 2016-10-05 卡尔迈尔纺织机械制造有限公司 Lay bar of a warp knitting machine

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1483040A (en) * 1974-08-06 1977-08-17 Nat Res Dev Seaming of fabrics
GB2049824A (en) * 1979-05-10 1980-12-31 Sulzer Ag Apparatus for Controlling a Component of a Machine for Making Textile Webs
GB2050446A (en) * 1977-10-26 1981-01-07 Tufto Corp Needle bar positioning apparatus for a tufting machine

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1483040A (en) * 1974-08-06 1977-08-17 Nat Res Dev Seaming of fabrics
GB2050446A (en) * 1977-10-26 1981-01-07 Tufto Corp Needle bar positioning apparatus for a tufting machine
GB2049824A (en) * 1979-05-10 1980-12-31 Sulzer Ag Apparatus for Controlling a Component of a Machine for Making Textile Webs

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1989003443A1 (en) * 1987-10-08 1989-04-20 Liba Maschinenfabrik Gmbh Warp knitting machine with guide bars adjustable by means of racking motors
CN105986360A (en) * 2014-11-04 2016-10-05 卡尔迈尔纺织机械制造有限公司 Lay bar of a warp knitting machine
CN105986360B (en) * 2014-11-04 2018-06-01 卡尔迈尔纺织机械制造有限公司 The comber of tricot machine

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Publication number Publication date
GB2182358B (en) 1987-12-16

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PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 19980307