US3349732A - Indexing apparatus for sewing machines - Google Patents

Indexing apparatus for sewing machines Download PDF

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Publication number
US3349732A
US3349732A US382048A US38204864A US3349732A US 3349732 A US3349732 A US 3349732A US 382048 A US382048 A US 382048A US 38204864 A US38204864 A US 38204864A US 3349732 A US3349732 A US 3349732A
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Prior art keywords
sewing
carriage
indexing
sewing machines
workpiece
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US382048A
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Perrella Guido
Picker Frank
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DYNACAS Ltd
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DYNACAS Ltd
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D05SEWING; EMBROIDERING; TUFTING
    • D05BSEWING
    • D05B35/00Work-feeding or -handling elements not otherwise provided for
    • D05B35/12Indicators for positioning work, e.g. with graduated scales

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  • This invention relates to an indexing apparatus for sewing machines and more specifically, to an automatic indexing apparatus adapted for use in combination with buttonhole sewing machines to provide the latter with means for sequentially sewing a plurality of spaced buttonholes in a workpiece such as shirts, dresses and the like.
  • Such attachments usually comprise a slidable carrier or work table having means adapted to hold a garment thereon and to move the latter under the sewing mechanism of the machine, automatically stopping at each predetermined 'buttonhole location. At the completion of the last buttonhole, such a carrier has had to be manually returned to its start position.
  • a further disadvantage of prior indexing devices is that they have been designed mainly for attachment to and for operation with machines for sewing lateral buttonholes in workpieces, i.e., with the longitudinal axis of the buttonhole normal to the vertical axis of the lapels or breast edges of suit jackets etc.
  • the workpiece or garment was moved to the sewing mechanism in a direction transverse to the longitudinal axis of the sewing machine.
  • the needle of the mechanism sewed in an aligned path with the said longitudinal axis 'whereby the buttonholes were sewn into the. garment normal to the edge thereof.
  • indexing attachments usually have been placed directly in front of their associated sewing machines whereby periodic routine maintenance on the machine has been extremely diflicult to carry out.
  • prior attachments usually were so integrally interconnected mechanreally with their associated machines that the latter had to be rendered inoperative if the attachment sulfered a mechanical breakdown.
  • This disadvantage has been obviated to a certain extent by the indexing attachment disclosed in our copending US. patent application Ser. No. 328,312 filed on Dec. 5, 1963, now Patent No. 3,322,083.
  • the object of the present invention therefore, is to provide automatic indexing apparatus for buttonhole sewmg machines, which apparatus is designed to overcome the above disadvantages of the devices of the prior art.
  • the device of the present invention is not an attachment insofar as this term is accepted in relation to the prior art in that the present device is disposed remote from its associated sewing machine and is not mechanically connected thereto.
  • the present device in no way interferes with manual or independent operation of its associated machine.
  • the present invention relates to the combination with the sewing mechamsm of a buttonholing machine, of an indexing apparatus to provide said sewing mechanism with means automatically to effect a plurality of spaced, sequential buttonhole sew ng operations to a workpiece;
  • said] apparatus comprising a frame having a carriage slidably mounted therealong; drive means to impart reciprocal movement to said carriage along said frame; indexing means to control said drive means and sequentially to stop said carriage during movement thereof at a plunality of selected locations on said frame; and a pair of guide arms on said carriage extending outwardly from said frame and being provided with means for clamping a workpiece therebetween; said arms and clamping means terminating adjacent opposite sides of said sewing mechanism and being adapted to transmit movement of said carriage to said workpiece relative to said sewing mechanism and to transmit movement of said sewing mechanism and said workpiece to said carriage.
  • FIG. 1 is a perspective view of the present invention operatively mounted adjacent a buttonhole sewing machine
  • FIG. 2 is an end view of the apparatus shown in FIG. 1;
  • FIG. 3 is a plan view of the apparatus showing the integers of the present invention.
  • FIG. 4 is a plan view similar to FIG. 3 showing the integers of the device at a final buttonholing position
  • FIG. 5 is broken down into several enlarged plan views of the present invention.
  • FIG. 6 is similarly broken sectional views in elevation taken along line 6'6 of FIG. 5;
  • FIG. 7 is a cross sectional view taken along the line 77 of FIG. 5;
  • FIG. 8 is a fragmentary perspective view of the tensioning arm and its associated integers
  • FIGS. 9, 10 and 11 are fragmentary sectional views, taken along the line 9-9 of FIG. 5B, and show the operation of the integers illustrated in FIG. 8;

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Sewing Machines And Sewing (AREA)

Description

Oct. 31, 1967 Filed July 13, 1964 G1. PERRELMLA EETAL INDBXING APPARATUS FOR SEWING MACHINES 19 Sheets--Sheet l 31, 1957 G. PERRELLA ETAL fi fm INDEXING APPARATUS FOR SEWING MACHINES Filed July 13, 1964 19 Sheets-Sheet Oct. 31, 196 (3. PERRELLA ETAL INDEXING APPARATUS FOR SEWING MACHINES l9 heets-$heet 4;
Filed July 13, 1964 Oct. 31, 1967 G. PERRELMLA ETAL. 39 9 INDEXING APPARATUS FOR SEWING MACHINES Filed July 13, 1964 19 Sheets-Sheet 5 I I I I I II I I I I I I II I GPERRELLA ETAL- 3 349 732 INDEXING APPARATUS FOR SEWING MACHINES Oct. 31, 1967 Filed July 15, 1964 19 Sheets-$heet 6 Oct. 31,1967 6. PERRELLA ETAL 39 9 INDEXING APPARATUS FOR SEWING MACHINES Filed July 13, 1964 l9 She e'ts-$heec 7 {[IIIIIIHIIIII IIIII? p31,
III II I I Oct. 31, 1967 Filed July 13, 1964 G. PERREELLA ETAL INDEXING APPARATUS FOR SEWING MACHINES l9 Sheets-Sheet 8 Oct. 31, 1967 Filed Jul gs. 196 1 G. PERRELLA ETAL INDEXING APPARATUS FOR SEWING MACHINES l9 Sheets-5heet 1967 a. PERRELEWA ETAL INDEXING APPARATUS FOR SEWING MACHINES Filed July 15, 1964 19 Sheets-$heet 1o Oct. 31, 1967 s. PERRELLA ETAL 334%732 INDE-XING APPARATUS FOR SEWING MACHINES Filed July 13, 1964 19 Sheets-5het 11 31, 1967 G. PEHEREFWLA ETAL, fiyiliiwfmz INDEXING APPARATUS FOR SEWING MACHINES l9 heets-$heet 12 Filed July 15. 1964 Mm /QJ 31, 1967 G. PERRELLA ETAL IN EXING APPARATUS FOR SEWING MACHINES Filed July 13, 1964 19 heets-Sheet 15 1957 ca. PERRELLA ETAL 3@3% y INDEXING APPARATUS FOR SEWING MACHINES l9 Sheets-Sheet 14 Filed July 13, 1964 Oct. 31, 1967 G. PERRELLA ETAL 3349,3 32
INDEXING APPARATUS FOR SEWING MACHINES 19 Sheets-$heet 1.5
Filed July 15, 1964 Oct. 31, 1967 (3. PERRELLA ETAL 3 34-9 732 INDEXING APPARATUS FOR SEWING MACHINES Filed July 13, 1964 19 Sheets-Sheet 1+5 Oct. 31, 1967 G. PERRELLA ETAL 354%732 INDEXING APPARATUS FOR SEWING MACHINES Filed July 15, 1964 19 Sheets-Sheet 17 G. PERRELLA ETAL 3QJ32 INDEXING APPARATUS FOR SEWING MACHINES Filed July 13, 1964 19 Sheets-$heet 18 Oct. 31, 1967 G. PERRELLA ETAL INDEXING APPARATUS FOR SEWING MACHINES l9 Sheets-8heet 19 Filed July 15, 1964 MACHINE ATTACH.
Y) Mm E I .H R N U m 2 E M O w M D D R W L T C I T A O M C I 2 6 O 2 W T W V T T|||| O W S H X Wm L A I ll 00 m m l E III lw Dlq -mhnE C T I tum S .L w w F Ni U M JNR W N N m O O S n w MACH! E United States Patent 3,349,732 INDEXENG APPARATUS FOR SEWING MACHINES Guido Perrella, Montreal, Quebec, and Frank Picker, St. Bruno, Quebec, Canada, assignors to Dynaeast LttL, Montreal, Quebec, Canada Filed July 13, 1964, Ser. No. 382,048 Claims priority, application Canada, Mar. 31, 1964, 899,130 19 Claims. (Cl. 112-65) This invention relates to an indexing apparatus for sewing machines and more specifically, to an automatic indexing apparatus adapted for use in combination with buttonhole sewing machines to provide the latter with means for sequentially sewing a plurality of spaced buttonholes in a workpiece such as shirts, dresses and the like.
Indexing devices or attachments for buttonhole sewing machines are known, US. Patent No. 2,465,232 of Mar. 22, 1949, to I ones et al. being one example of such prior devices. However, known devices of the prior art have not altogether been successful and, as a result, have not enjoyed wide acceptance in the garment trade.
One disadvantage of prior indexing attachments is that, although they fed a workpiece to a sewing machine in sequential steps, they did not complete a full reciprocating cycle, i.e., a return stroke to a start position after a series of buttonhole sewing operations. Such attachments usually comprise a slidable carrier or work table having means adapted to hold a garment thereon and to move the latter under the sewing mechanism of the machine, automatically stopping at each predetermined 'buttonhole location. At the completion of the last buttonhole, such a carrier has had to be manually returned to its start position.
A further disadvantage of prior indexing devices is that they have been designed mainly for attachment to and for operation with machines for sewing lateral buttonholes in workpieces, i.e., with the longitudinal axis of the buttonhole normal to the vertical axis of the lapels or breast edges of suit jackets etc. In such cases, the workpiece or garment was moved to the sewing mechanism in a direction transverse to the longitudinal axis of the sewing machine. In most cases, the needle of the mechanism sewed in an aligned path with the said longitudinal axis 'whereby the buttonholes were sewn into the. garment normal to the edge thereof. Obviously, therefore, the above described prior attachments are not readily adaptable for the sequential sewing of aligned vertical buttonholes in garments such as shirts, dress fronts, raincoats and the like where longitudinal axes of buttonholes are parallel with the vertical axis of the garment. The main reason being, of course, that such garments must be fed in alignment with the longitudinal axis of the path to be traversed by the sewing mechanism of the machine and in order, therefore, for prior indexing devices to be applicable for aligned sewing, they necessarily would have to operate their reciprocal work tables directly toward and away from the longitudinal axis of the sewing machine. It will be evident from a perusal of the prior art that such an application would not be possible.
The abovementioned patent to Jones et al. somewhat overcomes the problem of sewing aligned buttonholes, but this patent recites the sewing of such buttonholes in a tape that may be applied to a shirt front at a later stage and the tape easily can be fed away from the region of the sewing machine after the buttonholes are sewn.
A still further disadvantage of known indexing attachments is that they usually have been placed directly in front of their associated sewing machines whereby periodic routine maintenance on the machine has been extremely diflicult to carry out. Moreover, the prior attachments usually were so integrally interconnected mechanreally with their associated machines that the latter had to be rendered inoperative if the attachment sulfered a mechanical breakdown. This disadvantage has been obviated to a certain extent by the indexing attachment disclosed in our copending US. patent application Ser. No. 328,312 filed on Dec. 5, 1963, now Patent No. 3,322,083.
The object of the present invention therefore, is to provide automatic indexing apparatus for buttonhole sewmg machines, which apparatus is designed to overcome the above disadvantages of the devices of the prior art. Moreover, the device of the present invention is not an attachment insofar as this term is accepted in relation to the prior art in that the present device is disposed remote from its associated sewing machine and is not mechanically connected thereto. Moreover, it will be appreciated from the description of the present invention, that the latter in no way interferes with manual or independent operation of its associated machine.
The problem of sewing aligned buttonholes in workpieces such as shirts has now been overcome with the introduction of a new type of sewing machine wherein the needle and sewing mechanism thereof are offset from the body of the machine to a sufficient degree that a workpiece may be fed parallel to the longitudinal axis of the machine and therefore in alignment with the like axis of the needle. For the purpose of illustration, and by way of example it is to such a machine that the apparatus of the present invention is applied.
According to its broadest aspect, the present invention relates to the combination with the sewing mechamsm of a buttonholing machine, of an indexing apparatus to provide said sewing mechanism with means automatically to effect a plurality of spaced, sequential buttonhole sew ng operations to a workpiece; said] apparatus comprising a frame having a carriage slidably mounted therealong; drive means to impart reciprocal movement to said carriage along said frame; indexing means to control said drive means and sequentially to stop said carriage during movement thereof at a plunality of selected locations on said frame; and a pair of guide arms on said carriage extending outwardly from said frame and being provided with means for clamping a workpiece therebetween; said arms and clamping means terminating adjacent opposite sides of said sewing mechanism and being adapted to transmit movement of said carriage to said workpiece relative to said sewing mechanism and to transmit movement of said sewing mechanism and said workpiece to said carriage.
The invention is illustrated, by way of example, in the accompanying drawings in which:
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of the present invention operatively mounted adjacent a buttonhole sewing machine;
FIG. 2 is an end view of the apparatus shown in FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is a plan view of the apparatus showing the integers of the present invention;
FIG. 4 is a plan view similar to FIG. 3 showing the integers of the device at a final buttonholing position;
FIG. 5 is broken down into several enlarged plan views of the present invention;
FIG. 6 is similarly broken sectional views in elevation taken along line 6'6 of FIG. 5;
'FIG. 7 is a cross sectional view taken along the line 77 of FIG. 5;
FIG. 8 is a fragmentary perspective view of the tensioning arm and its associated integers;
FIGS. 9, 10 and 11 are fragmentary sectional views, taken along the line 9-9 of FIG. 5B, and show the operation of the integers illustrated in FIG. 8;

Claims (1)

1. IN COMBINATION WITH THE SEWING MEACHANISM OF A BUTTONHOLING MACHINE, AN INDEXING APPARATUS TO PROVIDE SAID MECHANISM WITH MEANS AUTOMATICALLY TO EFFECT A PLURALITY OF SPACED, SQUENTIAL BUTTONHOLE SEWING OPERATIONS TO A WORKPIECE; SAID APPARATUS COMPRISING A FRAME HAVING A CARRIAGE SLIDABLY MOUNTED THEREIN, SAID CARRIAGE INCLUDING FIRST AND SECOND ELEMENTS, ROLLERS ON SAID ELEMENTS FOR RECIPROCAL MOVEMENT OF SAID CARRIAGE IN SAID FRAME; CONNECTING MEMBERS SECURING TOGETHER SAID FIRST AND SECOND ELEMENTS, DRIVE MEANS TO IMPART SAID RECIPROCAL MOVEMENT TO SAID CARRIAGE; INDEXING MEANS TO CONTROL SAID DRIVE MEANS AND SEQUENTIALLY STOP SAID CARRIAGE DURING SAID MOVEMENT AT A PLURALITY OF SELECTED LOCATIONS IN SAID FRAME AND THEN DISCONNECT SAID CARRIAGE FROMS SAID DRIVE MEANS; AND A PAIR OF GUIDE ARMS HAVING MEANS FOR CLAMPING A WORKPIECE UNDER TENSION THEREBETWEEN AT OPPOSITE ENDS OF THE WORKPIECE TO MORE POSITIVELY GRIP AND CONTROL
US382048A 1964-03-31 1964-07-13 Indexing apparatus for sewing machines Expired - Lifetime US3349732A (en)

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Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3859936A (en) * 1970-05-15 1975-01-14 Necchi Spa Fabric feeding device for sewing machines
US3911838A (en) * 1972-06-24 1975-10-14 Necchi Spa Automatic apparatus for making piped or welted pockets
US4036156A (en) * 1974-12-05 1977-07-19 Pfaff Industriemaschinen Gmbh Device for sewing together plies of material adjusted to equal lengths
US4343255A (en) * 1979-05-01 1982-08-10 Starkville Tool And Die Company Automated placket shirt machine
US4381720A (en) * 1981-09-18 1983-05-03 Union Special Corporation Fabric orientating mechanism cooperating with a sewing machine
US4461227A (en) * 1981-09-18 1984-07-24 Union Special Corporation Quick release mechanism for an automatic sewing machine workholder
US4481896A (en) * 1982-01-13 1984-11-13 Wembley Industries, Inc. Flexible material stacker
US4497269A (en) * 1982-06-01 1985-02-05 Charles Schneider Method of making aesthetic quilting
EP1336679A1 (en) * 2002-02-16 2003-08-20 Dürkopp Adler Aktiengesellschaft Apparatus for sewing seams consisting of groups of stitching patterns

Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2873704A (en) * 1955-12-19 1959-02-17 Trim Master Corp Mechanism for operating on tubular blanks
US2899919A (en) * 1959-08-18 Myska
US2944496A (en) * 1957-12-09 1960-07-12 Various Assignees Work indexing mechanism
US2989013A (en) * 1957-09-26 1961-06-20 Singer Mfg Co Sewing machines
US3068816A (en) * 1959-06-08 1962-12-18 Douglas M Mcbean Apparatus for simultaneously sewing a plurality of buttons on or buttonholes in a fabric
US3083653A (en) * 1959-08-05 1963-04-02 Singer Mfg Co Work indexing mechanism for sewing machines

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2899919A (en) * 1959-08-18 Myska
US2873704A (en) * 1955-12-19 1959-02-17 Trim Master Corp Mechanism for operating on tubular blanks
US2989013A (en) * 1957-09-26 1961-06-20 Singer Mfg Co Sewing machines
US2944496A (en) * 1957-12-09 1960-07-12 Various Assignees Work indexing mechanism
US3068816A (en) * 1959-06-08 1962-12-18 Douglas M Mcbean Apparatus for simultaneously sewing a plurality of buttons on or buttonholes in a fabric
US3083653A (en) * 1959-08-05 1963-04-02 Singer Mfg Co Work indexing mechanism for sewing machines

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3859936A (en) * 1970-05-15 1975-01-14 Necchi Spa Fabric feeding device for sewing machines
US3911838A (en) * 1972-06-24 1975-10-14 Necchi Spa Automatic apparatus for making piped or welted pockets
US4036156A (en) * 1974-12-05 1977-07-19 Pfaff Industriemaschinen Gmbh Device for sewing together plies of material adjusted to equal lengths
US4343255A (en) * 1979-05-01 1982-08-10 Starkville Tool And Die Company Automated placket shirt machine
US4381720A (en) * 1981-09-18 1983-05-03 Union Special Corporation Fabric orientating mechanism cooperating with a sewing machine
US4461227A (en) * 1981-09-18 1984-07-24 Union Special Corporation Quick release mechanism for an automatic sewing machine workholder
US4481896A (en) * 1982-01-13 1984-11-13 Wembley Industries, Inc. Flexible material stacker
US4497269A (en) * 1982-06-01 1985-02-05 Charles Schneider Method of making aesthetic quilting
EP1336679A1 (en) * 2002-02-16 2003-08-20 Dürkopp Adler Aktiengesellschaft Apparatus for sewing seams consisting of groups of stitching patterns

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