US3312184A - Quilting machine of the endless guide track type - Google Patents

Quilting machine of the endless guide track type Download PDF

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US3312184A
US3312184A US346203A US34620364A US3312184A US 3312184 A US3312184 A US 3312184A US 346203 A US346203 A US 346203A US 34620364 A US34620364 A US 34620364A US 3312184 A US3312184 A US 3312184A
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auxiliary
sewing
vertical
bar
main
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David R Cash
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D05SEWING; EMBROIDERING; TUFTING
    • D05BSEWING
    • D05B11/00Machines for sewing quilts or mattresses
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D05SEWING; EMBROIDERING; TUFTING
    • D05BSEWING
    • D05B57/00Loop takers, e.g. loopers

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  • a conventional quilting machine of the endless guidetrack type comprise: (A) a sewing machine having an upper thread-sewing mechanism and a lower thread-locking mechanism; (B) a stationary floor-mounted main frame having (1) a pair of horizontally-spaced verticallyarranged side standards and (2) a pair of verticallyspaced horizontally-arranged cross members extending from one standard to the other, including (a) a base frame for the lower thread-locking mechanism and (b) a head frame for the upper thread-sewing mechanism; (C) movable carriage means mounted on the floor to support a workpiece for operative universal uniplanar movement relative to said sewing machine, said carriage means including (1) a lower carriage mounted on the floor for longitudinal back and forth movement, and (2) an upper carriage mounted on the lower carriage for transverse back and forth movement; (D) an elongate endless guidetrack stationarily mounted on the upper carriage and shaped to reproduce a given sewing line design; and (E) drive means for operating the sewing machine and for driving said guide-track so as to move the carriage means along
  • FIG. 3 is a partly broken front elevational view of the sewing end of said sewing machine
  • FIGS. 57 are horizontal sectional views respectively taken along lines 5-5, 6-6 and 77 of FIG. 3;
  • the support 1 of element A is provided by the floor on which the quilting machine rests and a stationary floormounted main frame having (1) a pair of horizontallyspaced vertically-arranged side standards 2 and 3 and (2) a pair of vertically-spaced horizontally-arranged upper and lower cross frame members 4 and 5 extending from one side standard to the other and secured to both, the upper cross member 4 constituting the head frame 4 and the lower cross member 5 constituting a base frame 5.
  • auxiliary means for mounting a pair of auxiliary vertical sewing needles on said sewing machine comprising (1) a 1st auxiliary cross bar,
  • auxiliary mounting means on opposite sides of the center of said 1st auxiliary cross bar for rigidly mounting said pair of auxiliary vertical needle bars directly on said 1st auxiliary cross bar, one on each side of said main vertical needle bar;
  • auxiliary means for mounting auxiliary presser feet on said sewing machine comprising (1) a 2nd auxiliary cross bar,
  • auxiliary mounting means on opposite sides of the center of said 2nd auxiliary cross bar for rigidly mounting said pair of auxiliary vertical presser foot bars directly on said 2nd auxiliary cross bar, one on each side of said main vertical presser foot bar;
  • one of said auxiliary cross bars has a vertical bore through .which one of said auxiliary vertical bars passes.
  • one of said auxiliary cross bars has three vertical bores through which one of said main vertical bars 6 and both of the corresponding pair of auxiliary bars pass.
  • said improvement includes (1) auxiliary guide means connected to and supported by said cross head frame and arranged to receive and guide said upwardly projecting portion of said one auxiliary vertical bar.
  • said improvement includes (1) auxiliary guide means connected to and supported by said cross head frame and arranged to receive and guide said upwardly projecting portions of said auxiliary vertical needle and presser foot bars.

Description

April 4, 1967 D. R. CASH 3,312,184
QUILTING MACHINE OF THE ENDLESS GUIDE TRACK TYPE Filed Feb. 20, 1964 T 5 Sheets-Sheet l 1 INVENTOR.
DAVID R. CASH ATTORNEY D. R. CASH April 4, 1967 QUILTING MACHINE OF THE ENDLESS GUIDE TRACK TYPE Filed Feb. 20, 1964 5 Sheets-Sheet 2 INVENTOR. DAVID R. CASH BY WWW ATTORNEY April 1967 D. R. CASH 3,312,184
QUILTING MACHINE OF THE ENDLESS GUIDE TRACK TYPE Filed Feb. 20, 1964 5 Sheets-Sheet 5 0 00% "0 m2? (2&9.
INVENTOR. DAVI D R. CA8 H lax/WWW ATTORNEY United States Patent 3,312,184 QUILTING MACHINE OF THE ENDLESS GUIDE TRACK TYPE David R. Cash, 5120 Maryview Drive, Louisville, Ky. 40216 Filed Feb. 20, 1964, Ser. No. 346,203 Claims. (Cl. 112118) This invention relates to improvements in quilting machines of the endless guide-track type. In machines of this type, the layers of material, constituting a quilt, are sewn together along an endless path which is contoured to reproduce a given sewing line design.
A conventional quilting machine of the endless guidetrack type comprise: (A) a sewing machine having an upper thread-sewing mechanism and a lower thread-locking mechanism; (B) a stationary floor-mounted main frame having (1) a pair of horizontally-spaced verticallyarranged side standards and (2) a pair of verticallyspaced horizontally-arranged cross members extending from one standard to the other, including (a) a base frame for the lower thread-locking mechanism and (b) a head frame for the upper thread-sewing mechanism; (C) movable carriage means mounted on the floor to support a workpiece for operative universal uniplanar movement relative to said sewing machine, said carriage means including (1) a lower carriage mounted on the floor for longitudinal back and forth movement, and (2) an upper carriage mounted on the lower carriage for transverse back and forth movement; (D) an elongate endless guidetrack stationarily mounted on the upper carriage and shaped to reproduce a given sewing line design; and (E) drive means for operating the sewing machine and for driving said guide-track so as to move the carriage means along a path reproducing said sewing line design and thereby cause the stationary sewing mechanism to sew that design into the workpiece. The term operative universal uniplanar movement is used to designate operat-ive movement in any direction within a horizontal (or equivalent) plane.
The principal object of this invention is to provide a quilting machine of the endless guide-track type, which is capable of sewing two or three reproductions of the same sewing line design into the same quilt at the same time.
Another important object of the invention is to accomplish the principal object through the use of simple and inexpensive means which may be easily prepared for two line and three line operation and which can be used with any of a variety of endless guide-tracks providing different sewing-line designs. I
The objectives of my invention are readily accomplished by providing the upper mechanism of the sewing machine with a pair of transversely arranged bars, one constituting a 3-needle bar mounted on the needle-reciprocating mechanism and the other constituting a 3- presser foot ba-r mounted on the presser foo-t raising and lowering mechanism and by providing the lower mechanism of the sewing machine with two additional threadlocking mechanisms. With an arrangement of this character, one may use the quilting machine in the conventional way with a single needle or use it in accordance with my invention, with either two or three needles to produce two or three reproductions of the same sewing line design in the same quilt at the same time.
The invention is illustrated in the accompanying drawings wherein:
FIG. 1 is a perspective View of a conventional quilting .machine of the endless guide-track type which, in accordance with my invention, is equipped with a multineedle sewing machine;
3,3l2,l84 Patented Apr. 4, 1967 FIG. 2 is a perspective view of a sewing machine shown in FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is a partly broken front elevational view of the sewing end of said sewing machine;
FIG. 4 is a partly broken vertical sectional view taken along line 44 of FIG. 3;
FIG. 4B is a vertical sectional view taken along line 4B-4B of FIG. 4;
FIGS. 57 are horizontal sectional views respectively taken along lines 5-5, 6-6 and 77 of FIG. 3; and
FIGS. 8l0 are plan views showing a single-needle sewing design in FIG. 8, a Z-needle sewing design in FIG. 9 and a 3-needle sewing design in FIG. 10, each of these views being transversely broken to avoid needless repetition.
Conventional structure The quilting machine shown in FIG. 1 conventionally comprises: (A) a support 1; (B) a sewing machine 8; (C) movable carriage means 16 and 18; (D) an elongate endless guide-track 22; and (E) drive means 25.
The support 1 of element A is provided by the floor on which the quilting machine rests and a stationary floormounted main frame having (1) a pair of horizontallyspaced vertically-arranged side standards 2 and 3 and (2) a pair of vertically-spaced horizontally-arranged upper and lower cross frame members 4 and 5 extending from one side standard to the other and secured to both, the upper cross member 4 constituting the head frame 4 and the lower cross member 5 constituting a base frame 5.
The sewing machine 8 of element B has an upper thread-sewing mechanism (i.e. an upper) mounted on the head frame 4 and a main lower thread-locking mechanism, which cannot be seen in FIG. 1, mounted on the base frame 5. As can be seen in FIGS. 24, the sewing mechanism main vertically reciprocates a vertically-arranged needle bar 9, the lower end of which removably carries a main vertical sewing needle 10 and also raises and lowers a main vertically-arranged presser foot-bar 11, the lower end of which carries a main presser foot 12. The main lower thread-locking mechanism 13 is rotated in timed relationship with these vertically-moving parts.
The movable carriage means of element C is mounted on the floor 1 to support a workpiece W for operative universal uniplanar movement. This carriage means includes: (1) a lower carriage 16 mounted on the floor tracks 17 for longitudinal back-and-forth movement; and (2) an upper carriage 18 mounted on lower-carriage tracks 19 for longitudinal 'back-and-forth movement with the lower carriage, for transverse back-and-fort-h movement relative to the lower carriage and for universal uniplanar movement relative to the sewing machine.
The elongate endless guide-track 22 of element D is mounted on the upper carriage 18. This track follows a contour which reproduces a given sewing line design. The contour of the track establishes the sewing line design or pattern which the upper carriage 18 will follow in causing the sewing machine to sew that sewing line design into the workpiece W.
The drive means 25 of element E is fixedly mounted on the main frame within side standard 3. It has three dri-ve connections, one of which projects from that side standard 3 through the interior of a sheet metal casing 26 (extending alongside head frame 4) to the sewing head for reciprocating the needle and raising and lowering the presser foot. Its second drive connection projects from side standard 3 to extend along the top side of base frame '5 and ultimately connect with the main lower thread-locking mechanism 13 through a shaft 27 carrying gear 2 8 which meshes with worm 29 (see FIG. 4) to operate the main lower thread-locking mechanism 13 in timed relationship with the upper sewing mechanism. Its
third drive connection constitutes a pattern drive connection, which leads to and terminates in a pattern follower 30 having driving engagement with the endless guide-track 22 for moving that track and the upper carriage 18 in accordance with the sewing line design. A suitable pattern follower is shown and described in my presently pending application S.N. 185,041, new Patent No. 3,127,858.
Inventive Structure In accordance with my invention, the upper'threadsewing mechanism is provided with means for suppor=ting and guiding an additional or auxiliary pair of needles and of presser feet while the main lower thread-locking mechanism is provided with two additional auxiliary thread-locking mechanisms.
3-needle support means-In arranging for the sewing head to reciprocate three needles, I provide the threadsewing mechanism with an auxiliary multi-needle cross bar 35, mount that auxiliary cross bar 35 on the conventional main needle bar 9 and mount two differential or auxiliary needle bars 36 and 37 on the auxiliary cross bar 35, one at each end thereof. To this end, the auxiliary multi-needle cross bar 35 is provided with three vertical bores, one at its center and one on each end portion. The conventional main needle bar 9 passes through the center bore of the auxiliary multi-needle cross bar 35 which is clamped or otherwise rigidly secured to the main needle bar 9. The auxiliary needle- bars 36 and 37 pass vertically through their respective bores in the auxiliary cross bar 35 and are rigidly mounted on bar 35 by suitable means which may comprise clamping means, set screws or the like. These auxiliary needlebars 56 and 37 are arranged removably to carry auxiliary sewing needles 38 and 39.
3-presser-f00t support means.In further accordance with my invention, the conventional main vertically-arranged presser-foot bar 11 is arranged to extend through the vertical center bore of an auxiliary horizontallyarranged multi-pressed foot cross bar 45 which is rigidly mounted on the main vertical presser-foot bar 11. The auxiliary multi-presser foot cross bar 45 similarly carries a pair of auxiliary vertically-arranged presser- foot bars 46 and 47, one for each end of the auxiliary cross bar 45, each of the auxiliary vertical bars 46 and 47 passing through vertical bores in opposite end portions of the auxiliary cross bar 45 and being rigidly secured thereto by any suitable means. These auxiliary resser- foot bars 45 and 47 are arranged removably to carry auxiliary presser feet 48 and 49.
Auxiliary guides.The upper end portion of each auxiliary needle- bar 36 and 37 and of each auxiliary presser- foot bar 46 and 47 is slidably engaged and guided by suitable auxiliary guide blocks 50 and 51. These auxiliary guide blocks are secured to opposite sides of the sewing head and each is provided with a pair of vertical guide ways, one for a given auxiliary needle bar and the other for the auxiliary presser-foot bar associated with that particular auxiliary needle bar. Thus, the verticaL guide ways in auxiliary guide block 50 are respectively aligned with (and arranged to receive) the auxiliary needle bar 36 and auxiliary presser foot bar 46 while the other auxiliary guide block 51 is respectively aligned with (and arranged to receive) the auxiliary needle bar 37 and auxiliary presser foot bar 47.
Auxiliary thread supply and feed means.Naturally, for each of the auxiliary needles 38 and 39, an auxiliary thread supply will be provided along with conventional means for pulling thread from these sources of supply.
Auxiliary thread-locking mechanisms.As shown in FIG. 3, a pair of auxiliary thread- locking mechanisms 53 and 54 are provided, one on each side of the threadlocking mechanism 13. These auxiliary thread-locking mechanisms respectively cooperate with auxiliary needles 38 and 39.
Operation C0nventi0nal.-The foregoing quilting machine may he conventionally operated with a single needle 10 to sew any of the customary variety of single sewing line designs such as that shown at 60 in FIG. 8. In this case, we assume that the machine starts at point 61 to saw the line leading to point 62 and that it continues in a like manner to sew the lines leading to successive points 63-74 so that it completes the design upon sewing the line leading from 74 back to its starting point at 81. With a single needle, it can sew all quilts within a wide range of thicknesses.
Z-needle 0perati0n.-In order to perform this operation under balanced load conditions, the center needle 10 should be removed and the two auxiliary needles 38 and 39 mounted on their respective auxiliary needle bars 36 and 37. Now the machine may be operated in the conventional manner to sew design starting say at point 81. However, in accordance with my invention, it will operate simultaneously to sew design at starting point 101. It will be appreciated that designs 80 and 1% are duplicates of each other and of design 60, all three designs being sewn in accordance with the sewing line design established by the endless guide track 22.
With two needles in use at the same time, the machine performs twice as much work as it performs with one needle when all other conditions are the same; hence, in such case, there will necessarily be a reduction in the maximum quilt thickness which the machine is capable of sewing. I have obtained excellent results with a spacing of 2 /2" between the center needle and each of the auxiliary needles. Accordingly, in this Z-needle operation, pattern lti'll will be offset from pattern 8% by 5".
S-needle operation.Since a 3-need-le operation will be clear from the foregoing, it should suffice to say that, when this quilting machine is operated with three needles to sew duplicate designs 60, 80 and 100 in offset relationship, the resulting end product will appear as in FIG. 10.
Having described my invention, I claim:
ll. In a quilting machine of the type, having a guidetrack shaped to reproduce a given sewing line design or pattern, wherein a drive means not only drives a sewing machine, having an upper sewing head mounted on a cross head frame to reciprocate a main vertical sewing needle on a main vertical needle bar while raising and lowering a .main presser foot on a main vertical presser foot bar and having a main lower-thread-locking mechanism mounted on a cross base frame to co-act with said main vertical sewing needle, but also contemporaneously drives a carriage means along a guide-track path which reproduces said given sewing-line pattern to cause said sewing machine to sew that pattern into a workpiece, an improvement rendering said sewing machine capable of sewing up to at least two additional reproductions of the same sewing line pattern into the same workpiece at the same time, comprising:
(A) auxiliary means for mounting a pair of auxiliary vertical sewing needles on said sewing machine comprising (1) a 1st auxiliary cross bar,
(2) auxiliary mounting means at the center of said 1st auxiliary cross bar for rigidly mounting that 1st auxiliary cross bar directly on said main vertical needle bar for movement therewith,
(3) a pair of auxiliary vertical needle bars, and
(4) auxiliary mounting means on opposite sides of the center of said 1st auxiliary cross bar for rigidly mounting said pair of auxiliary vertical needle bars directly on said 1st auxiliary cross bar, one on each side of said main vertical needle bar;
(B) auxiliary means for mounting auxiliary presser feet on said sewing machine comprising (1) a 2nd auxiliary cross bar,
(2) auxiliary mounting means at the center of said 2nd auxiliary cross bar for rigidly mounting that cross bar directly on said main presser foot bar for movement therewith,
(3) a pair of auxiliary vertical presser-foot bars, each having an auxiliary resser-foot at its lower end, and
(4) auxiliary mounting means on opposite sides of the center of said 2nd auxiliary cross bar for rigidly mounting said pair of auxiliary vertical presser foot bars directly on said 2nd auxiliary cross bar, one on each side of said main vertical presser foot bar; and
(C) means for mounting a pair of auxiliary threadlocking mechanisms on said cross base frame, one on each side of said main lower thread locking mechanism for simultaneous operation therewith and for co-action with said auxiliary vertical sewing needles.
2. The improvement of claim 1, wherein:
(A) one of said auxiliary cross bars has a vertical bore through .which one of said auxiliary vertical bars passes.
3. The improvement of claim 1, wherein:
(A) one of said auxiliary cross bars has three vertical bores through which one of said main vertical bars 6 and both of the corresponding pair of auxiliary bars pass.
4. The improvement of claim 1, wherein:
(A) one of said auxiliary vertical bars projects upwardly from its auxiliary cross bar; and
(B) said improvement includes (1) auxiliary guide means connected to and supported by said cross head frame and arranged to receive and guide said upwardly projecting portion of said one auxiliary vertical bar.
5. The improvement of claim 1, wherein:
(A) said auxiliary vertical needle and resser-foot bars, on one and the same side of said main vertical needle and resser-foot bars, both project upwardly from their respective auxiliary cross bars; and
(B) said improvement includes (1) auxiliary guide means connected to and supported by said cross head frame and arranged to receive and guide said upwardly projecting portions of said auxiliary vertical needle and presser foot bars.
References Cited by the Examiner UNITED STATES PATENTS 112,189 2/1871 Smith 112-163 X 340,497 4/ 1886 Eschner 112-2 3,083,654 4/1963 Cash 112-3 3,247,813 4/1966 Hart 112-262 X JORDAN FRANKLIN, Primary Examiner.
G. V. LARKIN, Assistant Examiner.

Claims (1)

1. IN A QUILTING MACHINE OF THE TYPE, HAVING A GUIDETRACK SHAPED TO REPRODUCE A GIVEN SEWING LINE DESIGN OR PATTERN, WHEREIN A DRIVE MEANS NOT ONLY DRIVES A SEWING MACHINE, HAVING AN UPPER SEWING HEAD MOUNTED ON A CROSS HEAD FRAME TO RECIPROCATE A MAIN VERTICAL SEWING NEEDLE ON A MAIN VERTICAL NEEDLE BAR WHILE RAISING AND LOWERING A MAIN PRESSER FOOT ON A MAIN VERTICAL PRESSER FOOT BAR AND HAVING A MAIN LOWER-THREAD-LOCKING MECHANISM MOUNTED ON A CROSS BASE FRAME TO CO-ACT WITH SAID MAIN VERTICAL SEWING NEEDLE, BUT ALSO CONTEMPORANEOUSLY DRIVES A CARRIAGE MEANS ALONG A GUIDE-TRACK PATH WHICH REPRODUCES SAID GIVEN SEWING-LINE PATTERN TO CAUSE SAID SEWING MACHINE TO SEW THAT PATTERN INTO A WORKPIECE, AN IMPROVEMENT RENDERING SAID SEWING MACHINE CAPABLE OF SEWING UP TO AT LEAST TWO ADDITIONAL REPRODUCTIONS OF THE SAME SEWING LINE PATTERN INTO THE SAME WORKPIECE AT THE SAME TIME, COMPRISING: (A) AUXILIARY MEANS FOR MOUNTING A PAIR OF AUXILIARY VERTICAL SEWING NEEDLES ON SAID SEWING MACHINE COMPRISING (1) A 1ST AUXILIARY CROSS BAR, (2) AUXILIARY MOUNTING MEANS AT THE CENTER OF SAID 1ST AUXILIARY CROSS BAR FOR RIGIDLY MOUNTING THAT 1ST AUXILIARY CROSS BAR DIRECTLY ON SAID MAIN VERTICAL NEEDLE BAR FOR MOVEMENT THEREWITH, (3) A PAIR OF AUXILIARY VERTICAL NEEDLE BARS, AND (4) AUXILIARY MOUNTING MEANS ON OPPOSITE SIDES OF THE CENTER OF SAID 1ST AUXILIARY CROSS BAR FOR RIGIDLY MOUNTING SAID PAIR OF AUXILIARY VERTICAL NEEDLE BARS DIRECTLY ON SAID 1ST AUXILIARY CROSS BAR, ONE ON EACH SIDE OF SAID MAIN VERTICAL NEEDLE BAR; (B) AUXILIARY MEANS FOR MOUNTING AUXILIARY PRESSER FEET ON SAID SEWING MACHINE COMPRISING (1) A 2ND AUXILIARY CROSS BAR, (2) AUXILIARY MOUNTING MEANS AT THE CENTER OF SAID 2ND AUXILIARY CROSS BAR FOR RIGIDLY MOUNTING THAT CROSS BAR DIRECTLY ON SAID MAIN PRESSER FOOT BAR FOR MOVEMENT THEREWITH, (3) A PAIR OF AUXILIARY VERTICAL PRESSER-FOOT BARS, EACH HAVING AN AUXILIARY PRESSER-FOOT AT ITS LOWER END, AND (4) AUXILIARY MOUNTING MEANS ON OPPOSITE SIDES OF THE CENTER OF SAID 2ND AUXILIARY CROSS BAR FOR RIGIDLY MOUNTING SAID PAIR OF AUXILIARY VERTICAL PRESSER FOOT BARS DIRECTLY ON SAID 2ND AUXILIARY CROSS BAR, ONE ON EACH SIDE OF SAID MAIN VERTICAL PRESSER FOOT BAR; AND (C) MEANS FOR MOUNTING A PAIR OF AUXILIARY THREADLOCKING MECHANISMS ON SAID CROSS BASE FRAME, ONE ON EACH SIDE OF SAID MAIN LOWER THREAD-LOCKING MECHANISM FOR SIMULTANEOUS OPERATION THEREWITH AND FOR CO-ACTION WITH SAID AUXILIARY VERTICAL SEWING NEEDLES.
US346203A 1965-12-29 1964-02-20 Quilting machine of the endless guide track type Expired - Lifetime US3312184A (en)

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Cited By (15)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3683706A (en) * 1970-11-30 1972-08-15 William J O Neill Drive for a rectilinear scanner for organ imaging
US4501208A (en) * 1982-09-16 1985-02-26 Meca S.A.S. Di Cagnoni Landoni S.C. Process for the bidirectional feeding of fabrics in quilting machines, and a machine utilizing this process
US4860675A (en) * 1988-07-18 1989-08-29 Td Quilting Machinery Automatic quilting machine for specialized quilting of patterns which can be controlled by a remote joy stick and monitored on a video screen
US4876976A (en) * 1988-07-18 1989-10-31 Td Quilting Machinery Automatic quilting machine and method for specialized quilting of patterns which can be controlled by a remote joystick and monitored on a video screen including pattern duplication through a reprogrammable computer
US4953485A (en) * 1989-04-10 1990-09-04 Td Quilting Machinery Automatic quilting machine for specialized quilting of patterns which can be created by utilizing computer graphics in conjunction with a reprogrammable computer
US4953483A (en) * 1989-08-04 1990-09-04 Td Quilting Machinery Automatic quilting machine and method for specialized quilting of patterns with separate computers to control the stitching and table movement functions
US4989527A (en) * 1986-09-19 1991-02-05 Automated Machinery Systems, Inc. Sewing system
US5915317A (en) * 1997-12-22 1999-06-29 Thrash; Patrick J. Automated gantry-type stitching system
US5931107A (en) * 1997-12-22 1999-08-03 Mcdonnell Douglas Corporation Advanced stitching head for making stitches in a textile article having variable thickness
US5953231A (en) * 1997-12-22 1999-09-14 Mcdonnell Douglas Corporation Automated quality control for stitching of textile articles
US6128545A (en) * 1997-12-22 2000-10-03 Mcdonnell Douglas Corporation Automated apparatus and method of generating native code for a stitching machine
US6198983B1 (en) 1997-12-22 2001-03-06 Mcdonnell Douglas Corporation Table-driven software architecture for a stitching system
US6615756B2 (en) * 2001-10-31 2003-09-09 Laurel W. Barrus Adjustable, lightweight, collapsible quilting apparatus and methods for using same
US6792884B1 (en) 2003-09-08 2004-09-21 Handi Quilter Company, Inc. Adjustable, lightweight, collapsible quilting apparatus and methods for using same
US9021969B1 (en) * 2011-05-06 2015-05-05 Penny Roberts Multi-spool threader

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US112189A (en) * 1871-02-28 Improvement in sewing-machines
US340497A (en) * 1886-04-20 Multiple sewing-machine
US3083654A (en) * 1960-01-08 1963-04-02 Cash Machine Co James Mattress sewing table
US3247813A (en) * 1963-07-05 1966-04-26 Cambridge Filter Corp Method and apparatus for making air filters

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US112189A (en) * 1871-02-28 Improvement in sewing-machines
US340497A (en) * 1886-04-20 Multiple sewing-machine
US3083654A (en) * 1960-01-08 1963-04-02 Cash Machine Co James Mattress sewing table
US3247813A (en) * 1963-07-05 1966-04-26 Cambridge Filter Corp Method and apparatus for making air filters

Cited By (16)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3683706A (en) * 1970-11-30 1972-08-15 William J O Neill Drive for a rectilinear scanner for organ imaging
US4501208A (en) * 1982-09-16 1985-02-26 Meca S.A.S. Di Cagnoni Landoni S.C. Process for the bidirectional feeding of fabrics in quilting machines, and a machine utilizing this process
US4989527A (en) * 1986-09-19 1991-02-05 Automated Machinery Systems, Inc. Sewing system
US4860675A (en) * 1988-07-18 1989-08-29 Td Quilting Machinery Automatic quilting machine for specialized quilting of patterns which can be controlled by a remote joy stick and monitored on a video screen
US4876976A (en) * 1988-07-18 1989-10-31 Td Quilting Machinery Automatic quilting machine and method for specialized quilting of patterns which can be controlled by a remote joystick and monitored on a video screen including pattern duplication through a reprogrammable computer
US4953485A (en) * 1989-04-10 1990-09-04 Td Quilting Machinery Automatic quilting machine for specialized quilting of patterns which can be created by utilizing computer graphics in conjunction with a reprogrammable computer
US4953483A (en) * 1989-08-04 1990-09-04 Td Quilting Machinery Automatic quilting machine and method for specialized quilting of patterns with separate computers to control the stitching and table movement functions
US5931107A (en) * 1997-12-22 1999-08-03 Mcdonnell Douglas Corporation Advanced stitching head for making stitches in a textile article having variable thickness
US5915317A (en) * 1997-12-22 1999-06-29 Thrash; Patrick J. Automated gantry-type stitching system
US5953231A (en) * 1997-12-22 1999-09-14 Mcdonnell Douglas Corporation Automated quality control for stitching of textile articles
US6128545A (en) * 1997-12-22 2000-10-03 Mcdonnell Douglas Corporation Automated apparatus and method of generating native code for a stitching machine
US6198983B1 (en) 1997-12-22 2001-03-06 Mcdonnell Douglas Corporation Table-driven software architecture for a stitching system
US6615756B2 (en) * 2001-10-31 2003-09-09 Laurel W. Barrus Adjustable, lightweight, collapsible quilting apparatus and methods for using same
US6792884B1 (en) 2003-09-08 2004-09-21 Handi Quilter Company, Inc. Adjustable, lightweight, collapsible quilting apparatus and methods for using same
US9021969B1 (en) * 2011-05-06 2015-05-05 Penny Roberts Multi-spool threader
US9845558B1 (en) 2011-05-06 2017-12-19 Penny Roberts Multi-spool threader

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GB1101399A (en) 1968-01-31

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