US2953002A - Knitting machine for high pile fabrics - Google Patents

Knitting machine for high pile fabrics Download PDF

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US2953002A
US2953002A US799218A US79921859A US2953002A US 2953002 A US2953002 A US 2953002A US 799218 A US799218 A US 799218A US 79921859 A US79921859 A US 79921859A US 2953002 A US2953002 A US 2953002A
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fibers
knitting
carding
portions
knitting machine
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John H Hill
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Wildman Jacquard Co
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Wildman Jacquard Co
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D04BRAIDING; LACE-MAKING; KNITTING; TRIMMINGS; NON-WOVEN FABRICS
    • D04BKNITTING
    • D04B9/00Circular knitting machines with independently-movable needles
    • D04B9/14Circular knitting machines with independently-movable needles with provision for incorporating loose fibres, e.g. in high-pile fabrics

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  • This invention relates to knitting machines and in particular, to a mechanism by which certain improvements are realized in the production of so-called high pile fabrics.
  • a further object is that of accomplishing the desired result with simple means which shall be inexpensive, add a minimum of complication mechanically and which shall be flee from trouble during operation of the de- VICE.
  • High pile fabrics are those in which a base fabric is supplemented by fibers incorporated in such manner that the fibers are drawn into tufts at each stitch to project to at least one side of the fabric.
  • the pile thus formed is much longer than anything accomplished by way of combing, knapping or by forming terry loops which may or may not be cut.
  • the pile is usually sheared and treated by processes which enhance its appearance and by which it may be made to resemble very closely several natural materials.
  • fiber stock in the form of roving is fed to the knitting instrumentalities of a knitting machine by way of carding and doifer means at one or more feeding stations which may feed rovings which differ in material, texture, color or in any other desired manner from the roving fed at another feeding station.
  • Pattern or other variegated effects may be produced, for example, by providing means which cause some of the knitting instrumentalities to take fibers from the doffer means of one carding unit and other of the knitting instrumentalities to take fibers from the doifer means of a second carding unit, which fibers may differ in some respect from the first-mentioned fibers.
  • Fig. l is a sectional view of a knitting machine to which the invention has been applied;
  • Fig. 2 is a front view of the doffer means showing one pattern of needle selectivity which may be employed in carrying out the invention
  • Fig. 3 is a front elevational view of a trick wheel and its associated mechanism employed in effecting desired needle selectivity
  • Fig. 4 is a plan view of a knitting machine showing six carding units applied thereto.
  • Fig. l the invention is applied to a knitting machine having a needle cylinder 10, circular base 11, sinker head 12, needles 13 and sinkers 14.
  • trick wheel 17 having spaced butts 18 effects a predetermined selection of the needles by acting upon the needle butts 19 and raising them sufliciently to be acted upon by cams in cam sections 20.
  • Such trick wheels are well known in the art and for a more complete description thereof, reference may be had to United States Patents 2,127,224 and 2,269,288.
  • a card mechanism generally denoted by numeral 22 for parallelizing and delivering fibers to hooks of knitting instrumentalities and having among other parts, a card cylinder '23 rotatable as shown in a clockwise direction, a licker-in cylinder 24, stripper roll 25 and Worker roll 26.
  • a second set of rolls is shown at 27 and 28 but the roll 28 is moved away from the card cylinder so that it does not make contact therewith and does not function as a worker, but instead serves to transfer excess fibers back to stripper 27 in a manner to be described.
  • a doifer cylinder 29 removes the fibers from the card and as the hooks of needles 13 enter the card clothing, they take a tuft of fibers and then the base yarn and knit, the fibers being cast off as pile at the back of the fabric.
  • a number of air nozzles 30 and 31 assist by projecting air streams to cause the fibers to appear cleanly at a single face of the fabric.
  • a supply of fibers of staple lengths or in any other suitable form are furnished as very loosely twisted slivers or rovings 32 and are advanced to the licker-in cylinder.
  • one or more of these carding cylinders are used, each of which preferably feeds rovings having characteristics which differ from the rovings of the other carding units. For example, it may be desired to produce a striped fabric of two different colors in which case each of the colors would be fed at one of two carding units.
  • a trick wheel is set to select a predetermined needle pattern so that some of the needles are caused to take fibers from the doffer wheel 29 at one of the carding units. After these needles have taken their fibers, they are lowered to approximately a tuck position but do not knit at this time.
  • a second trick wheel adjacent a second carding unit Fig.
  • base yarn may be fed at each feeding station while those needles that take fibers at a particular station knit it at that station.
  • a cleaner roll 33 has been provided adjacent roll 28 and is driven by a chain 34 from a ZO-tooth sprocket on stripper 27 to a lO-tooth sprocket on the cleaner roll so that. the speed of the latter is approximately twice that of the stripper.
  • Both of rolls 28 and 33 preferably have straight dofier wire on them.
  • the input of fibers to the carding unit should be balanced to the requirements of the pattern. Also, instead of feeding the excess fibers back to the carding unit directlly, they may be discharged and subsequently reprocessed, in any desired way, for example, they may be reclaimed and incorporated into the stock from which rovings are made.
  • the combination of knitting instrumentalities for drawing yarn into loops to form a fabric, fiber carding and dofier means including a stripper roll for parallelizing and delivering fibers to the hooks of said knitting instrumentalities, pattern means for causing selected ones of the knitting instrumentalities to take fibers from some portions of the doifer means but not from others, and means for removing fibers from said other portions of said doifer means and delivering them to said stripper roll.
  • the combination of knitting instrumentalities for drawing yarn into loops to form a fabric, fibercarding and doffer means including a stripper roll for parallelizing and delivering fibers to the hooks of said knitting instrumentalities, pattern means for causing selected ones of the knitting instrumentalities to take fibersfrom some portions of the dolfer means but not from others, and means comprising a cleaner roll adjacent said doffer means for removing fibers from said other portions of said dofi'er means and for delivering them to said stripper roll.
  • the combination of knitting instrumentalities for drawing yarn into loops to form a fabric at least two fiber carding and dofi'er meansfea'ch including a stripper roll for parallelizing and delivering fibers ,to the hooks of said knitting instrumentalities, pattern -means' for causing some of said knitting instrumentalities to take fibers from some portions only of one of said dofier means but not from other portions thereof, pattern means for causing other of said knitting instrumentalities to take fibers from some portions only of another of said dofier means but not from other portions thereof, and means comprising a cleaner roll adjacent each of saiddoffer means for removing fibersfrom said other portions of said dofier means and for delivering them to said stripper roll.
  • said fiber removing means comprises a cleaner roll. adjacent each of said dofier means for removing fibers from said portions of said dofier means and adapted to deliver them to said carding means.

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

Description

Sept. 20, 1960 J. H. HILL KNITTING MACHINE FOR HIGH PILE FABRICS Filed March 13, 1959 2 Sheets-Sheet l INVENTOR. JOHN H. HILL.
A TTORNE Y Sept. 20, 1960 J. H. HILL 2,953,002
KNITTING MACHINE FOR HIGH PILE FABRICS Filed March 13, 1959 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 5:; JOHN HINH I? Ell-V TOR.
A TTORNE Y United States Patent Ofifice 2,953,062 Patented Sept. 20, 1960 KNITTING FOR HIGH PILE FABRICS John H. Hill, Wayne, Pa., assignor to Wildman Jacquard Co., Norristown, Pa., a corporation of Pennsylvama Filed Mar. 13, 1959, Ser. No. 799,218
' 7 Claims. 01. 66-9) This invention relates to knitting machines and in particular, to a mechanism by which certain improvements are realized in the production of so-called high pile fabrics.
It is a general object of the invention to improve the fiber carding and feeding means for knitting machines adapted to knit high pile type fabrics in which a pattern is knitted.
More specifically it is an object of the invention to so modify the fiber carding and feeding means that while the needles may vary their action in taking fibers at a dofier means in such a way that fibers are not uniformly taken and knitted, the excess will not pile up at the doifer but will be removed therefrom and preferably returned to the mass of fibers being carded.
It is a further object to provide means which make possible the knitting of fabrics having all-over high pile patterns as well as patterns where fibers are fed to spaced areas only, the remaining areas being knit as plain jersey.
A further object is that of accomplishing the desired result with simple means which shall be inexpensive, add a minimum of complication mechanically and which shall be flee from trouble during operation of the de- VICE.
Other objects will become apparent from the disclosure which follows.
High pile fabrics are those in which a base fabric is supplemented by fibers incorporated in such manner that the fibers are drawn into tufts at each stitch to project to at least one side of the fabric. The pile thus formed is much longer than anything accomplished by way of combing, knapping or by forming terry loops which may or may not be cut. Of course, the pile is usually sheared and treated by processes which enhance its appearance and by which it may be made to resemble very closely several natural materials.
According to the invention of the instant case, fiber stock in the form of roving is fed to the knitting instrumentalities of a knitting machine by way of carding and doifer means at one or more feeding stations which may feed rovings which differ in material, texture, color or in any other desired manner from the roving fed at another feeding station. Pattern or other variegated effects may be produced, for example, by providing means which cause some of the knitting instrumentalities to take fibers from the doffer means of one carding unit and other of the knitting instrumentalities to take fibers from the doifer means of a second carding unit, which fibers may differ in some respect from the first-mentioned fibers. Such selection of the knitting instrumentalities results in certain areas of the doifer means becoming overloaded with fibers from its carding unit and novel means have been additionally provided for continually removing fibers fi-om these overloaded areas and returning them to be reworked by the carding unit.
The invention will be described in detail by reference to a specific embodiment thereof illustrated in the accompanying figures of drawing, wherein:
Fig. l is a sectional view of a knitting machine to which the invention has been applied;
Fig. 2 is a front view of the doffer means showing one pattern of needle selectivity which may be employed in carrying out the invention;
Fig. 3 is a front elevational view of a trick wheel and its associated mechanism employed in effecting desired needle selectivity; and
Fig. 4 is a plan view of a knitting machine showing six carding units applied thereto.
Now referring to Fig. l, the invention is applied to a knitting machine having a needle cylinder 10, circular base 11, sinker head 12, needles 13 and sinkers 14.
Cams in sinker cap 16 actuate the sinkers in known manner.
A so-called trick wheel 17 having spaced butts 18 effects a predetermined selection of the needles by acting upon the needle butts 19 and raising them sufliciently to be acted upon by cams in cam sections 20. Such trick wheels are well known in the art and for a more complete description thereof, reference may be had to United States Patents 2,127,224 and 2,269,288.
On a base 21, attached to circular base 11 or to any fixed part or parts of the machine, is mounted a card mechanism generally denoted by numeral 22 for parallelizing and delivering fibers to hooks of knitting instrumentalities and having among other parts, a card cylinder '23 rotatable as shown in a clockwise direction, a licker-in cylinder 24, stripper roll 25 and Worker roll 26. A second set of rolls is shown at 27 and 28 but the roll 28 is moved away from the card cylinder so that it does not make contact therewith and does not function as a worker, but instead serves to transfer excess fibers back to stripper 27 in a manner to be described. Finally, a doifer cylinder 29 removes the fibers from the card and as the hooks of needles 13 enter the card clothing, they take a tuft of fibers and then the base yarn and knit, the fibers being cast off as pile at the back of the fabric. A number of air nozzles 30 and 31 assist by projecting air streams to cause the fibers to appear cleanly at a single face of the fabric.
A supply of fibers of staple lengths or in any other suitable form are furnished as very loosely twisted slivers or rovings 32 and are advanced to the licker-in cylinder.
According to the invention, one or more of these carding cylinders are used, each of which preferably feeds rovings having characteristics which differ from the rovings of the other carding units. For example, it may be desired to produce a striped fabric of two different colors in which case each of the colors would be fed at one of two carding units. A trick wheel is set to select a predetermined needle pattern so that some of the needles are caused to take fibers from the doffer wheel 29 at one of the carding units. After these needles have taken their fibers, they are lowered to approximately a tuck position but do not knit at this time. A second trick wheel adjacent a second carding unit (Fig. 4) is patterned to raise those needles which were not previously selected and to cause them to take fibers from this second carding unit and at this time all of these needles take a base yarn from a means adjacent thereto. The fibers of this second carding unit may differ in color or in any other property from those of the first unit. Then, after all of the needles of these two groups have taken their fibers as well as the base yarn, they are caused to knit in the usual manner. Accordingly, a course results at each second feeding station.
Alternately, base yarn may be fed at each feeding station while those needles that take fibers at a particular station knit it at that station. When operating that I an... n
way, floats are left at the needles which do not knit then. Of course the opposite should occur at the intermediate feeding stations.
As a result of this limited selection of needles adjacent each doffer means, certain areas of the doffer are never cleared of fibers by the needles and the fibers would pile up excessively in these areas if no means were provided for the removal thereof. For this purpose a cleaner roll 33 has been provided adjacent roll 28 and is driven by a chain 34 from a ZO-tooth sprocket on stripper 27 to a lO-tooth sprocket on the cleaner roll so that. the speed of the latter is approximately twice that of the stripper. Both of rolls 28 and 33 preferably have straight dofier wire on them. Thus the cleaner roll, removes excess fibers from the dofier and transfers these to roll 28 which in turn transfers them to the stripper 27 for reprocessing. V
It is possible, by means of predetermined needle selection, to produce a fabric having horizontal stripes or a checkerboard pattern. Also, colors may be blended together to simulate naturally occurring furs.
The input of fibers to the carding unit should be balanced to the requirements of the pattern. Also, instead of feeding the excess fibers back to the carding unit directlly, they may be discharged and subsequently reprocessed, in any desired way, for example, they may be reclaimed and incorporated into the stock from which rovings are made.
While one embodiment of the invention has been disclosed, it is to be understood that the inventive concept may be carried out in a number of ways. This invention is, therefore, not to be limited to the precise detailsdescribed,'but is intended to embrace all variations and modifications thereof falling within the spirit of the invention and the scope of the claims.
I claim:
1. In a knitting machine of the type described, the combination of knitting instrumentalities for drawing yarn into loops to form a fabric, fiber carding'and doffer means for parallelizing and delivering fibers to the hooks of the knitting instrumentalities, means for causing certain of said knitting instrumentalities to take fibers from limited portions only of the surface of said dofier means, and means for removing fibers from the remaining portions of said surface and for delivering said fibers to said carding means.
2. In a knitting machine of the type described, the combination of knitting instrumentalities for drawing yarn into loops to form a fabric, fiber carding and dofier means including a stripper roll for parallelizing and delivering fibers to the hooks of said knitting instrumentalities, pattern means for causing selected ones of the knitting instrumentalities to take fibers from some portions of the doifer means but not from others, and means for removing fibers from said other portions of said doifer means and delivering them to said stripper roll.
3. In a knitting machine of the type described, the combination of knitting instrumentalities for drawing yarn into loops to form a fabric, fibercarding and doffer means including a stripper roll for parallelizing and delivering fibers to the hooks of said knitting instrumentalities, pattern means for causing selected ones of the knitting instrumentalities to take fibersfrom some portions of the dolfer means but not from others, and means comprising a cleaner roll adjacent said doffer means for removing fibers from said other portions of said dofi'er means and for delivering them to said stripper roll.
4. In a knitting machine of the type described, the combination of knitting instrumentalities for drawing yarn into loops to form a fabric, at least two fiber carding and dofl'ter means .for parallelizing and delivering fibers to the hooks of said knittinginstrumentalities, pattern means for causing some of said knitting instrumentalities to take fibers from some portions only of one of said dotfer means but not, from other portions thereof, means for causing other of said knitting instrumentalities to take fibers from some portions only of another of said doffer means but not from other portions thereof, and means for removing fibers from said other portions of said dofter means and for delivering said fibers to said carding means. 7 V i 5. In a knitting machine of the type described, the combination of knitting instrumentalities for drawing yarn into loops to form a fabric, at least two fiber carding and dofi'er meansfea'ch including a stripper roll for parallelizing and delivering fibers ,to the hooks of said knitting instrumentalities, pattern -means' for causing some of said knitting instrumentalities to take fibers from some portions only of one of said dofier means but not from other portions thereof, pattern means for causing other of said knitting instrumentalities to take fibers from some portions only of another of said dofier means but not from other portions thereof, and means comprising a cleaner roll adjacent each of saiddoffer means for removing fibersfrom said other portions of said dofier means and for delivering them to said stripper roll.
6. In a knitting machine of the type described, the combination of knitting instrumentalities for drawing yarn into loops to form a fabric, at least two fiber carding and doffer means for parallelizing and delivering fibers to the hooks of said knitting instrumentalities, pattern means for causing only some of said knitting instrumentalities to take fibers from one of said' dofier means and others of said knitting instrumentalities to take fibers from another of said dofier means and. means at each carding means for removing excess fibers from portions of dolfer means thereat which fibers result from failure of certain 'instrumentalities'to take fibers therefrom. i e
7. The mechanism of claim 6 wherein said fiber removing means comprises a cleaner roll. adjacent each of said dofier means for removing fibers from said portions of said dofier means and adapted to deliver them to said carding means. 1
References Cited in the file, of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,114,414 Tauber Oct. 20, 1914 1,848,370 Moore Mar. 8, 1932 1,894,596 Moore Ian. 17, 1933 2,680,360 Schmidt June 8, 1954 2,710,525 Brandt ....V V..V..,.. Iune 14, 1955
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Cited By (15)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3277672A (en) * 1963-11-26 1966-10-11 Jr Thomas Anderson Oliver Circular knitting machines
US3280594A (en) * 1963-09-12 1966-10-25 Reid Meredith Inc Doffing mechanism for making deep pile fabrics
US3413823A (en) * 1966-02-07 1968-12-03 Amphenol Corp Apparatus for production of patterned pile fabric
US3516265A (en) * 1966-12-01 1970-06-23 Louis Collez Method of producing artificial furs of nonuniform fiber density
US3651664A (en) * 1970-05-18 1972-03-28 Louis Collez Method of producing artificial furs of nonuniform fiber density
DE1585333B1 (en) * 1964-08-14 1972-10-12 Peltex Sa Process for the production of strips in knitted fabrics with intermeshed fibers
US3709002A (en) * 1970-08-20 1973-01-09 Bunker Ramo Apparatus for producing patterned deep pile circular knitted fabrics
US3710597A (en) * 1970-10-29 1973-01-16 Norwood Mills Knit pile fabric
US3728872A (en) * 1971-05-03 1973-04-24 Glenoit Mills Method and apparatus for knitting sliver high pile fabrics
US4258557A (en) * 1977-11-02 1981-03-31 Sulzer Morate Gmbh Knitting machine for producing knitted goods with combed-in fibres
US4673599A (en) * 1986-01-24 1987-06-16 David Vanderslice Synthetic fur garland and method of making same
US4706474A (en) * 1980-10-29 1987-11-17 Karl Eybl Gesellschaft M.B.H. Process of manufacturing a knitted pile fabric
US6112384A (en) * 1997-04-07 2000-09-05 Barnes; Michael A. Multi-color fiber fluff products and method and apparatus for making same
US7026048B1 (en) 1997-04-07 2006-04-11 Barnes Michael A Multi-color fiber fluff products and method and apparatus for making same
ITFI20130022A1 (en) * 2013-01-25 2014-07-26 Texapel Spa CAM AND FIELD OF CAMS TO MOVE THE WILDMAN'S CIRCULAR MACHINE NEEDLES

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1114414A (en) * 1913-11-13 1914-10-20 John C Tauber Mechanism for knitting fleece-lined fabric.
US1848370A (en) * 1930-11-28 1932-03-08 Moore David Pelton Pile fabric knitting machine
US1894596A (en) * 1931-02-17 1933-01-17 Moore David Pelton Apparatus for and method of making knitted pile fabrics
US2680360A (en) * 1951-05-11 1954-06-08 Borg George W Corp Pile fabric knitting machine
US2710525A (en) * 1950-03-18 1955-06-14 Borg George W Corp Pile fabric knitting machines

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1114414A (en) * 1913-11-13 1914-10-20 John C Tauber Mechanism for knitting fleece-lined fabric.
US1848370A (en) * 1930-11-28 1932-03-08 Moore David Pelton Pile fabric knitting machine
US1894596A (en) * 1931-02-17 1933-01-17 Moore David Pelton Apparatus for and method of making knitted pile fabrics
US2710525A (en) * 1950-03-18 1955-06-14 Borg George W Corp Pile fabric knitting machines
US2680360A (en) * 1951-05-11 1954-06-08 Borg George W Corp Pile fabric knitting machine

Cited By (16)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3280594A (en) * 1963-09-12 1966-10-25 Reid Meredith Inc Doffing mechanism for making deep pile fabrics
US3277672A (en) * 1963-11-26 1966-10-11 Jr Thomas Anderson Oliver Circular knitting machines
DE1585333B1 (en) * 1964-08-14 1972-10-12 Peltex Sa Process for the production of strips in knitted fabrics with intermeshed fibers
US3413823A (en) * 1966-02-07 1968-12-03 Amphenol Corp Apparatus for production of patterned pile fabric
US3516265A (en) * 1966-12-01 1970-06-23 Louis Collez Method of producing artificial furs of nonuniform fiber density
US3651664A (en) * 1970-05-18 1972-03-28 Louis Collez Method of producing artificial furs of nonuniform fiber density
US3709002A (en) * 1970-08-20 1973-01-09 Bunker Ramo Apparatus for producing patterned deep pile circular knitted fabrics
US3710597A (en) * 1970-10-29 1973-01-16 Norwood Mills Knit pile fabric
US3728872A (en) * 1971-05-03 1973-04-24 Glenoit Mills Method and apparatus for knitting sliver high pile fabrics
US4258557A (en) * 1977-11-02 1981-03-31 Sulzer Morate Gmbh Knitting machine for producing knitted goods with combed-in fibres
US4706474A (en) * 1980-10-29 1987-11-17 Karl Eybl Gesellschaft M.B.H. Process of manufacturing a knitted pile fabric
US4673599A (en) * 1986-01-24 1987-06-16 David Vanderslice Synthetic fur garland and method of making same
US6112384A (en) * 1997-04-07 2000-09-05 Barnes; Michael A. Multi-color fiber fluff products and method and apparatus for making same
US6632755B1 (en) 1997-04-07 2003-10-14 Michael A. Barnes Multi-color fiber fluff products and method and apparatus for making same
US7026048B1 (en) 1997-04-07 2006-04-11 Barnes Michael A Multi-color fiber fluff products and method and apparatus for making same
ITFI20130022A1 (en) * 2013-01-25 2014-07-26 Texapel Spa CAM AND FIELD OF CAMS TO MOVE THE WILDMAN'S CIRCULAR MACHINE NEEDLES

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