US3076724A - Method for treatment of textile materials with liquids - Google Patents

Method for treatment of textile materials with liquids Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3076724A
US3076724A US76436A US7643660A US3076724A US 3076724 A US3076724 A US 3076724A US 76436 A US76436 A US 76436A US 7643660 A US7643660 A US 7643660A US 3076724 A US3076724 A US 3076724A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
roll
liquid
running
speed
trough
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
US76436A
Inventor
William L Freeze
Iii John Cocker
Thomas F Suggs
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.)
Cocker Machine and Foundry Co
Original Assignee
Cocker Machine and Foundry Co
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 US657765A external-priority patent/US2977662A/en
Application filed by Cocker Machine and Foundry Co filed Critical Cocker Machine and Foundry Co
Priority to US76436A priority Critical patent/US3076724A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3076724A publication Critical patent/US3076724A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06BTREATING TEXTILE MATERIALS USING LIQUIDS, GASES OR VAPOURS
    • D06B3/00Passing of textile materials through liquids, gases or vapours to effect treatment, e.g. washing, dyeing, bleaching, sizing, impregnating
    • D06B3/10Passing of textile materials through liquids, gases or vapours to effect treatment, e.g. washing, dyeing, bleaching, sizing, impregnating of fabrics
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06BTREATING TEXTILE MATERIALS USING LIQUIDS, GASES OR VAPOURS
    • D06B2700/00Treating of textile materials, e.g. bleaching, dyeing, mercerising, impregnating, washing; Fulling of fabrics
    • D06B2700/09Apparatus for passing open width fabrics through bleaching, washing or dyeing liquid

Definitions

  • This invention relates to methods for treating'continuous running materials such as yarn, fabrics, and the like with liquids such as sizing, dyes, resins, rinses, fixers etc.
  • Our inventionv has for its chief aim, the provision of a method ofthe kind referred whereby entrained air is expelled from the material just before it is run submerged in a bath of the treating liquid and thereby preconditioned to rapidly absorb the liquid, and also whereby the excess liquid from the material is removed so that only a definite uniform amount is retained.
  • a further aim of our invention is to provide a method whereby the aforesaid air expulsion and removal of excess liquid is controlled in accordance with the speed at which the material is progressed in the treatment for attainment of uniform results under all conditions of operation.
  • the apparatus comprises a trough 1 of which the bottom is jacketed as at 2 for circulation of a tempering medium, such as steam or hot water therethrough, the trough being supported crosswise of the tops of a pair of spaced side frames 3 and 4.
  • a tempering medium such as steam or hot water
  • trough 1 Normally maintained in the trough 1 at a level L, see the accompanying drawing, is a quantity of treating liquid; and running partly submerged in the liquid are two spaced hollow rolls 5 and 6 preferably of stainless steel or other metal immune against corrosion, the first roll 5 being of a diameter somewhat less than that of the second roll 6.
  • a rubber covered wiper roll, designated 5a serves to keep the exposed portion of the roll 5 clean of the liquid.
  • a smaller rubber-sheathed squeeze roll 7 Cooperative with the first roll 5 within the trough 1 is a smaller rubber-sheathed squeeze roll 7 which is normally only partly submerged in the liquid and cooperative with the roll 6 is a smaller padder roll 8 which is normally completely submerged.
  • the disposal of the squeeze roll 7 relative to the roll 5 is such that the nip between them is substantially at the level of the liquid in the trough to in sure that the air entrained in the fabric is displaced just before the material enters the liquid.
  • a superimposed solid rubber covered quetch roll 10 cooperative with the roll 6 is a superimposed solid rubber covered quetch roll 10, and in turn cooperative with the latter is a small, rubber covered dressing roll 11.
  • the material M being treated is drawn from a supply beam (not illustrated), and directed, as shown in the drawing, down into the trough 1 over a lead-in roll 12 journalled in bearings 13 atop the sides of the trough adjacent one end of the latter, to pass downwardly of the first roll 5 then beneath the squeeze and padde-r rolls 7 and 8, then up over the second roll 6 through the nip between it and the quetch roll 10, then upwardly about the quetch roll, and finally over the dressing roll 11 en route to a collecting beam (not illustrated).
  • the journals of the roll 5 are supported for free rotation in suitably packed hearings in the side walls of the trough 1, while the ends of the shaft 6a of the roll 6 are rotatively supported in ball bearing assemblies 13 set into the side walls of the trough.
  • a sprocket wheel which is driven, through a chain, from a sprocket pinion on the shaft of a regulatable speed gear unit.
  • the roll 5 is positively driven at the same peripheral speed as the roll 6 through a chain trained about a sprocket pinion on the shaft of the former and a sprocket Wheel on the shaft of the latter.
  • the squeeze roll 7 is suspended by fixed arms 22 on a cross shaft 23 whereof the opposite ends are engaged in bearings 24 at the top ends of toothed rack bars 25 constrained to endwise or up and down movement in vertical grooves in the outer faces of the side walls of frames 3 and 4 and held to said grooves by retaining strips. Meshing with the rack bars 25 are spur pinions 27 respectively at opposite ends of a cross shaft 28 rotatively borne in the side walls of the trough 1 below the trough bottom.
  • the ends of the rock shaft 23 extend outwardly beyond the bearings 24 at the tops of the rack bars 25,- and atlixed to them are short arms having, at their distal ends, small rollers that bear upon the edges of eccentric cams which are movable about projecting studs on said rack bars. Fulcrumed at their bottom ends to lateral brackets on the rack bars 25 are cylinders whereof the piston rods are pivotally connected to short lever extensions of the eccentric cams.
  • the stainless steel wiper roll indicated at 37 serves to keep the front or upper exposed portion of the squeeze roll 7 clean of the liquid.
  • the padder roll 8 is similarly suspended within the trough by arms 38 fast on a cross shaft 39 whereof the opposite ends are engaged in bearings 40 at the top ends of rack bars 41, the latter being slidable in vertical grooves in the outer faces of the'side walls of frames 3 and 4 and held to said grooves by keeper strips provided for that purpose. Also similarly, the rack bars 41 mesh with spur pinions '43 at opposite ends of a separate cross shaft 45 rotatively borne in the side walls of the trough 1 below the trough bottom.
  • short arms afiixed to opposite ends of the cross shaft 39, have adjustable rollers that bear upon eccentric cams movable about pro jecting studs on the rack bars 41, short lever extensions of said eccentric cams being connected to the piston rods of pressure fluid cylinders which, at their lower ends, are fulcrumed to lateral brackets on said rack bars.
  • the journals 55 of the quetch roll 10 are engaged in bearing blocks not shown which are slidably confined to longitudinal guideways in upstanding carrier arms 58 fulcrumed on the protruding end housings of the inset bearings 13 wherein the roll 6 is journalled.
  • Atop the arms 58 are pressure fluid-actuated devices in the form of diaphragm motors 60 of which the pendent stems 61 are adjustably connected to the aforementioned bearing blocks.
  • the dressing roll 11 has its journals engaged respectively in the short upright extremities of bell crank levers fulcrumed on fixed studs 67, the longer or horizontal extremities of said bell crank levers being coupled, by means of adjustable links to the aforementioned hearing blocks.
  • gear sectors 70 Bolted to the carrier arms 58 at their bottoms are gear sectors 70 which are in mesh with spur pinions 71 at the outer ends of another transverse shaft 72, said shaft being operable through a sprocket chain 73 by a reversible servo motor 75.
  • a shroud 30 Surrounding the exposed surface portion of the quetch roll 10 with slight intervening clearance 78 is a shroud 30 in the form of a hollow hook which is curved concentrically with said roll, and which is secured at opposite ends, by brackets to the slide bearing blocks of the quetch roll.
  • a pressurized gaseous tempering medium such as steam, is introduced into the shroud 80 adjacent one of its longitudinal edges as at 81, for ultimate discharge into the clearance interval 78 through a slit 82 in the inner wall of the shroud adjacent the opposite longitudinal edges of the latter.
  • a similar shroud 85 is provided for the dressing roll 11 into which steam is introduced through hose 86 adjacent one longitudinal edge for discharge through a lengthwise slit 87 in the inner wall of said shroud adjacent its opposite longitudinal edge. Since, during the operation of the apparatus, the rolls 5 and 6 rotate in the direction of the arrows thereon in the drawing, the steam is carried around within the intervals 78 and 88 to keep the rolls and 11 warm and moist and thereby prevent premature chilling and hardening of the sizing on the material M as it rounds said rolls. For a similar purpose the submerging roll 6 is kept heated from within by steam introduced axially thereof at one end and exhausted from the other end thereof.
  • a vibrator 95 is connected to each of the arms 38 by which said roll is suspended. For a like reason each of the slide bearing blocks for the quetch roll 10 has connected thereto a similar vibrator.
  • the vibrators 95 are shown as being of a pneumatically actuated type to which compressed air is conducted through flexible tubes 97.
  • Compressed air for operation of the cylinders influential upon the squeeze roll 7 is supplied through a pipe line having branches which respectively extend to the upper and lower ends of said cylinders.
  • a plunger type control valve 101 which is arranged to be actuated by a cam 102 on the shaft 72.
  • compressed air for operation of the cylinder influential upon the padder roll 8 is supplied through a pipe having branches extending, respectively, to the upper and lower ends of said cylinders.
  • Interposed in the pipe line 105 is a control valve similar to the control valve 101, arranged to be actuated by a separate cam on the shaft 72.
  • a suitable means (not illustrated) is provided to cause the servo motor 75 to partially turn in one direction or the other upon increasing or decreasing the speed of the roll 6 and, in turn, the rate of travel of the material M through the apparatus, so that compensative increase or decrease of air is supplied to the upper ends of the cylinders associated with rolls 7 and 8 and to the upper ends of the diaphragm motors 60.
  • more or less pressure is caused to be exerted proportionately upon the squeeze and padder rolls 7 and 8 and upon the quetch roll 10 as may be required or desired in the treatment of different kinds of yarns or textile materials run through the apparatus.
  • the arms 58 will be tilted either to the left or to the right of vertical center as shown in full and dotted lines in the drawing so that the material will pass about more or less of the surface of the roll 6. It is to be understood that the operation is such that when the speed of travel of the material M is increased, the pressure on the squeeze, dressing roll 11 and padder rolls 7 and 8 is increased and the quetch roll 10 is moved leftward about the roll 6, and vice versa. According to our invention therefore, the material is evenly treated with assurance of uniform absorption of the liquid throughout, the length and breadth of the sheet regardless of the speed of travel of the material.
  • a method of treating continuously running textile material with a liquid comprising the steps of directing ,said material downwardly into a bath of said liquid, squeezing said downwardly moving material at the surface of said liquid with a pressure proportional to the speed of said running material to displace entrained air therefrom, intermittently padding said material While submerged in said liquid with a pressure proportional to the speed of said running material, directing said material above the surface of said liquid and squeezing said material above the surface of said liquid with a pressure proportional to the speed of said running material, thereby removing excess liquid from said material.
  • a method of treating continuously running textile material with a liquid comprising the steps of directing said material downwardly into a bath of said liquid, squeezing said downwardly moving material at the surface of said liquid with a pressure proportional to the speed of said running material to displace entrained air therefrom, allowing said material to absorb said liquid while running submerged therein, intermittently padding 5 6 said material while submerged in said liquid with a pressures of each of said squeezing actions are greater as the sure proportional to the speed of said running material, speed of said running material increases.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Treatment Of Fiber Materials (AREA)

Description

Feb. 5, 1963 w. L. FREEZE ETAL 3,076,724
METHOD FOR TREATMENT OF TEXTILE MATERIALS WITH LIQUIDS Original Filed May 8, 1957 HIGH SPEED PDS/f/OA/ LOWSPEED POS/T/ON United States This application is a division of Serial No. 657,765, filed May 8, 1957, and now Patent No. 2,977,662, issued April 4, 1961;
This invention relates to methods for treating'continuous running materials such as yarn, fabrics, and the like with liquids such as sizing, dyes, resins, rinses, fixers etc.
Our inventionv has for its chief aim, the provision of a method ofthe kind referred whereby entrained air is expelled from the material just before it is run submerged in a bath of the treating liquid and thereby preconditioned to rapidly absorb the liquid, and also whereby the excess liquid from the material is removed so that only a definite uniform amount is retained.
A further aim of our invention is to provide a method whereby the aforesaid air expulsion and removal of excess liquid is controlled in accordance with the speed at which the material is progressed in the treatment for attainment of uniform results under all conditions of operation.
Other objects and attendant advantages will appear from the following detailed description of the attached drawings, wherein The accompanying drawing is a view, in longitudinal section of an apparatus for continuously treating running yarns or fabric With a treating liquid in accordance with our new method.
As herein exemplified, the apparatus comprises a trough 1 of which the bottom is jacketed as at 2 for circulation of a tempering medium, such as steam or hot water therethrough, the trough being supported crosswise of the tops of a pair of spaced side frames 3 and 4.
Normally maintained in the trough 1 at a level L, see the accompanying drawing, is a quantity of treating liquid; and running partly submerged in the liquid are two spaced hollow rolls 5 and 6 preferably of stainless steel or other metal immune against corrosion, the first roll 5 being of a diameter somewhat less than that of the second roll 6. A rubber covered wiper roll, designated 5a serves to keep the exposed portion of the roll 5 clean of the liquid. Cooperative with the first roll 5 within the trough 1 is a smaller rubber-sheathed squeeze roll 7 which is normally only partly submerged in the liquid and cooperative with the roll 6 is a smaller padder roll 8 which is normally completely submerged. It is to be particularly noted that the disposal of the squeeze roll 7 relative to the roll 5 is such that the nip between them is substantially at the level of the liquid in the trough to in sure that the air entrained in the fabric is displaced just before the material enters the liquid. Also cooperative with the roll 6 is a superimposed solid rubber covered quetch roll 10, and in turn cooperative with the latter is a small, rubber covered dressing roll 11.
The material M being treated is drawn from a supply beam (not illustrated), and directed, as shown in the drawing, down into the trough 1 over a lead-in roll 12 journalled in bearings 13 atop the sides of the trough adjacent one end of the latter, to pass downwardly of the first roll 5 then beneath the squeeze and padde-r rolls 7 and 8, then up over the second roll 6 through the nip between it and the quetch roll 10, then upwardly about the quetch roll, and finally over the dressing roll 11 en route to a collecting beam (not illustrated).
The journals of the roll 5 are supported for free rotation in suitably packed hearings in the side walls of the trough 1, While the ends of the shaft 6a of the roll 6 are rotatively supported in ball bearing assemblies 13 set into the side walls of the trough. To one end of the shaft 6a of roll 6 is secured a sprocket wheel which is driven, through a chain, from a sprocket pinion on the shaft of a regulatable speed gear unit. The roll 5 is positively driven at the same peripheral speed as the roll 6 through a chain trained about a sprocket pinion on the shaft of the former and a sprocket Wheel on the shaft of the latter.
The squeeze roll 7 is suspended by fixed arms 22 on a cross shaft 23 whereof the opposite ends are engaged in bearings 24 at the top ends of toothed rack bars 25 constrained to endwise or up and down movement in vertical grooves in the outer faces of the side walls of frames 3 and 4 and held to said grooves by retaining strips. Meshing with the rack bars 25 are spur pinions 27 respectively at opposite ends of a cross shaft 28 rotatively borne in the side walls of the trough 1 below the trough bottom. The ends of the rock shaft 23 extend outwardly beyond the bearings 24 at the tops of the rack bars 25,- and atlixed to them are short arms having, at their distal ends, small rollers that bear upon the edges of eccentric cams which are movable about projecting studs on said rack bars. Fulcrumed at their bottom ends to lateral brackets on the rack bars 25 are cylinders whereof the piston rods are pivotally connected to short lever extensions of the eccentric cams. The stainless steel wiper roll indicated at 37 serves to keep the front or upper exposed portion of the squeeze roll 7 clean of the liquid.
The padder roll 8 is similarly suspended within the trough by arms 38 fast on a cross shaft 39 whereof the opposite ends are engaged in bearings 40 at the top ends of rack bars 41, the latter being slidable in vertical grooves in the outer faces of the'side walls of frames 3 and 4 and held to said grooves by keeper strips provided for that purpose. Also similarly, the rack bars 41 mesh with spur pinions '43 at opposite ends of a separate cross shaft 45 rotatively borne in the side walls of the trough 1 below the trough bottom. Here also, short arms, afiixed to opposite ends of the cross shaft 39, have adjustable rollers that bear upon eccentric cams movable about pro jecting studs on the rack bars 41, short lever extensions of said eccentric cams being connected to the piston rods of pressure fluid cylinders which, at their lower ends, are fulcrumed to lateral brackets on said rack bars.
The journals 55 of the quetch roll 10 are engaged in bearing blocks not shown which are slidably confined to longitudinal guideways in upstanding carrier arms 58 fulcrumed on the protruding end housings of the inset bearings 13 wherein the roll 6 is journalled. Atop the arms 58 are pressure fluid-actuated devices in the form of diaphragm motors 60 of which the pendent stems 61 are adjustably connected to the aforementioned bearing blocks.
The dressing roll 11 has its journals engaged respectively in the short upright extremities of bell crank levers fulcrumed on fixed studs 67, the longer or horizontal extremities of said bell crank levers being coupled, by means of adjustable links to the aforementioned hearing blocks.
Bolted to the carrier arms 58 at their bottoms are gear sectors 70 which are in mesh with spur pinions 71 at the outer ends of another transverse shaft 72, said shaft being operable through a sprocket chain 73 by a reversible servo motor 75.
Surrounding the exposed surface portion of the quetch roll 10 with slight intervening clearance 78 is a shroud 30 in the form of a hollow hook which is curved concentrically with said roll, and which is secured at opposite ends, by brackets to the slide bearing blocks of the quetch roll. During operation of the apparatus a pressurized gaseous tempering medium, such as steam, is introduced into the shroud 80 adjacent one of its longitudinal edges as at 81, for ultimate discharge into the clearance interval 78 through a slit 82 in the inner wall of the shroud adjacent the opposite longitudinal edges of the latter. A similar shroud 85 is provided for the dressing roll 11 into which steam is introduced through hose 86 adjacent one longitudinal edge for discharge through a lengthwise slit 87 in the inner wall of said shroud adjacent its opposite longitudinal edge. Since, during the operation of the apparatus, the rolls 5 and 6 rotate in the direction of the arrows thereon in the drawing, the steam is carried around within the intervals 78 and 88 to keep the rolls and 11 warm and moist and thereby prevent premature chilling and hardening of the sizing on the material M as it rounds said rolls. For a similar purpose the submerging roll 6 is kept heated from within by steam introduced axially thereof at one end and exhausted from the other end thereof.
In order to enhance the effectiveness of the padder roll 8, a vibrator 95 is connected to each of the arms 38 by which said roll is suspended. For a like reason each of the slide bearing blocks for the quetch roll 10 has connected thereto a similar vibrator. The vibrators 95 are shown as being of a pneumatically actuated type to which compressed air is conducted through flexible tubes 97.
Compressed air for operation of the cylinders influential upon the squeeze roll 7 is supplied through a pipe line having branches which respectively extend to the upper and lower ends of said cylinders. Interposed in the aforesaid pipe line is a plunger type control valve 101 which is arranged to be actuated by a cam 102 on the shaft 72. Similarly, compressed air for operation of the cylinder influential upon the padder roll 8 is supplied through a pipe having branches extending, respectively, to the upper and lower ends of said cylinders. Interposed in the pipe line 105 is a control valve similar to the control valve 101, arranged to be actuated by a separate cam on the shaft 72. By way of two other pipe lines, compressed air is supplied respectively to tops and the bottoms of the diaphragm motors 60 influential upon the quetch roll 10.
Operation Assume the apparatus to be running in the accompanying drawing with the rolls 5 and 6 turning in the direction of the arrows thereon. As the material M passes between the unsubrnerged portion of the roll 5 (kept clean by the wiper roll 5a) and the squeeze roll 7 with its wiper roll 37, it is held against said roll 5 under pressure by the action of the cylinders provided for that purpose. As a result, the entrained air is forced out of the material and the latter is thereby pre-conditioned to rapidly absorb the treating liquid upon entering the bath and underpassing the squeeze roll 7. In upwardly rounding the padder roll 3 and passing between it and the roll 6, the absorbed liquid is caused to thoroughly penetrate the material due to the pressure exerted upon the padder roll by action of the cylinders associated therewith, even penetration of the liquid being assured through the constant vibration induced in said padder roll by the vibrators 95. As the material M emerges from the bath and passes between the roll 6 and the quetch roll 10 (which is maintained in contact with the roll 6 under pressure by the action of the diaphragm motors 60) excess liquid is displaced from the material and drains back into the trough, the liquid so removed being prevented from congealing due to the heating of the roll 6 from within. Finally, as the material passes between the quetch roll 10 and the associated dressing roll 11, any liquid which may have been trapped under the material in rounding the roll 6 is removed, the steam discharged from shrouds and incidentally serving to prevent congealing of the liquid on the bare portions of the rolls 10 and 11.
In practice, a suitable means (not illustrated) is provided to cause the servo motor 75 to partially turn in one direction or the other upon increasing or decreasing the speed of the roll 6 and, in turn, the rate of travel of the material M through the apparatus, so that compensative increase or decrease of air is supplied to the upper ends of the cylinders associated with rolls 7 and 8 and to the upper ends of the diaphragm motors 60. In this way more or less pressure is caused to be exerted proportionately upon the squeeze and padder rolls 7 and 8 and upon the quetch roll 10 as may be required or desired in the treatment of different kinds of yarns or textile materials run through the apparatus. Due to turning of the shaft 72, the arms 58 will be tilted either to the left or to the right of vertical center as shown in full and dotted lines in the drawing so that the material will pass about more or less of the surface of the roll 6. It is to be understood that the operation is such that when the speed of travel of the material M is increased, the pressure on the squeeze, dressing roll 11 and padder rolls 7 and 8 is increased and the quetch roll 10 is moved leftward about the roll 6, and vice versa. According to our invention therefore, the material is evenly treated with assurance of uniform absorption of the liquid throughout, the length and breadth of the sheet regardless of the speed of travel of the material.
It is to be understood that we do not consider ourselves limited to the precise details of construction herein shown by way of example, since these may be varied or modified in many ways without departing from the spirit of the invention as will be readily understood by those schooled in the textile treating art.
Having thus described our invention, we claim:
1. A method of treating continuously running textile material with a liquid comprising the steps of directing ,said material downwardly into a bath of said liquid, squeezing said downwardly moving material at the surface of said liquid with a pressure proportional to the speed of said running material to displace entrained air therefrom, intermittently padding said material While submerged in said liquid with a pressure proportional to the speed of said running material, directing said material above the surface of said liquid and squeezing said material above the surface of said liquid with a pressure proportional to the speed of said running material, thereby removing excess liquid from said material.
2. A method of treating continuously running textile material with a liquid comprising the steps of directing said material downwardly into a bath of said liquid, squeezing said downwardly moving material at the surface of said liquid with a pressure proportional to the speed of said running material to displace entrained air therefrom, allowing said material to absorb said liquid while running submerged therein, intermittently padding 5 6 said material while submerged in said liquid with a pressures of each of said squeezing actions are greater as the sure proportional to the speed of said running material, speed of said running material increases. directing said material above the surface of said liquid and squeezing said material above the surface of said References Cited m the file of thls Pawnt liquid with a pressure proportional to the speed of said 5 UNITED STATES PATENTS running material, thereby removing excess liquid from 2,627,480 Heizer 3 1953 said material, and then squeezing said material again 2,849,784 Adams Sam 2 53 while moving upwardly above the surface of said liquid 2 2 0 suggs 2 195 with a pressure proportional to the speed of said run- 10 2, 34,393 li May 5, 1959 g matelial- 2,977,662 Freeze et a1 Apr. 4, 1961 3. The method defined in claim 2 wherein the pres- 2,99%626 Kabelitz July 18, 1961

Claims (1)

1. A METHOD OF TREATING CONTINUOUSLY RUNNING TEXTILE MATERIAL WITH A LIQUID COMPRISING THE STEPS OF DIRECTING SAID MATERIAL DOWNWARDLY INTO A BATH OF SAID LIQUID SQUEEZING SAID DOWNWARDLY MOVING MATERIAL AT THE SURFACE OF SAID LIQUID WITH A PRESSURE PROPORTIONAL TO THE SPEED OF SAID RUNNING MATERIAL TO DISPLACE ENTRAINED AIR THEREFROM, INTERMITTENTLY PADDING SAID MATERIAL WHILE SUBMERGED IN SAID LIQUID WITH A PRESSURE PROPORTIONAL TO THE SPEED OF SAID RUNNING MATERIAL, DIRECTING SAID MATERIAL ABOVE THE SURFACE OF SAID LIQUID WITH A PRESMATERIAL ABOVE THE SURFACE OF SAID LIQUID WITH A PRESSURE PROPORTIONAL TO THE SPEED OF SAID RUNNING MATERIAL, THEREBY REMOVING EXCESS LIQUID FROM SAID MATERIAL.
US76436A 1957-05-08 1960-12-07 Method for treatment of textile materials with liquids Expired - Lifetime US3076724A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US76436A US3076724A (en) 1957-05-08 1960-12-07 Method for treatment of textile materials with liquids

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US657765A US2977662A (en) 1957-05-08 1957-05-08 Apparatus for treatment of textiles with liquids
US76436A US3076724A (en) 1957-05-08 1960-12-07 Method for treatment of textile materials with liquids

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3076724A true US3076724A (en) 1963-02-05

Family

ID=26758107

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US76436A Expired - Lifetime US3076724A (en) 1957-05-08 1960-12-07 Method for treatment of textile materials with liquids

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3076724A (en)

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3280441A (en) * 1964-05-04 1966-10-25 Cocker Machine & Foundry Compa Apparatus for sizing textile yarns
US3441992A (en) * 1968-01-16 1969-05-06 Ira L Griffin & Sons Inc Size applicator having auxiliary squeeze rolls
USRE31115E (en) * 1976-11-05 1983-01-04 Method of padding and extracting a continuously advancing circular knit fabric tube
US20040076753A1 (en) * 2002-09-25 2004-04-22 Ballard Power Systems Inc. Impregnation of porous substrates

Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2627480A (en) * 1948-09-11 1953-02-03 Specialties Dev Corp Yarn treating method
US2849784A (en) * 1956-04-13 1958-09-02 Andrew C Adams Slashers
US2862280A (en) * 1956-03-21 1958-12-02 Cocker Machine And Foundry Com Size box
US2884893A (en) * 1953-08-11 1959-05-05 Sucker G M B H Fa Geb Textile treating apparatus
US2977662A (en) * 1957-05-08 1961-04-04 Cocker Machine And Foundry Com Apparatus for treatment of textiles with liquids
US2992626A (en) * 1956-03-22 1961-07-18 Sucker Gmbh Geb Regulation of nipping pressure of pressure rollers in impregnating machines

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2627480A (en) * 1948-09-11 1953-02-03 Specialties Dev Corp Yarn treating method
US2884893A (en) * 1953-08-11 1959-05-05 Sucker G M B H Fa Geb Textile treating apparatus
US2862280A (en) * 1956-03-21 1958-12-02 Cocker Machine And Foundry Com Size box
US2992626A (en) * 1956-03-22 1961-07-18 Sucker Gmbh Geb Regulation of nipping pressure of pressure rollers in impregnating machines
US2849784A (en) * 1956-04-13 1958-09-02 Andrew C Adams Slashers
US2977662A (en) * 1957-05-08 1961-04-04 Cocker Machine And Foundry Com Apparatus for treatment of textiles with liquids

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3280441A (en) * 1964-05-04 1966-10-25 Cocker Machine & Foundry Compa Apparatus for sizing textile yarns
US3441992A (en) * 1968-01-16 1969-05-06 Ira L Griffin & Sons Inc Size applicator having auxiliary squeeze rolls
USRE31115E (en) * 1976-11-05 1983-01-04 Method of padding and extracting a continuously advancing circular knit fabric tube
US20040076753A1 (en) * 2002-09-25 2004-04-22 Ballard Power Systems Inc. Impregnation of porous substrates

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2977662A (en) Apparatus for treatment of textiles with liquids
US3207616A (en) Method and apparatus for treating tubular knitted fabric
US2045755A (en) Method of treating fabrics
GB950638A (en) Process and apparatus for finishing fabric tube
US2960963A (en) Fabric treating machine
US3076724A (en) Method for treatment of textile materials with liquids
US3314256A (en) Dyeing and similar liquid treatment of textile materials
US2067915A (en) Apparatus for the continuous treatment of textile fabrics with liquids
US3647526A (en) Method for treating textile materials
US1497075A (en) Machine for lixiviating textile fabrics
US2795839A (en) Fluid treating apparatus
US1854526A (en) Method and means for treating textile fabrics
US2603077A (en) Machine for dyeing fabrics
US2142043A (en) Machine and process for finishing mercerized cotton
US1916946A (en) Process for wet-treatment, especially for washing textile goods in the form of fabrics
US1741338A (en) Method and means for treating textile fabrics
US4046942A (en) Method of producing an endless follower, and product per se
US2171611A (en) Method of removing fat from animal casings
US2107485A (en) Process and apparatus for adhesively uniting plies of fabric material
US3505835A (en) Apparatus for the continuous liquid treatment of fabrics
US3036359A (en) Apparatus for treating continuous running materials
US4346503A (en) Process for de-twisting and craping a cloth composed of twisted yarns
US4263008A (en) Method and apparatus for continuously carrying out weight reduction and mercerization of cloth material
US2168479A (en) Soaking machine
US3120050A (en) Method for treating continuous running materials