US1967798A - Spinneret - Google Patents

Spinneret Download PDF

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Publication number
US1967798A
US1967798A US459235A US45923530A US1967798A US 1967798 A US1967798 A US 1967798A US 459235 A US459235 A US 459235A US 45923530 A US45923530 A US 45923530A US 1967798 A US1967798 A US 1967798A
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United States
Prior art keywords
spinneret
stones
stone
holes
manner
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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
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US459235A
Inventor
Witte Kurt
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North American Rayon Corp
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North American Rayon Corp
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Publication date
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Publication of US1967798A publication Critical patent/US1967798A/en
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D01NATURAL OR MAN-MADE THREADS OR FIBRES; SPINNING
    • D01DMECHANICAL METHODS OR APPARATUS IN THE MANUFACTURE OF ARTIFICIAL FILAMENTS, THREADS, FIBRES, BRISTLES OR RIBBONS
    • D01D4/00Spinnerette packs; Cleaning thereof
    • D01D4/02Spinnerettes
    • D01D4/022Processes or materials for the preparation of spinnerettes

Definitions

  • the present invention refers to a spinneret for the manufacture of rayon, particularly viscose rayon, and has special reference to all those Working methods wherein acid containing spin- 5 ning baths, especially those containing sulphuric acid., were used.
  • the spinneret consists of a precious metal, i. e. a metal which is not corroded by acids and alkali, such as gold, platinum or alloys of these metals, such as gold-platinum i0 alloy, gold-palladium alloy, etc.
  • the spinneret may have the usual form of a cup and be pressed out in the usual manner from a thin metal sheet,
  • one the thickness of 0.3 or 0.5 mm for example, one the thickness of 0.3 or 0.5 mm.
  • the spin- 3,5 neret is set with small stones in the form of precious stones or suitable semi-precious stones such as rubies, Sapphires, garnets, so-called watch-jewels, or similar substances made from hard, natural or artificial glass, which are drilled with minute holes, for example holes 0.12 mm. in diameter.
  • These small stones are set into the spinneret in such a manner that the stones form a perfectly even surface on the outside of the spinneret i. e. in such a manner as to avoid any unevenness, projections and edges on the outer surface of the spinneret.
  • a spinneret provided with an arrangement as described in this invention is shown as an example in the enclosed drawing.
  • Figure 1 is a plan View, partly in cross section, showing one form of the improved spinneret.
  • Figure 2 is an enlarged View of a portion of the bottom plate of the spinneret head showing the manner in which the precious stones are set therein.
  • Figure 1 shows four inlaid stones 1 afxed in the spinneret bottom plate 2.
  • small holes 3 are drilled at the desired positions through the plate 2.
  • a further cylindrical drilling from the outside, 4, is then made.
  • the stone 1, provided with the drilled hole 5, is then set into the enlarged cylindrical opening Ll, after which the projection 6 is pressed over to grip the edges of the stone. This portion 6 serves to irmly hold the stones in place.
  • the bottom surface is then polished to smoothness in any desired manner.
  • a spimieret for use in the manufacture of artiiicial filaments comprising a metallic member of acid-resisting material, holes extending therethrough, the outer ends of the holes being enlarged to form a shoulder Within the member, a drilled stone fitted snugly within the enlarged portion of the hole and against the shoulder, the outer edge of said stone being bevelled, and the metal of said member adjacent the stone being pressed against the bevelled portion of the stone to grip the edge of the same, the outer surfaces of the stone, and of the member proper forming a substantially perfectly even surface on the outside of the spinneret.

Description

` July 24, 1934.
j j 5 z K. WITTE SPINNERET Filled June 4, 1950 Eiqll gmc/whom fiar? We,
Patented July 24, 1934 UNET STATES SPINNERET Kurt Witte, St. Polten, Austria, assignor to North American Rayon Corporation, New York, N. Y.
Application June 4, 1930, Serial No. 459,235 In Germany June 4, 1929 1 Claim.
The present invention refers to a spinneret for the manufacture of rayon, particularly viscose rayon, and has special reference to all those Working methods wherein acid containing spin- 5 ning baths, especially those containing sulphuric acid., were used. The spinneret consists of a precious metal, i. e. a metal which is not corroded by acids and alkali, such as gold, platinum or alloys of these metals, such as gold-platinum i0 alloy, gold-palladium alloy, etc. The spinneret may have the usual form of a cup and be pressed out in the usual manner from a thin metal sheet,
for example, one the thickness of 0.3 or 0.5 mm.
Instead of the usual spinning holes the spin- 3,5 neret is set with small stones in the form of precious stones or suitable semi-precious stones such as rubies, Sapphires, garnets, so-called watch-jewels, or similar substances made from hard, natural or artificial glass, which are drilled with minute holes, for example holes 0.12 mm. in diameter. These small stones are set into the spinneret in such a manner that the stones form a perfectly even surface on the outside of the spinneret i. e. in such a manner as to avoid any unevenness, projections and edges on the outer surface of the spinneret.
A spinneret provided with an arrangement as described in this invention is shown as an example in the enclosed drawing.
Figure 1 is a plan View, partly in cross section, showing one form of the improved spinneret.
Figure 2 is an enlarged View of a portion of the bottom plate of the spinneret head showing the manner in which the precious stones are set therein.
Figure 1 shows four inlaid stones 1 afxed in the spinneret bottom plate 2. In aflixing these stones, small holes 3, are drilled at the desired positions through the plate 2. A further cylindrical drilling from the outside, 4, is then made. The stone 1, provided with the drilled hole 5, is then set into the enlarged cylindrical opening Ll, after which the projection 6 is pressed over to grip the edges of the stone. This portion 6 serves to irmly hold the stones in place. The bottom surface is then polished to smoothness in any desired manner.
A further advantage arises from the fact that the stones may be set into the spinneret head using metal of usual thickness. By any other method of stone setting, a thicker plate would be necessary.
I claim:
A spimieret for use in the manufacture of artiiicial filaments, comprising a metallic member of acid-resisting material, holes extending therethrough, the outer ends of the holes being enlarged to form a shoulder Within the member, a drilled stone fitted snugly within the enlarged portion of the hole and against the shoulder, the outer edge of said stone being bevelled, and the metal of said member adjacent the stone being pressed against the bevelled portion of the stone to grip the edge of the same, the outer surfaces of the stone, and of the member proper forming a substantially perfectly even surface on the outside of the spinneret.
KURT WITTE.
US459235A 1929-06-04 1930-06-04 Spinneret Expired - Lifetime US1967798A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DE1967798X 1929-06-04

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1967798A true US1967798A (en) 1934-07-24

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Family Applications (1)

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US459235A Expired - Lifetime US1967798A (en) 1929-06-04 1930-06-04 Spinneret

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FR (1) FR690214A (en)

Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2434227A (en) * 1945-04-13 1948-01-06 Standish S Rowe Strand guide
US2485553A (en) * 1944-05-23 1949-10-25 Linde Air Prod Co Filament guide
US2503821A (en) * 1946-06-04 1950-04-11 Beaunit Mills Inc Spinning funnel
US2814553A (en) * 1952-05-29 1957-11-26 Centre Nat Rech Scient Apparatus for extraction or fractionation of various solutes
US2839783A (en) * 1949-11-23 1958-06-24 American Enka Corp Spinnerets for melt-spinning high polymeric substances
US2985911A (en) * 1959-06-29 1961-05-30 Ethicon Inc Spinnerettes
US3060500A (en) * 1959-09-01 1962-10-30 Du Pont Composite spinneret plate unit
US3584678A (en) * 1969-07-28 1971-06-15 Monsanto Chemicals Orifice plate for spinning fine diameter wire
US3628140A (en) * 1969-11-06 1971-12-14 Coulter Electronics Scanning element and aperture wafer for electronic particle counting and sizing apparatus
US4317549A (en) * 1980-04-17 1982-03-02 Southwire Company Snap in wire guide housing
US20160070271A1 (en) * 2013-04-25 2016-03-10 Fujikin Incorporated Multi-hole orifice plate for flow control, and flow controller using the same

Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2485553A (en) * 1944-05-23 1949-10-25 Linde Air Prod Co Filament guide
US2434227A (en) * 1945-04-13 1948-01-06 Standish S Rowe Strand guide
US2503821A (en) * 1946-06-04 1950-04-11 Beaunit Mills Inc Spinning funnel
US2839783A (en) * 1949-11-23 1958-06-24 American Enka Corp Spinnerets for melt-spinning high polymeric substances
US2814553A (en) * 1952-05-29 1957-11-26 Centre Nat Rech Scient Apparatus for extraction or fractionation of various solutes
US2985911A (en) * 1959-06-29 1961-05-30 Ethicon Inc Spinnerettes
US3060500A (en) * 1959-09-01 1962-10-30 Du Pont Composite spinneret plate unit
US3584678A (en) * 1969-07-28 1971-06-15 Monsanto Chemicals Orifice plate for spinning fine diameter wire
US3628140A (en) * 1969-11-06 1971-12-14 Coulter Electronics Scanning element and aperture wafer for electronic particle counting and sizing apparatus
US4317549A (en) * 1980-04-17 1982-03-02 Southwire Company Snap in wire guide housing
US20160070271A1 (en) * 2013-04-25 2016-03-10 Fujikin Incorporated Multi-hole orifice plate for flow control, and flow controller using the same
US9746856B2 (en) * 2013-04-25 2017-08-29 Fujikin Incorporated Multi-hole orifice plate for flow control, and flow controller using the same

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
FR690214A (en) 1930-09-17

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