US2613697A - Method of curling - Google Patents

Method of curling Download PDF

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Publication number
US2613697A
US2613697A US667195A US66719546A US2613697A US 2613697 A US2613697 A US 2613697A US 667195 A US667195 A US 667195A US 66719546 A US66719546 A US 66719546A US 2613697 A US2613697 A US 2613697A
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Prior art keywords
curling
wire
die
curl
strand
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US667195A
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Fantell Michael
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Priority to ES449045A priority patent/ES449045A3/en
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B21MECHANICAL METAL-WORKING WITHOUT ESSENTIALLY REMOVING MATERIAL; PUNCHING METAL
    • B21DWORKING OR PROCESSING OF SHEET METAL OR METAL TUBES, RODS OR PROFILES WITHOUT ESSENTIALLY REMOVING MATERIAL; PUNCHING METAL
    • B21D53/00Making other particular articles
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S425/00Plastic article or earthenware shaping or treating: apparatus
    • Y10S425/017Filament stretching apparatus

Definitions

  • MICHAEL FANTELL FIGURE 3 Patented Oct. 14, 1952 I UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE METHOD OF CURLING Michael Fantell, West Orange, N. J.
  • My invention relates to a device for curlin strips, ribbons or strands in order to form a sponge. More particularly my inventionrelates to the formation of metallic sponges.
  • My curling device being adjustable to varying degrees of hardness of the material to be curled, will also accept plastic strips as well as synthetic fibers and will impart a curl.
  • Figure 1 is a diagrammatic illustration of the apparatus and method of curling a metal strip.
  • Figure 2 is a front elevation of the curling device.
  • Figure 3 is a cross section taken on the line 3-3 in Figure 2, showing several positions of the curling device.
  • my device has a spool or roll 5 of wire, strands of plastic or synthetic fibers 6.
  • Nickel silver wire, brass wire, or stainless steel wire may be used. There are many other alloys and types of material which may also be used.
  • This wire 6 may be approximately .005 in diameter. Of course other sizes may be used.
  • the wire 6 is fed into a rolling mill between rolls 8, 9 of high carbon steel exerting a pressure of approximately 250 500 lbs. It may thereby be reduced to a ribbon approximately .0015" thick.
  • the flattening function of the rolls 8, 9 may be eliminated and they will merely be utilized for feeding the wire 6 (or other material) and maintaining tension during the curling process, much less pressure then being necessary.
  • the ribbon I0 is then led through a diamond die II.
  • a carboloy die or other similar die may also be used. This die may have an orifice of approximately .02 5" diameter. The size of the orifice is not critical. After passing through the die II, it is pulled through the opposed. rollers l2, l3.
  • the roller 12 is preferably of cast iron and the roller l3 of rubber. Up to this point, the strip ID has been maintained under tension through the pull of the rollers l2, l3.
  • the tension is relaxed and the wire is permitted to form curls l4 and is wound on the spindle l5.
  • a slot I6 in the spindle serves to hold the end of the curled ribbon Hi.
  • the directions of revolution of the various rollers is indicated by the arrows.
  • the speed of the spindle 15 should be approximately one-third the speed of the pulling rollers l2, 'l3 so that the wire l4 may curl.
  • the die II is positioned in a holder ll where it is held in place by a set screw Ill.
  • the holder I! is angularly adjustable being held in any desired position by the set screw [9.
  • the position of the holder and the die is positioned with respect to the path of the ribbon ID by raising or lowering the upright 20 on the bar 2
  • the upright 20 is fixed at any point by the set screw 22.
  • is constantly reciprocated so that the wire 10 is fed into the puller-rolls l2, [3 at varying points and is thereby not caused to wind on the spindle l5 all at one point. If, however, it is desired that the wire Ill be wound on the spindle [5 in a ball all at one point, the holder 2
  • variable factors encountered in curling a metallic ribbon Ill or other material are:
  • variable factors aforementioned may be compensated for and any desired degree of curl effected.
  • the method of curling a strand comprising passing a strand under tension through a hole through a die having sharply defined edges at both ends of the hole, positioning the hole in the die transversely to the path of the strand whereby the strand tightly and sharply bends at a material angle over each of the edges, and releasing the strand to curl.
  • the method of curling a strand comprising passing a strand under tension through a diepassage, said die-passage being a hOle through a die having sharply defined edges at both ends of the die-passage, positioning the die-passage transversely to the path of the strand whereby the strand is frictionally engaged with the edges 4 of the die-passage and bent at a material angle over both edges, and releasing the strand to curl.

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

Description

' Oct. 14, 1952 E 2,613,697
METHOD OF CURLING Filed May S, 1946 IN V EN TOR.
MICHAEL FANTELL FIGURE 3 Patented Oct. 14, 1952 I UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE METHOD OF CURLING Michael Fantell, West Orange, N. J.
Application May 3, 1946, Serial No. 667,195
2 Claims. p 1
My invention relates to a device for curlin strips, ribbons or strands in order to form a sponge. More particularly my inventionrelates to the formation of metallic sponges.
It is an object of my invention to provide a device for curling metal ribbons and the like, that is adjustable to accommodate ribbons of varying degrees of hardness, that will effect varying degrees of curl, that is adaptable to provide varying degrees of curl in relation to the speed of the metal strips through the curling device, that is adjustable to provide varying degrees of curl with relation to the tension of the strip as it progresses through the apparatus. It is a further object of my invention to provide a curling device which is simple, easy to adjust, efficient in operation, uniform in the curl produced. It is a further object of my invention to provide a curling device that will accept metal strips of varying dimensions and differing cross section. My curling device will function with metallic wires that are circular in cross section. It will also accept metallic wires that vary from the circular in cross section. It will accept ribbon-like metallic strips. My curling device, being adjustable to varying degrees of hardness of the material to be curled, will also accept plastic strips as well as synthetic fibers and will impart a curl.
Other objects and advantages will appear from a consideration of the hereinafter set forth description. The accompanyin drawings and description are intended merely as illustrative of a preferred embodiment of my invention.
Figure 1 is a diagrammatic illustration of the apparatus and method of curling a metal strip.
Figure 2 is a front elevation of the curling device.
Figure 3 is a cross section taken on the line 3-3 in Figure 2, showing several positions of the curling device.
Referring now to the drawings in detail, my device has a spool or roll 5 of wire, strands of plastic or synthetic fibers 6. Nickel silver wire, brass wire, or stainless steel wire may be used. There are many other alloys and types of material which may also be used. This wire 6 may be approximately .005 in diameter. Of course other sizes may be used. The wire 6 is fed into a rolling mill between rolls 8, 9 of high carbon steel exerting a pressure of approximately 250 500 lbs. It may thereby be reduced to a ribbon approximately .0015" thick. If the material on the spool 5 is of proper dimension for curling, the flattening function of the rolls 8, 9 may be eliminated and they will merely be utilized for feeding the wire 6 (or other material) and maintaining tension during the curling process, much less pressure then being necessary. The ribbon I0 is then led through a diamond die II. A carboloy die or other similar die may also be used. This die may have an orifice of approximately .02 5" diameter. The size of the orifice is not critical. After passing through the die II, it is pulled through the opposed. rollers l2, l3. The roller 12 is preferably of cast iron and the roller l3 of rubber. Up to this point, the strip ID has been maintained under tension through the pull of the rollers l2, l3. Upon leaving the rollers l2, IS, the tension is relaxed and the wire is permitted to form curls l4 and is wound on the spindle l5. A slot I6 in the spindle serves to hold the end of the curled ribbon Hi. The directions of revolution of the various rollers is indicated by the arrows. The speed of the spindle 15 should be approximately one-third the speed of the pulling rollers l2, 'l3 so that the wire l4 may curl.
The die II is positioned in a holder ll where it is held in place by a set screw Ill. The holder I! is angularly adjustable being held in any desired position by the set screw [9. The position of the holder and the die is positioned with respect to the path of the ribbon ID by raising or lowering the upright 20 on the bar 2| and adjusting the angle of the holder H. The upright 20 is fixed at any point by the set screw 22. The bar 2| is constantly reciprocated so that the wire 10 is fed into the puller-rolls l2, [3 at varying points and is thereby not caused to wind on the spindle l5 all at one point. If, however, it is desired that the wire Ill be wound on the spindle [5 in a ball all at one point, the holder 2| may remain stationary.
Attention is directed to Figure 3 in which the adjustable feature of the die H is illustrated. The variable factors encountered in curling a metallic ribbon Ill or other material are:
(1) Speed of the wire;
(2) Size of the wire;
(3) Shape of the wire (round or ribbon) (4) Hardness of the wire; and
(5) Tension of the wire.
By adjusting the angle of incidence of the wire to the curling edge of the die, the variable factors aforementioned may be compensated for and any desired degree of curl effected.
It is found that the less acute the angle that the wire leaves the die, the less sharp the resultant curl. Thus the position indicated by the solid figure in Figure 3 would produce a slight 3 curl, while the dotted figure in Figure 3 would produce a heavy curl.
It is therefore seen that I have provided a novel apparatus for imparting a curl to ribbon, wire, synthetic fibers, plastic material, etc. It is simple in construction, adjustable to the variable factors encountered in curling, easy to operate, flicient in operation, and adapted to work with many difierent types of material and sizes of material.
The foregoing described apparatus is intended merely as illustrative of a preferred embodiment of my invention, as many changes may be made in the arrangement and choice of parts within the scope of the appended claims without departing from the spirit of my invention.
I claim:
1. The method of curling a strand comprising passing a strand under tension through a hole through a die having sharply defined edges at both ends of the hole, positioning the hole in the die transversely to the path of the strand whereby the strand tightly and sharply bends at a material angle over each of the edges, and releasing the strand to curl.
2. The method of curling a strand comprising passing a strand under tension through a diepassage, said die-passage being a hOle through a die having sharply defined edges at both ends of the die-passage, positioning the die-passage transversely to the path of the strand whereby the strand is frictionally engaged with the edges 4 of the die-passage and bent at a material angle over both edges, and releasing the strand to curl.
MICHAEL FANTELL.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file of this patent:
UNITED STATES PATENTS Number Name Date 352,514 Brampton Nov. 16, 1886 514,371 Lockwood Feb. 6, 1894 689,575 Church Dec. 24, 1901 1,323,127 Treuhardt Nov. 25, 1919 1,386,318 Cowan Aug. 2, 1921 1,446,811 Rowland Feb. 27, 1923 1,670,253 Gilbert May 15, 1928 1,689,093 Wolle Oct. 23, 1928 1,777,900 Sedgley Oct. 7, 1930 1,959,104 Mahan May 15, 1934 1,976,491 Gottschalk Oct. 9, 1934 2,042,537 Liddell June 2, 1936 2,121,527 Mason June 21, 1938 2,138,787 Gottschalk et a1. Nov. 29, 1938 2,196,076 Moran Apr. 2, 1940 2,245,320 Bletso June 10, 1941 2,450,280 Homon Sept. 28, 1948 2,457,705 Moran Dec. 28, 1948 FOREIGN PATENTS Number Country Date 558,297 Great Britain Dec. 30, 1943
US667195A 1946-05-03 1946-05-03 Method of curling Expired - Lifetime US2613697A (en)

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Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US667195A US2613697A (en) 1946-05-03 1946-05-03 Method of curling
ES449045A ES449045A3 (en) 1946-05-03 1976-06-18 A machine to produce curled filaments (Machine-translation by Google Translate, not legally binding)

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Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2926392A (en) * 1954-01-11 1960-03-01 Eastman Kodak Co Method and apparatus for opening crimped tow
US3000407A (en) * 1958-05-05 1961-09-19 Gen Electric Electric lamp mount making method and apparatus
US3194716A (en) * 1960-06-29 1965-07-13 Dow Chemical Co Filamentary microtapes
US3231217A (en) * 1963-02-14 1966-01-25 Steel Heddle Mfg Co Narrow metallic ribbon package
US3374302A (en) * 1965-12-06 1968-03-19 Techniservice Corp Strand treatment process

Citations (19)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US352514A (en) * 1886-11-16 brampton
US514371A (en) * 1894-02-06 Hand-tool for wire-working
US689575A (en) * 1901-08-12 1901-12-24 American Wire Fence Company Wire-coiling device.
US1323127A (en) * 1919-11-25 Work-clamp
US1386318A (en) * 1919-12-19 1921-08-02 Cowan Richard Universal welding-clamp
US1446811A (en) * 1921-03-10 1923-02-27 J H Rowland Work-holding clamp
US1670253A (en) * 1926-04-19 1928-05-15 Gilbert Arthur Welding clamp
US1689093A (en) * 1926-10-01 1928-10-23 Union Bag And Paper Corp Method of and apparatus for making curled wire
US1777900A (en) * 1926-02-06 1930-10-07 Reginald F Sedgley Method of and apparatus for making coils
US1959104A (en) * 1931-07-01 1934-05-15 John Consorte Resilient body
US1976491A (en) * 1931-07-31 1934-10-09 John W Gottschalk Metallic rope
US2042537A (en) * 1931-02-06 1936-06-02 Motor Improvements Inc Filter and method of making same
US2121527A (en) * 1934-03-10 1938-06-21 Springfield Wire & Tinsel Co Method and machine for producing coiled wire bunches
US2138787A (en) * 1933-04-29 1938-11-29 John W Gottschalk Mfg Company Method of making resilient metallic bunches
US2196076A (en) * 1937-06-22 1940-04-02 Francis D Moran Apparatus for making metal sponge
US2245320A (en) * 1939-11-06 1941-06-10 Bruce N Bletso Die mounting
GB558297A (en) * 1941-06-27 1943-12-30 Ici Ltd Improvements in and relating to the production of crimped threads or filaments
US2450280A (en) * 1945-01-08 1948-09-28 Springfield Wire & Tinsel Co Method of making metal sponges
US2457705A (en) * 1944-07-19 1948-12-28 Francis D Moran Wire curling apparatus and method

Patent Citations (19)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US352514A (en) * 1886-11-16 brampton
US514371A (en) * 1894-02-06 Hand-tool for wire-working
US1323127A (en) * 1919-11-25 Work-clamp
US689575A (en) * 1901-08-12 1901-12-24 American Wire Fence Company Wire-coiling device.
US1386318A (en) * 1919-12-19 1921-08-02 Cowan Richard Universal welding-clamp
US1446811A (en) * 1921-03-10 1923-02-27 J H Rowland Work-holding clamp
US1777900A (en) * 1926-02-06 1930-10-07 Reginald F Sedgley Method of and apparatus for making coils
US1670253A (en) * 1926-04-19 1928-05-15 Gilbert Arthur Welding clamp
US1689093A (en) * 1926-10-01 1928-10-23 Union Bag And Paper Corp Method of and apparatus for making curled wire
US2042537A (en) * 1931-02-06 1936-06-02 Motor Improvements Inc Filter and method of making same
US1959104A (en) * 1931-07-01 1934-05-15 John Consorte Resilient body
US1976491A (en) * 1931-07-31 1934-10-09 John W Gottschalk Metallic rope
US2138787A (en) * 1933-04-29 1938-11-29 John W Gottschalk Mfg Company Method of making resilient metallic bunches
US2121527A (en) * 1934-03-10 1938-06-21 Springfield Wire & Tinsel Co Method and machine for producing coiled wire bunches
US2196076A (en) * 1937-06-22 1940-04-02 Francis D Moran Apparatus for making metal sponge
US2245320A (en) * 1939-11-06 1941-06-10 Bruce N Bletso Die mounting
GB558297A (en) * 1941-06-27 1943-12-30 Ici Ltd Improvements in and relating to the production of crimped threads or filaments
US2457705A (en) * 1944-07-19 1948-12-28 Francis D Moran Wire curling apparatus and method
US2450280A (en) * 1945-01-08 1948-09-28 Springfield Wire & Tinsel Co Method of making metal sponges

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2926392A (en) * 1954-01-11 1960-03-01 Eastman Kodak Co Method and apparatus for opening crimped tow
US3000407A (en) * 1958-05-05 1961-09-19 Gen Electric Electric lamp mount making method and apparatus
US3194716A (en) * 1960-06-29 1965-07-13 Dow Chemical Co Filamentary microtapes
US3231217A (en) * 1963-02-14 1966-01-25 Steel Heddle Mfg Co Narrow metallic ribbon package
US3374302A (en) * 1965-12-06 1968-03-19 Techniservice Corp Strand treatment process

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Publication number Publication date
ES449045A3 (en) 1977-07-16

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