US3645082A - Apparatus for false twisting yarn - Google Patents

Apparatus for false twisting yarn Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3645082A
US3645082A US64763A US3645082DA US3645082A US 3645082 A US3645082 A US 3645082A US 64763 A US64763 A US 64763A US 3645082D A US3645082D A US 3645082DA US 3645082 A US3645082 A US 3645082A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
guide
axis
guides
bearings
twist
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
US64763A
Inventor
Bruce Murray Mcintosh
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.)
Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd
Original Assignee
Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd
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 GB40241/67A external-priority patent/GB1207811A/en
Application filed by Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd filed Critical Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3645082A publication Critical patent/US3645082A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D02YARNS; MECHANICAL FINISHING OF YARNS OR ROPES; WARPING OR BEAMING
    • D02GCRIMPING OR CURLING FIBRES, FILAMENTS, THREADS, OR YARNS; YARNS OR THREADS
    • D02G1/00Producing crimped or curled fibres, filaments, yarns, or threads, giving them latent characteristics
    • D02G1/02Producing crimped or curled fibres, filaments, yarns, or threads, giving them latent characteristics by twisting, fixing the twist and backtwisting, i.e. by imparting false twist
    • D02G1/028Producing crimped or curled fibres, filaments, yarns, or threads, giving them latent characteristics by twisting, fixing the twist and backtwisting, i.e. by imparting false twist by twisting or false-twisting at least two filaments, yarns or threads, fixing the twist and separating the filaments, yarns or threads

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a process and an apparatus for making twist crimped filaments. 7
  • twist crimped filament yarn by imparting a false twist to a running multifilament yarn threadline by rotating it in a false twisting device, and heat setting the twisted filaments so that when they pass out of the twisted zone they remain crimped.
  • high linear threadline speeds are preferred but these require high false twisting rotational speeds to insert the desired number of crimps per inch into the resultant filaments.
  • twist crimped filament yarns by processes in which there are no moving parts contacting the running threadline. In such methods two yarns are pretwisted around each other along part of their length and the yarns are then runas continuous threadlines through such pretwisted zone with twist darnming means which completelyprevent the predetermined dammed twist from bleeding along the running threadlines. In known processes using this method no high twisting speed is needed but it has been necessary to introduce means such as conical rollers to balance the tensions in the two'darn'twisted threadlines. Another disadvantage is that the filaments are less tightly crimped when two multifilament yarns are twisted around each other to a given number of turns per inch then when single filaments are similarly twisted around each other within one yarn.
  • a dammed twist process for making twist crimped filament yarns comprising leading at equal speeds through a feeding device a plurality of filamentary strands which are not twisted around each other and each of which comprises at least one filament, and withdrawing such'strands at equal speeds under at'l'east some tension'through a forwarding device, between which feeding and forwarding devices strands are pretwisted around each other by 'a fixed number of turns by mutual rotation between assemblies of guides, each' individual guide in such assemblies guiding one strand, and each assembly having anaxis of symmetry coincident with the axis of the twisted strands, such twist being heat set by heating and cooling such twisted strands between such assemblies of guides.
  • the dammed twist crimping process of this invention. may be integrated with drawing, in which case the forwarding device referred to'hereinbefore is a draw roll.
  • drawing we mean the operation well known in the art of converting melt spun filaments into useful textile filaments by stretching them continuously to a ratio commensurate with their natural draw ratio.
  • any known suitable drawing means m'aybe used, for instance heated feed-rolls, heated or unheated snubbing means or heating means which do not involve snubbing action.
  • the chosen drawing means includes a heated zone in an essentially straight length of threadline path after at least the firstpartof the draw, such heatedzone may conveniently be used for fulfilling also the function of heat setting the dammedztwist.
  • Multifilament strands may be over-end unwound each from a separate bobbin, the slight unwinding twist of the filaments within the strands not significantly affecting the process of this invention provided that the strands are not twisted about each other before'reaching the twisted zone between the feed and forwarding rolls.
  • apparatus for making twist crimped filament yarns comprising, between feeding and forwarding means, assemblies of guides having a common axis of symmetry and mutually rotatable about an axis parallel to such axis symmetry, means to cause and to prevent such mutual rotation, and between such assemblies heating and cooling means to set twist.
  • such apparatus is mounted on a known drawing machine such'that the feeding means of the apparatusof this invention are the draw rolls of the drawing machine.
  • such apparatus is mounted on a drawing machine .fitted with known means for drawing filamentary strands such that the feeding and forwarding means of theapparatus of this invention are the feed and draw rolls respectively of the draw frame, and known drawing means are provided before the first guide assembly.
  • FIG; I is a schematic perspective view of an apparatus embodying the principles of the present invention.
  • FIG. 2 is a elevational view of an orbital twister guide
  • FIG. 3 is a sectional view taken on the line A-A of FIG. 2;
  • FIG. 4 is an elevational view of another form of an orbital twister guide
  • FIG. 5 is a sectional view taken on the line XX of FIG. 4;
  • FIG. 6 is a schematic elevational view illustrating use of the orbital twister guide as a double guide.
  • FIG. I of the accompanying drawings One embodiment of the apparatus of this invention is illustrated in FIG. I of the accompanying drawings in which two multihole twist stop guides 31 and 32, the second of which may be rotated and clamped, are placedat each end of a zone 33 in twhich'are a heated plate 34and an unheated space 35.
  • the guides 31 and 32 are vplaced between a feed roll 36 and a draw .roll 37 there being also a heated snubbing pin 38 betweenthefeedroll 36 and theguide 31.
  • the guide 32 is then rotated through a predetermined number of turns and clamped.
  • the strands are thereby-twisted together between guides 31 and 32 as illustrated, the twisted filaments being heated by contact-with the plate 34.
  • the filaments are drawn by a conventional snubbing pin and plate tandem hotdrawing process and they aresimultaneouslyxtwistcrimpedaccording to the process of thisainventionewhile passing overthe plate and through the cooling zone between the guides 31 and 32.
  • an improved multiple threadline guide particularly suitable for the dammed twist process of this invention comprising an assembly of threadable guides for individual strands symmetrically disposed about an axis of symmetry, rotatably mounted in bearings having a radius greater than the radius of a circle encompassing all such individual guides and such assembly being provided with means to cause and prevent such rotation.
  • Such a multiple threadline guide is referred to hereinafter as an orbital twister guide.
  • Such individual guides are in a plane perpendicular to the axis of rotation and concentrically and equally spaced around such axis.
  • the orbital twister guide of this invention comprises a member rotatably mounted within bearings, in which member inwardly directed slots in a plane at right angles to the axis of rotation have inner closed ends symmetrically spaced about the axis of rotation within a radius smaller than the radius of such bearings, and outer open ends which are separately threadable through slots in the bearings at angular positions of such member in such bearings at which such slots in the member are inward extensions of such slots in such bearings.
  • the orbital twister guide of this invention comprises a member substantially as described hereinbefore, rotatably mounted in bearings, one part of which may be removed to permit removal and reinsertion of the disc and then reassembled.
  • FIGS. 2 and 3 of the accompanying drawings Two plates I and 2 connected by spacing members 3 and 4 are pierced by circular holes 5, each concentrically surrounded by recesses 6. The plates 1 and 2 are also pierced by slots 7 which penetrate through the recesses 6 to the holes 5. In the recesses 6 are nylon bearing inserts 8 split so as not to close slots 7. A gearwheel 9 is fixed between concentric annular projections 10, extending into the recesses 6 and seating in the nylon bearings 8. The gear 9 meshes with a pinion ll rotatably mounted between the plates 1 and 2, on an axle 12 extending through the plate 1 and attached to driving and clamping means not shown.
  • the subassembly of gearwheel 9 and projections 10 is pierced by radial slots 13 each containing an inserted ceramic threadline guide 14, such guides 14 being arranged concentrically in the gear 9 on a circle with a diameter smaller than that of the holes 5.
  • the gear 9 is rotated until a slot 13 is aligned with slots 7 and a filamentary strand is inserted through such slots into a ceramic threadline guide 13.
  • the gear is then rotated until another slot 13 is aligned with slots 7 and a second strand is similarly inserted. This procedure is repeated until all the strands required in a particular process are inserted each through a separate threadline guide 13.
  • the gear 9 is then rapidly rotated by driving axle 12 by means not shown until a desired number of turns of twist has been imparted to the strands and then further rotation is prevented by clamping axle 12 by means not shown.
  • the strands are twisted between a twist stop and the orbital guide which when clamped acts as the second twist stop.
  • We prefer to use for the first twist stop either another similar orbital twister guide or a slotted guiding member similar to that in the orbital twister guide but not rotatably mounted.
  • FIGS. 4 and of the accompanying drawings Another embodiment of the orbital twister guide is illustrated in FIGS. 4 and of the accompanying drawings.
  • a subassembly of gearwheel 20 and projections 21 similar to members 9 and of FIG. 2 is provided with guides 22 similar to the guides 13 of FIG. 2 but spaced so as to correspond conveniently with the spacing of spinneret holes through which the filaments to be crimped are extruded.
  • Two pairs of housing plates 23 and 24 and 25 and 26 are connected respectively by spacing members 27 and 28 and are clamped together by means not shown along the line XX.
  • the housing subassembly 23, 24 and 27 is removed, the guide subassembly 20 and 21 is extracted, and held under a spinneret from which emerge the filaments to be treated by the process of this invention.
  • One monofilament or multifilament strand is passed through each guide slot, the guide subassembly is reinserted in the housing plates 25 and 26 and the housing plates 23 and 24 are replaced and clamped along line X-X.
  • a twist stop guide which may be a similar orbital twister guide is strung up similarly.
  • the guides are positioned at each end of a heating zone provided between feed and draw rolls and the strands are then strung up over such feed and draw rolls. Finally the orbital twister guide is rotated to provide the required twist in the running threadline.
  • the orbital twister guide of this invention is conveniently provided also as a double guide as shown schematically in FIG. 6 of the accompanying drawings.
  • Two twisted threadlines are run in parallel through such a guide which provides S twist in the right-hand threadline and Z twist in the left-hand threadline when rotated as shown, so that the threadlines may conveniently be plied after twist crimping to provide a torque free crimped filament yarn.
  • EXAMPLE I A melt spun twistless yarn of polyethylene terephthalate consisting of 15 filaments each of 18 denier and having an intrinsic viscosity measured in orthochlorophenol at 20 C. of 0.65 and a birefringence of 0.008 was side unwound from a bobbin and the filaments were threaded individually through a set of 15 concentric equally spaced holes each 0.03 inch diameter on a circle of 0.75 inch diameter in a steel disc of l inch diameter.
  • the filaments were similarly threaded through three other similar discs which were then mounted in clamps, the first between the bobbin and the feed roll of a drawframe, the second between a heated snubbing pin and a heated plate placed between the feed roll and draw roll of the drawframe, the third after the plate and the fourth before the draw roll.
  • the discs were disposed so that the separately guided filaments passed from the first to the fourth disc without twist.
  • the snubbing pin had a diameter of 2 inches and was heated to 95 C.
  • the plate was 8 inches long and heated to 200 C.
  • the third disc was placed 4 inches from the end of the plate.
  • the yarn was passed round the feed roll rotating at a surface speed of 25 r.p.m., round the snubbing pin and over the draw roll which was rotated at 100 r.p.m.
  • the third disc was then rotated and reclamped when a twist level of 70 turns per inch had been built up between the second and third discs and the heated plate was brought into contact with this dam twisted part of the threadline.
  • a drawn and bulked torque yarn with highly crimped filaments was produced.
  • a 6 inch gap was left between the hot plate and the second orbital twister guide, in which gap a draught of cooling air was directed on to the threadline.
  • the two filaments of each yarn were each slotted into two diametrically opposed guides in one of the rotors of each double orbital twister guide. The second guide was then rotated at 1,100
  • EXAMPLE 3 Two 79-denier monofilaments of polyhexamethylene adipamide with a birefringence of 0.0009 and a relative viscosity of 35 measured as in Example 2 were over-end unwound from bobbins and processed as described in Example 2 but using single orbital twister guides as illustrated in FIGS. 2 and 3 of the accompanying drawings and using various draw ratios between 3.0 and 6.0. Using a tension motor in the cooling zone of the twisted threadline it was found that the maximum number of twists per inch that could be inserted without breaking the running threadline was achieved at an optimum tension in the twisted region of between 1.5 and 2 gm. per denier, corresponding to draw ratios between 4.6 and 5.4, within which range a highly crimped drawn yarn was produced with a tenacity of about 3.5 grams per denier.
  • EXAMPLE 4 Three l28-denier yarns of polyethylene terephthalate each containing filaments with a birefringence of 0.008 and an intrinsic viscosity measured in orthochlorophenol at 20 C. of 0.65 were over-end unwound and drawn to a ratio of 3.86 using the drawing process described in Example 2 but with the hot plate at 215 C.
  • the three yarns were slotted syrnmetrically into single orbital twister guides as illustrated in FIGS. 2 and 3 of the accompanying drawings placed respectively after the hot feed roll and after the hot plate. A dam twist of 25 turns per inch was inserted over the hot plate by rotating the orbital twister'guide at 1,100 r.p.m. and the guide was then clamped. The yarns were plied together after the draw roll to give a drawn crimped three-ply torque yarn.
  • EXAMPLE 5 Three filaments of polyethylene terephthalate extruded at 290 C. were separated below the spinneret by a ceramic guide in the form of a comb before passing them round a heated feed roll at 95 C. and a cold draw roll providing a draw ratio of 3.83 at a final windup speed of 8,000 feet per minute at which the filament denier was 15.
  • the three filaments were symmetrically slotted into two orbital twister guides of the type illustrated in FIGS. 2 and 3 of the accompanying drawings placed between the feed and draw rolls, and between the guides the filaments traversed a 2 ft. long grooved hot plate at 230 C. followed by a 1 ft. cooling zone across which a draught of cooling air was provided.
  • the second orbital twister guide was rotated at 1,100 rpm. until a twist of 50 turns per inch had been established in the groove of the hot plate. The guide was then clamped. This integrated spinning, drawing and textured process provided a three-filament bulked torque yarn.
  • EXAMPLE 6 Two 80.5 denier spun yarns of polyethylene terephthalate each containing 8 filaments with a birefringence of 0.008 and an intrinsic viscosity of 0.65 determined in a 1 percent solution of orthochlorophenol at 20 C. were drawn separately at a draw ratio of 3.4 over a hot feed roll C.) and a hot plate (200 C.) at 2,000 ft./min. finishing with a yarn twist of onehalf turn per inch. The two yarns were slotted symmetrically into two single orbital twister guides as illustrated in FIGS. 2 and 3 of the accompanying drawings placed between two rolls, both rotating at surface speeds of 400 ft./min., one guide being placed between the first roll and a 2 ft.
  • a darn twist of 60 t.p.i. was inserted on the running threadline over the hot plate by rotating the orbital twister guide at 1,100 r.p.m. and the guide was then clamped.
  • the yarns coming from the thlrd rol were plied giving a stabilized crimped yarn of low torque.
  • process and apparatus of this invention may be used with any number of strands drawn at any speed at which winding means are available, it is particularly useful in connection with a multiplicity of fine strands drawn at high speeds as encountered in integrated spin draw processes.
  • a multiple threadline guide comprising an assembly of individually threadable guides symmetrically disposed about an axis of symmetry, such assembly being rotatable about an axis parallel to such axis of symmetry in bearings having a radius greater than the radius of a circle encompassing all such individual guides, and such assembly being provided with means to cause and to prevent such rotation.
  • a multiple threadline guide according to claim 1 in which individual guides are in a plane perpendicular to the axis of rotation and are concentrically and equally spaced round such axis.
  • a guide according to claim 1 comprising a member in which individual guides formed by inwardly directed slots in a plane at right angles to the axis of rotation have inner closed ends symmetrically spaced about the axis of rotation within a radius smaller than the radius of such bearings, and outer open ends which are separately threadable through slots in the bearings at angular positions of such member in such bearings at which such slots in the member are inward extensions of such slots in such bearings.
  • a guide comprising an assembly according to claim 1 rotatably mounted in bearings one part of which may be removed to permit removal, threading and reinsertion of the assembly and then reassembled.
  • a double multiple threadline guide comprising two assemblies of guides each according to claim 1 rotatable in opposite directions by a common driving means.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Yarns And Mechanical Finishing Of Yarns Or Ropes (AREA)

Abstract

A false twist device having a plurality of guides on a guide plate rotatable about an axis and said guide plate being mounted in bearings which have a radius larger than the guide plate.

Description

United States Patent McIntosh 1 Feb. 29, 1972 [54] APPARATUS FOR FALSE TWISTING 58 Field of Search "57/34, 34 HS, 51,515, 77.3, YARN I 57/77.33-77.45, 12
[72] Inventor: Bruce Murray McIntosh, Harrogate, En- [56] References Cited gland 73 Assignee: imperial Chemical Industries Limited, UNITED STATES PATENTS London, land 3,355,872 12/1967 Gilchrist et al.... ..57/34 us 22 Filed; 1 1970 3,408,807 1 H1968 Sylthe ..57/l2 X 3,412,543 11/1968 Horvath ..57/34 HS [21] Appl. No.: 64,763
' Primary Examiner-Donald E. Watkins Related Apphcauon Dam Attorney-Cushman, Darby & Cushman [62] Division of Ser. No. 757,077, Sept. 3, 1968, Pat. No.
3,553,952. [57] ABSTRACT [30] Foreign Application Priority Data A false twist device having a plurality of guides on a guide plate rotatable about an axis and said guide plate being Sept. 4, Great Bl'ltalfl mounted in bearings which have a radius larger than the guide late. [52] US. Cl ..57/77.45,57/77.33 p [51 Int. Cl. ..D02g l/02, DOlh 7/92 5 Claims, 6 Drawing Figures Patented Feb. 29, 1972 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 2O FIGS APPARATUS FOR FALSE TWISTING YARN This is a division of application Ser. No. 757,077; filed Sept. 3, 1968, now US. Pat. No. 3,553,952.
This invention relates to a process and an apparatus for making twist crimped filaments. 7
It is known to make twist crimped filament yarn by imparting a false twist to a running multifilament yarn threadline by rotating it in a false twisting device, and heat setting the twisted filaments so that when they pass out of the twisted zone they remain crimped. For economic reasons high linear threadline speeds are preferred but these require high false twisting rotational speeds to insert the desired number of crimps per inch into the resultant filaments. It is known to operate such afalse twist crimping process while drawing melt spun filament yarn, but the high false twist rotational speeds required place a relatively low practical limit on the linear drawing speed. I
It is also known to make twist crimped filament yarns by processes in which there are no moving parts contacting the running threadline. In such methods two yarns are pretwisted around each other along part of their length and the yarns are then runas continuous threadlines through such pretwisted zone with twist darnming means which completelyprevent the predetermined dammed twist from bleeding along the running threadlines. In known processes using this method no high twisting speed is needed but it has been necessary to introduce means such as conical rollers to balance the tensions in the two'darn'twisted threadlines. Another disadvantage is that the filaments are less tightly crimped when two multifilament yarns are twisted around each other to a given number of turns per inch then when single filaments are similarly twisted around each other within one yarn.
We have now found that under certain conditions similar filamentary strands can be continuously twist crimped by a dammed twist process even at high speeds without theneed for any mechanism to balance the tensions between such twisted strands so'that the strands may conveniently be single filaments as well as multifilament yarns, and a multiplicity of fine strands may readily be darn twisted together.
According to this invention we provide a dammed twist process for making twist crimped filament yarns comprising leading at equal speeds through a feeding device a plurality of filamentary strands which are not twisted around each other and each of which comprises at least one filament, and withdrawing such'strands at equal speeds under at'l'east some tension'through a forwarding device, between which feeding and forwarding devices strands are pretwisted around each other by 'a fixed number of turns by mutual rotation between assemblies of guides, each' individual guide in such assemblies guiding one strand, and each assembly having anaxis of symmetry coincident with the axis of the twisted strands, such twist being heat set by heating and cooling such twisted strands between such assemblies of guides.
We prefer a process in which the angles of each individual strand through each individual guide in an assembly are equal.
We further prefer to use two mutually rotatableassemblies of guides contacting eachmutually twisted group of strands.
The dammed twist crimping process of this invention. may be integrated with drawing, in which case the forwarding device referred to'hereinbefore is a draw roll. By drawing we mean the operation well known in the art of converting melt spun filaments into useful textile filaments by stretching them continuously to a ratio commensurate with their natural draw ratio. In such a process any known suitable drawing means m'aybe used, for instance heated feed-rolls, heated or unheated snubbing means or heating means which do not involve snubbing action. We preferthat atleast part of the filament stretch involved insuch drawing process takes place'before the filaments reach the twisted'zone. When the chosen drawing means includes a heated zone in an essentially straight length of threadline path after at least the firstpartof the draw, such heatedzone may conveniently be used for fulfilling also the function of heat setting the dammedztwist.
' be provided in parallel bundles from one bobbin which is side unwound so that no unwinding twist arises. Multifilament strands may be over-end unwound each from a separate bobbin, the slight unwinding twist of the filaments within the strands not significantly affecting the process of this invention provided that the strands are not twisted about each other before'reaching the twisted zone between the feed and forwarding rolls.
According to another aspect of this invention we provide apparatus for making twist crimped filament yarns comprising, between feeding and forwarding means, assemblies of guides having a common axis of symmetry and mutually rotatable about an axis parallel to such axis symmetry, means to cause and to prevent such mutual rotation, and between such assemblies heating and cooling means to set twist.
We prefer such assemblies to be in planes at right angles to such axes of symmetry and rotation.
We prefer the axes of symmetry and rotation to be coincident.
In one preferred form such apparatus is mounted on a known drawing machine such'that the feeding means of the apparatusof this invention are the draw rolls of the drawing machine.
In another preferred form such apparatus is mounted on a drawing machine .fitted with known means for drawing filamentary strands such that the feeding and forwarding means of theapparatus of this invention are the feed and draw rolls respectively of the draw frame, and known drawing means are provided before the first guide assembly.
It will be ,clear that any known drawing means such as heating or snubbing devices may be used.
FIG; I isa schematic perspective view of an apparatus embodying the principles of the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a elevational view of an orbital twister guide;
FIG. 3 is a sectional view taken on the line A-A of FIG. 2;
FIG. 4 is an elevational view of another form of an orbital twister guide;
FIG. 5 is a sectional view taken on the line XX of FIG. 4;
and
FIG. 6 is a schematic elevational view illustrating use of the orbital twister guide as a double guide.
One embodiment of the apparatus of this invention is illustrated in FIG. I of the accompanying drawings in which two multihole twist stop guides 31 and 32, the second of which may be rotated and clamped, are placedat each end of a zone 33 in twhich'are a heated plate 34and an unheated space 35. The guides 31 and 32 are vplaced between a feed roll 36 and a draw .roll 37 there being also a heated snubbing pin 38 betweenthefeedroll 36 and theguide 31. In operation the strands 39-are passed through corresponding holes in guides 31. andi32 andthen passed-roundthefeed roll 36, round the snubbing pin 38-and roundthe draw roll 37. The guide 32 is then rotated through a predetermined number of turns and clamped. The strands are thereby-twisted together between guides 31 and 32 as illustrated, the twisted filaments being heated by contact-with the plate 34.
In this apparatus the filaments are drawn by a conventional snubbing pin and plate tandem hotdrawing process and they aresimultaneouslyxtwistcrimpedaccording to the process of thisainventionewhile passing overthe plate and through the cooling zone between the guides 31 and 32.
It will be appreciated that the guides 31 and 32 illustrated in FIG. 1 of the accompanying drawings are not very convenient in practical operation because of the necessity to string up the strands by passing their ends through holes in the guides before such strands are drawn in a continuous process between feed and draw rolls. It is most desirable to use threadable guides into which continuous strands can be inserted while being forwarded continuously.
According to a further aspect of this invention we therefore provide an improved multiple threadline guide particularly suitable for the dammed twist process of this invention comprising an assembly of threadable guides for individual strands symmetrically disposed about an axis of symmetry, rotatably mounted in bearings having a radius greater than the radius of a circle encompassing all such individual guides and such assembly being provided with means to cause and prevent such rotation. Such a multiple threadline guide is referred to hereinafter as an orbital twister guide. Preferably such individual guides are in a plane perpendicular to the axis of rotation and concentrically and equally spaced around such axis.
In a preferred form the orbital twister guide of this invention comprises a member rotatably mounted within bearings, in which member inwardly directed slots in a plane at right angles to the axis of rotation have inner closed ends symmetrically spaced about the axis of rotation within a radius smaller than the radius of such bearings, and outer open ends which are separately threadable through slots in the bearings at angular positions of such member in such bearings at which such slots in the member are inward extensions of such slots in such bearings.
In another preferred form the orbital twister guide of this invention comprises a member substantially as described hereinbefore, rotatably mounted in bearings, one part of which may be removed to permit removal and reinsertion of the disc and then reassembled.
One embodiment of the orbital twister guide of this invention is illustrated in FIGS. 2 and 3 of the accompanying drawings. Two plates I and 2 connected by spacing members 3 and 4 are pierced by circular holes 5, each concentrically surrounded by recesses 6. The plates 1 and 2 are also pierced by slots 7 which penetrate through the recesses 6 to the holes 5. In the recesses 6 are nylon bearing inserts 8 split so as not to close slots 7. A gearwheel 9 is fixed between concentric annular projections 10, extending into the recesses 6 and seating in the nylon bearings 8. The gear 9 meshes with a pinion ll rotatably mounted between the plates 1 and 2, on an axle 12 extending through the plate 1 and attached to driving and clamping means not shown. The subassembly of gearwheel 9 and projections 10 is pierced by radial slots 13 each containing an inserted ceramic threadline guide 14, such guides 14 being arranged concentrically in the gear 9 on a circle with a diameter smaller than that of the holes 5.
In operation the gear 9 is rotated until a slot 13 is aligned with slots 7 and a filamentary strand is inserted through such slots into a ceramic threadline guide 13. The gear is then rotated until another slot 13 is aligned with slots 7 and a second strand is similarly inserted. This procedure is repeated until all the strands required in a particular process are inserted each through a separate threadline guide 13. The gear 9 is then rapidly rotated by driving axle 12 by means not shown until a desired number of turns of twist has been imparted to the strands and then further rotation is prevented by clamping axle 12 by means not shown. During this twisting operation the strands are twisted between a twist stop and the orbital guide which when clamped acts as the second twist stop. We prefer to use for the first twist stop either another similar orbital twister guide or a slotted guiding member similar to that in the orbital twister guide but not rotatably mounted.
Another embodiment of the orbital twister guide is illustrated in FIGS. 4 and of the accompanying drawings. A subassembly of gearwheel 20 and projections 21 similar to members 9 and of FIG. 2 is provided with guides 22 similar to the guides 13 of FIG. 2 but spaced so as to correspond conveniently with the spacing of spinneret holes through which the filaments to be crimped are extruded. Two pairs of housing plates 23 and 24 and 25 and 26 are connected respectively by spacing members 27 and 28 and are clamped together by means not shown along the line XX.
In operation the housing subassembly 23, 24 and 27 is removed, the guide subassembly 20 and 21 is extracted, and held under a spinneret from which emerge the filaments to be treated by the process of this invention. One monofilament or multifilament strand is passed through each guide slot, the guide subassembly is reinserted in the housing plates 25 and 26 and the housing plates 23 and 24 are replaced and clamped along line X-X. A twist stop guide which may be a similar orbital twister guide is strung up similarly. The guides are positioned at each end of a heating zone provided between feed and draw rolls and the strands are then strung up over such feed and draw rolls. Finally the orbital twister guide is rotated to provide the required twist in the running threadline.
The orbital twister guide of this invention is conveniently provided also as a double guide as shown schematically in FIG. 6 of the accompanying drawings. Two twisted threadlines are run in parallel through such a guide which provides S twist in the right-hand threadline and Z twist in the left-hand threadline when rotated as shown, so that the threadlines may conveniently be plied after twist crimping to provide a torque free crimped filament yarn.
The following examples illustrate our invention:
EXAMPLE I A melt spun twistless yarn of polyethylene terephthalate consisting of 15 filaments each of 18 denier and having an intrinsic viscosity measured in orthochlorophenol at 20 C. of 0.65 and a birefringence of 0.008 was side unwound from a bobbin and the filaments were threaded individually through a set of 15 concentric equally spaced holes each 0.03 inch diameter on a circle of 0.75 inch diameter in a steel disc of l inch diameter. The filaments were similarly threaded through three other similar discs which were then mounted in clamps, the first between the bobbin and the feed roll of a drawframe, the second between a heated snubbing pin and a heated plate placed between the feed roll and draw roll of the drawframe, the third after the plate and the fourth before the draw roll. The discs were disposed so that the separately guided filaments passed from the first to the fourth disc without twist. The snubbing pin had a diameter of 2 inches and was heated to 95 C., the plate was 8 inches long and heated to 200 C. and the third disc was placed 4 inches from the end of the plate. The yarn was passed round the feed roll rotating at a surface speed of 25 r.p.m., round the snubbing pin and over the draw roll which was rotated at 100 r.p.m. The third disc was then rotated and reclamped when a twist level of 70 turns per inch had been built up between the second and third discs and the heated plate was brought into contact with this dam twisted part of the threadline. A drawn and bulked torque yarn with highly crimped filaments was produced.
EXAMPLE 2 Two spun yarns of polyhexamethylene adipamide each containing two 35-denier filaments with a birefringence of 0.005 and a relative viscosity of 35 measured at 8.4 percent concentration in percent formic acid at 25 C. were side unwound from bobbins and drawn to a ratio of 5.5 at 1,000 ft. per minute on a draw frame comprising feed rolls heated to C., a 12 inches long plate heated to 230 C. and cold draw rolls. Two double orbital twister guides as illustrated in FIG. 6 of the accompanying drawings were placed one between the hot feed roll and the hot plate and the other between the hot plate and the draw roll. A 6 inch gap was left between the hot plate and the second orbital twister guide, in which gap a draught of cooling air was directed on to the threadline. The two filaments of each yarn were each slotted into two diametrically opposed guides in one of the rotors of each double orbital twister guide. The second guide was then rotated at 1,100
rpm. until 120 turns per inch of twist had been built up in the threadlines over the heated plate, being S twist in one threadline and Z twist in the other. The orbital twister guide was then held stationary and the two threadlines were plied at the draw roll and wound up to give a highly crimped balanced torque yarn.
EXAMPLE 3 Two 79-denier monofilaments of polyhexamethylene adipamide with a birefringence of 0.0009 and a relative viscosity of 35 measured as in Example 2 were over-end unwound from bobbins and processed as described in Example 2 but using single orbital twister guides as illustrated in FIGS. 2 and 3 of the accompanying drawings and using various draw ratios between 3.0 and 6.0. Using a tension motor in the cooling zone of the twisted threadline it was found that the maximum number of twists per inch that could be inserted without breaking the running threadline was achieved at an optimum tension in the twisted region of between 1.5 and 2 gm. per denier, corresponding to draw ratios between 4.6 and 5.4, within which range a highly crimped drawn yarn was produced with a tenacity of about 3.5 grams per denier.
EXAMPLE 4 Three l28-denier yarns of polyethylene terephthalate each containing filaments with a birefringence of 0.008 and an intrinsic viscosity measured in orthochlorophenol at 20 C. of 0.65 were over-end unwound and drawn to a ratio of 3.86 using the drawing process described in Example 2 but with the hot plate at 215 C. The three yarns were slotted syrnmetrically into single orbital twister guides as illustrated in FIGS. 2 and 3 of the accompanying drawings placed respectively after the hot feed roll and after the hot plate. A dam twist of 25 turns per inch was inserted over the hot plate by rotating the orbital twister'guide at 1,100 r.p.m. and the guide was then clamped. The yarns were plied together after the draw roll to give a drawn crimped three-ply torque yarn.
EXAMPLE 5 Three filaments of polyethylene terephthalate extruded at 290 C. were separated below the spinneret by a ceramic guide in the form of a comb before passing them round a heated feed roll at 95 C. and a cold draw roll providing a draw ratio of 3.83 at a final windup speed of 8,000 feet per minute at which the filament denier was 15. The three filaments were symmetrically slotted into two orbital twister guides of the type illustrated in FIGS. 2 and 3 of the accompanying drawings placed between the feed and draw rolls, and between the guides the filaments traversed a 2 ft. long grooved hot plate at 230 C. followed by a 1 ft. cooling zone across which a draught of cooling air was provided. The second orbital twister guide was rotated at 1,100 rpm. until a twist of 50 turns per inch had been established in the groove of the hot plate. The guide was then clamped. This integrated spinning, drawing and textured process provided a three-filament bulked torque yarn.
EXAMPLE 6 Two 80.5 denier spun yarns of polyethylene terephthalate each containing 8 filaments with a birefringence of 0.008 and an intrinsic viscosity of 0.65 determined in a 1 percent solution of orthochlorophenol at 20 C. were drawn separately at a draw ratio of 3.4 over a hot feed roll C.) and a hot plate (200 C.) at 2,000 ft./min. finishing with a yarn twist of onehalf turn per inch. The two yarns were slotted symmetrically into two single orbital twister guides as illustrated in FIGS. 2 and 3 of the accompanying drawings placed between two rolls, both rotating at surface speeds of 400 ft./min., one guide being placed between the first roll and a 2 ft. grooved hot plate C.) and the other between a cooling draught of air immediately after the hot plate and the second roll. The two yarns coming from the second roll were then passed through a 2 ft. hot air tube (air circulating in the same direction as the yarn at 230 C., 15 psi.) to a third roll rotating at 200 ft./min.
A darn twist of 60 t.p.i. was inserted on the running threadline over the hot plate by rotating the orbital twister guide at 1,100 r.p.m. and the guide was then clamped. The yarns coming from the thlrd rol were plied giving a stabilized crimped yarn of low torque.
It will be appreciated that although the process and apparatus of this invention may be used with any number of strands drawn at any speed at which winding means are available, it is particularly useful in connection with a multiplicity of fine strands drawn at high speeds as encountered in integrated spin draw processes.
What we claim is:
1. A multiple threadline guide, comprising an assembly of individually threadable guides symmetrically disposed about an axis of symmetry, such assembly being rotatable about an axis parallel to such axis of symmetry in bearings having a radius greater than the radius of a circle encompassing all such individual guides, and such assembly being provided with means to cause and to prevent such rotation.
2. A multiple threadline guide according to claim 1 in which individual guides are in a plane perpendicular to the axis of rotation and are concentrically and equally spaced round such axis.
3. A guide according to claim 1 comprising a member in which individual guides formed by inwardly directed slots in a plane at right angles to the axis of rotation have inner closed ends symmetrically spaced about the axis of rotation within a radius smaller than the radius of such bearings, and outer open ends which are separately threadable through slots in the bearings at angular positions of such member in such bearings at which such slots in the member are inward extensions of such slots in such bearings.
4. A guide comprising an assembly according to claim 1 rotatably mounted in bearings one part of which may be removed to permit removal, threading and reinsertion of the assembly and then reassembled.
5. A double multiple threadline guide comprising two assemblies of guides each according to claim 1 rotatable in opposite directions by a common driving means.

Claims (5)

1. A multiple threadline guide, comprising an assembly of individually threadable guides symmetrically disposed about an axis of symmetry, such assembly being rotatable about an axis parallel to such axis of symmetry in bearings having a radius greater than the radius of a circle encompassing all such individual guides, and such assembly being provided with means to cause and to prevent such rotation.
2. A multiple threadline guide according to claim 1 in which individual guides are in a plane perpendicular to the axis of rotation and are concentrically and equally spaced round such axis.
3. A guide according to claim 1 comprising a member in which individual guides formed by inwardly directed slots in a plane at right angles to the axis of rotation have inner closed ends symmetrically spaced about the axis of rotation within a radius smaller than the radius of such bearings, and outer open ends which are separately threadable through slots in the bearings at angular positions of such member in such bearings at which such slots in the member are inward extensions of such slots in such bearings.
4. A guide comprising an assembly according to claim 1 rotatably mounted in bearings one part of which may be removed to permit removal, threading and reinsertion of the assembly and then reassembled.
5. A double multiple threadline guide comprising two assemblies of guides each according to claim 1 rotatable in opposite directions by a common drIving means.
US64763A 1967-09-04 1970-08-18 Apparatus for false twisting yarn Expired - Lifetime US3645082A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB40241/67A GB1207811A (en) 1967-09-04 1967-09-04 Improvements relating to the manufacture of twist crimped filament yarn
US6476370A 1970-08-18 1970-08-18

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3645082A true US3645082A (en) 1972-02-29

Family

ID=26744874

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US64763A Expired - Lifetime US3645082A (en) 1967-09-04 1970-08-18 Apparatus for false twisting yarn

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3645082A (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN106222796A (en) * 2016-08-24 2016-12-14 四川环龙技术织物有限公司 A kind of wire-cloth preparation method of resistance composite industrial monofilament

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3355872A (en) * 1963-12-20 1967-12-05 Klinger Mfg Co Ltd Methods and apparatus for crimping yarns
US3408807A (en) * 1965-10-29 1968-11-05 Int Standard Electric Corp Twisting machine
US3412543A (en) * 1965-02-17 1968-11-26 Heberlein Patent Corp Method and apparatus for manufacture of slub-containing textured yarns

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3355872A (en) * 1963-12-20 1967-12-05 Klinger Mfg Co Ltd Methods and apparatus for crimping yarns
US3412543A (en) * 1965-02-17 1968-11-26 Heberlein Patent Corp Method and apparatus for manufacture of slub-containing textured yarns
US3408807A (en) * 1965-10-29 1968-11-05 Int Standard Electric Corp Twisting machine

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN106222796A (en) * 2016-08-24 2016-12-14 四川环龙技术织物有限公司 A kind of wire-cloth preparation method of resistance composite industrial monofilament

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2985995A (en) Compact interlaced yarn
US3691750A (en) Textured core yarns
US3535866A (en) Process and apparatus for producing crimped yarns
AU663518B2 (en) Internally bonded sewing threads and processes for production thereof
US3577873A (en) Novel core yarns and methods for their manufacture
US4035464A (en) Process for the production of polyamide-6 filament yarns
US4033103A (en) Process and apparatus for producing a variable diameter alternate twist yarn
US3287888A (en) Apparatus for the treatment of synthetic filaments
US3604659A (en) Method of drawing and winding a thread of endless filament and apparatus for implementing same
US2999351A (en) Bulky yarn
US4103481A (en) Variable diameter yarn
US3921382A (en) Method of making a covered elastic yarn
US2890568A (en) Production of voluminous yarn
US3553952A (en) Process and apparatus for crimping yarns and product made thereby
US3293843A (en) Drawing and crimping synthetic polymer filaments
US2946181A (en) Production of twistless yarns by direct spinning to tow, sizing the tow, false twisting and winding
US2988867A (en) Method of handling a plurality of yarns during processing
US3474612A (en) Drawing and bulking of synthetic polymer
US3645082A (en) Apparatus for false twisting yarn
US3706192A (en) Process and apparatus for false twisting synthetic yarns
US3724191A (en) Treatment of synthetic yarns
US4081948A (en) Manufacture of bulked yarn
IE41990B1 (en) A process for texturing thermoplastic synthetic yarns
US3668855A (en) Twister and method of twisting
US3703075A (en) Method of making a yarn containing loops