US1342713A - Roller-lap stop-motion - Google Patents

Roller-lap stop-motion Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1342713A
US1342713A US334600A US33460019A US1342713A US 1342713 A US1342713 A US 1342713A US 334600 A US334600 A US 334600A US 33460019 A US33460019 A US 33460019A US 1342713 A US1342713 A US 1342713A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
roller
lap
motion
stop
lever
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US334600A
Inventor
Heywood James
Heywood Charles
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.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US334600A priority Critical patent/US1342713A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1342713A publication Critical patent/US1342713A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D01NATURAL OR MAN-MADE THREADS OR FIBRES; SPINNING
    • D01HSPINNING OR TWISTING
    • D01H5/00Drafting machines or arrangements ; Threading of roving into drafting machine
    • D01H5/18Drafting machines or arrangements without fallers or like pinned bars
    • D01H5/60Arrangements maintaining drafting elements free of fibre accumulations

Definitions

  • This invention relates to improvements in stop motions for preventing roller laps in drawing frames, lap forming machines or the like used in the preparation of fibers for spinning and has particular reference to that class of stop motion wherein the movement of the top roller consequent upon a roller lap is utilized to effect the stopping of the frame.
  • Our invention aims at remedying the defect referred to and consists in tongues or steps disposed between the journals of the top and bottom drawing or calendering rollers so as to follow the top roller when such roller is displaced bv a roller lap, means for adjustably connecting the tongues or steps together, a double-armed pivoted lever located between the tongue connecting means and the usual revolving spider or oscillating shaft of the usual broken lap or empty lap bobbin stop motion and means for adjusting and setting the various parts.
  • Figure 1 is a transverse section through the drawing rollers of a ribbon lap ma- Specification of Letters Patent.
  • FIG. 3 front elevation of the table calender rollers of a ribbon lap machine showing the application of our invention to such rollers.
  • H indicates the roller beam for supporting the stands S in which the drawing rollers are journaled, T the top drawing rollers and R the bottom drawing rollers.
  • top drawing rollers as is well known are free to rise in case a roller lap occurs in accordance with our invention we employ two tongues or steps A forming part of the upright rods A, which pass under the journals 6 of the top drawing rollers T and are kept lightly in following contact with said journals so as to rise with them as a roller lap occurs.
  • the two rods a are adjustably connected at their lower ends, as, for instance, by screwed portions 0 and nuts (Z, with a cross bar B, freely slidable vertically in forked brackets a secured to the fixed bracket c'by a screw f or bolt.
  • the same bracket 6 has an eX- tending arm 9 forming a bearing for the pivot pin it of a double'armed lever C, the short arm 2' of which passes under the bar B, while the long arm j extends toward the rotating spider shaft E upon which is fixed the usual spiders 7' and has pivoted to it a tail piece D.
  • Bar B is fitted with a screw and nut X for adjusting and setting the position of the tail piece D with relation to the spider j and the tongue A.
  • roller lap occurs either on the bottom or top roller, roller T rises and is followed by the tongues A due to the overhanging weight of arm j of lever C, said arm simultaneously descending so as to bring the tail piece B into contact with spider 7' which forms part of the usual broken lap or empty lap bobbin stop motion connected with the usual strap fork retaining means, moving the latter and shifting the driving belt from the fast to the loose pulley, so stopping the machine.
  • the roller lap is cleared the parts return to normal position and the machine is started again.
  • the tail piece D may be brought as described into the path of an oscillating shaft with the same result as described.
  • Fig. 3 shows the application of our invention to the table calender rollers of a ribbon lap machine, in which T is the upper and R the lower calender roller.
  • the tongues A rest below the bearing blocks m of the roller T 2 and form part of rods a adjustably connected in a somewhat similar manner to that previously described,
  • Lever J is coupled by link K to one arm 0 of a double-armed lever O pivoted at p and carrying at the end of its other arm 9 a tail piece D adjacent to the spider shaft E and spider j
  • the motion acts in substantially the same manner as previously described in connection with Figs. 1 and 2.
  • top roller is quite free to be removed from its guides without disturbing the stop motion mechanism.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Preliminary Treatment Of Fibers (AREA)

Description

J. AND 0. HEYWOOD. ROLLER LAP STOP MOTION.
APPLICATION FILED 001 .30, 1919. 1,342,713.
z A:' R2
Y K a, c a C rr a Patented J 11116 8, 1920.
umrso STATES I PATENT OFFICE.
JAMES HEYWOOD, OF MANCHESTER, AND CHARLES HEYWOOD, OF STOCKPORT,
- ENGLAND.
ROLLER-LAP STOP-MOTION.
Application filed October 30, 1919.
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that we, Janus HEYwooD and GnnnLns Hnrwoon, subjects of the King of Great Britain and Ireland, and residents of Manchester, in the county of Lancaster, and Stockport, in the county of Chester, England, respectively, have invented certain Improvements in Roller-Lap Stop-Motions, of which the following is a specification.
This invention relates to improvements in stop motions for preventing roller laps in drawing frames, lap forming machines or the like used in the preparation of fibers for spinning and has particular reference to that class of stop motion wherein the movement of the top roller consequent upon a roller lap is utilized to effect the stopping of the frame.
Prior to'the date of our invention so far as we are aware all stop motions for the purposes referred to have been operated by means actually connected to the top roller or located above the top roller so that when the latter was lifted in consequence of a roller lap, mechanism intervening between the roller and the stop motion of the machine caused the latter to be stopped until the defect was remedied. A great objection to the prior arrangement referredto was that in case of a roller lap the top roller could not be removed without disturbing or taking away or disarranging some portion of the stop motion mechanism. Our invention aims at remedying the defect referred to and consists in tongues or steps disposed between the journals of the top and bottom drawing or calendering rollers so as to follow the top roller when such roller is displaced bv a roller lap, means for adjustably connecting the tongues or steps together, a double-armed pivoted lever located between the tongue connecting means and the usual revolving spider or oscillating shaft of the usual broken lap or empty lap bobbin stop motion and means for adjusting and setting the various parts.
Our invention will be fully described with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
Figure 1, is a transverse section through the drawing rollers of a ribbon lap ma- Specification of Letters Patent.
Patented June 8, 1920.
Serial No. 334,600.
chine showing the application of our invention thereto.
Fig. 2, front elevation of same partly in section, and
Fig. 3, front elevation of the table calender rollers of a ribbon lap machine showing the application of our invention to such rollers.
In carryin out our invention and referring particularly to Figs. 1 and 2, H indicates the roller beam for supporting the stands S in which the drawing rollers are journaled, T the top drawing rollers and R the bottom drawing rollers. lhe top drawing rollers, as is well known are free to rise in case a roller lap occurs in accordance with our invention we employ two tongues or steps A forming part of the upright rods A, which pass under the journals 6 of the top drawing rollers T and are kept lightly in following contact with said journals so as to rise with them as a roller lap occurs. The two rods a are adjustably connected at their lower ends, as, for instance, by screwed portions 0 and nuts (Z, with a cross bar B, freely slidable vertically in forked brackets a secured to the fixed bracket c'by a screw f or bolt. The same bracket 6 has an eX- tending arm 9 forming a bearing for the pivot pin it of a double'armed lever C, the short arm 2' of which passes under the bar B, while the long arm j extends toward the rotating spider shaft E upon which is fixed the usual spiders 7' and has pivoted to it a tail piece D. Bar B is fitted with a screw and nut X for adjusting and setting the position of the tail piece D with relation to the spider j and the tongue A.
During the normal running of the machine, the parts occupy the position indicated in Figs. 1 and 2. lVhen, however, a roller lap occurs either on the bottom or top roller, roller T rises and is followed by the tongues A due to the overhanging weight of arm j of lever C, said arm simultaneously descending so as to bring the tail piece B into contact with spider 7' which forms part of the usual broken lap or empty lap bobbin stop motion connected with the usual strap fork retaining means, moving the latter and shifting the driving belt from the fast to the loose pulley, so stopping the machine. Vhen the roller lap is cleared the parts return to normal position and the machine is started again. The tail piece D may be brought as described into the path of an oscillating shaft with the same result as described.
Fig. 3, shows the application of our invention to the table calender rollers of a ribbon lap machine, in which T is the upper and R the lower calender roller. Herein the tongues A rest below the bearing blocks m of the roller T 2 and form part of rods a adjustably connected in a somewhat similar manner to that previously described,
with bar B guided vertically in fixed brackets C pivoted at a, carrying an adjusting screw and nut X for the same purpose already described. Lever J is coupled by link K to one arm 0 of a double-armed lever O pivoted at p and carrying at the end of its other arm 9 a tail piece D adjacent to the spider shaft E and spider j The motion acts in substantially the same manner as previously described in connection with Figs. 1 and 2.
In both the arrangements described the top roller is quite free to be removed from its guides without disturbing the stop motion mechanism.
Below the bar B is a lever J What I claim and desire to secure by Letters Patent is 1. The combination, with a drawing roller having journals at its ends, of vertical rods provided with tongues at their upper ends which project under the said journals, a crossbar secured to the lower parts of the said rods, a guiding device for the crossbar, and a lever for controlling a stop motion operatively connected with the middle part of the crossbar.
2. The combination, with a drawing roller having journals at its ends, of vertical rods provided with tongues at their upper ends which project under the said journals, a crossbar secured to the lower parts of the said rods, a guiding device for the crossbar, a pivoted lever having a relatively short end portion which projects under the middle part of the said crossbar, and a revoluble spider for controlling a stop motion arranged in the path of the long end portion of the said lever.
In testimony we have hereunto set our hands in the presence of two witnesses.
JAMES HEYWOOD. CHARLES HEYWOOD.
Vitnesses:
MARGARET E. RAMSBOTTOM, WM. HALL.
US334600A 1919-10-30 1919-10-30 Roller-lap stop-motion Expired - Lifetime US1342713A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US334600A US1342713A (en) 1919-10-30 1919-10-30 Roller-lap stop-motion

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US334600A US1342713A (en) 1919-10-30 1919-10-30 Roller-lap stop-motion

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1342713A true US1342713A (en) 1920-06-08

Family

ID=23307948

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US334600A Expired - Lifetime US1342713A (en) 1919-10-30 1919-10-30 Roller-lap stop-motion

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US1342713A (en)

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3304584A (en) Drafting mechanism
US1342713A (en) Roller-lap stop-motion
US2811753A (en) Sliver-actuated stop motion
US630813A (en) Lap drawing and doubling machine.
US1846715A (en) Fly frame
US232240A (en) coltman
US631563A (en) Organzine-spinner.
US544203A (en) Machine foe twisting or doubling yarn
US534992A (en) Railway-head
US279870A (en) Stop-motion for spinning and twisting machines
US1033855A (en) Automatic measuring and stopping device.
US517030A (en) Island
US465332A (en) Island
US675476A (en) Stop-motion for spinning-machines.
US1728066A (en) Tension device for spinning machines
US1039905A (en) Spinning-machine.
US724575A (en) Stop-motion for machines for preparing fibrous material.
US1458980A (en) Roving stop motion for spinning frames
US1874500A (en) Stop motion for twister frames
US989050A (en) Twister.
US1861103A (en) Spinning machine
US3345696A (en) Calender roll loading and knock-off
US168309A (en) Improvement in doubling and twisting machines
US1041665A (en) Spinning-frame.
US1303664A (en) Stop-motion for textile-machines