US788555A - Carding-machine. - Google Patents

Carding-machine. Download PDF

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US788555A
US788555A US25253002A US1902252530A US788555A US 788555 A US788555 A US 788555A US 25253002 A US25253002 A US 25253002A US 1902252530 A US1902252530 A US 1902252530A US 788555 A US788555 A US 788555A
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roller
machine
mixing
conveyer
feed
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Frederick Nelson Pitts
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D01NATURAL OR MAN-MADE THREADS OR FIBRES; SPINNING
    • D01GPRELIMINARY TREATMENT OF FIBRES, e.g. FOR SPINNING
    • D01G25/00Lap-forming devices not integral with machines specified above

Definitions

  • carding-machine no matter whether of low or high grade, may be doubled or mixed and conveyed directly, if preferable, to the finishing-machine," and thereby effect a saving in material or stock and a saving of time and produce a yarn of better quality than has been produced in machines of this class as at present constructed.
  • a subsidiary object is to keep the fiber straight as it passes from one machine into the other, so that the fibers are fed endwise and not broken or disturbed and the bat is fed in doubled or crimped form.
  • the invention consists, essentially, of a doubling or mixing roller connected to the discharge end of the primary machine, such roller being arranged to come in contact with the doffer-roller, a vibrating comb suitably driven and designed to coact with the mixingroller, a conveyer having one end near the doffer and mixing roller and having its opposite end extending into proximity with the feed-roller of the finishing-machine, a compressor-bar suitably operated in proximity with the feed-roller of the feeding-machine, a licker-in roller located substantially above the uppermost feed-roller and coacting therewith, and a lu'mper-roller located substantially above the licker-in roller, the parts being arranged and constructed as here nafter more particularly explained.
  • Figure 1 is a perspectlve view showlng a portion of the discharge end of the primary machine and the feed end of the finishingmachine, exhibiting therebetween the parts involved in my invention.
  • Fig. 2 1s a S1111 ⁇ :
  • Fig. 3 is a longitudinal section.
  • Fig. 4 is a perspective detail of the evener-arm.
  • Fig. 5 is a perspective detail of the wormgear, whereby the mixing-roller is given an oscillating movement.
  • A is the dofler-roller of the primary machine, the shaft of which is supported in suitable bearings B on the main frame.
  • C is the gear-wheel, secured on the end of the shaft of the dofl'er.
  • D is the mixing-roller, which is provided with a suitable spindle d, which is j ournaled in suitable bearings on the frame of the machine.
  • d is a gear-wheel secured on the end of the shaft (1 of the mixing-roller.
  • d is an intermediate idler-connecting the gear-wheels C and d.
  • E is an endless conveyor made, preferably, of slats 6, connected to endless leather belts e, which are carried at one end by the roller F, having a spindle supported in suitable journals on the main frame of the primary machine, and on spindles G, supported in suitable journals on the main frame of the finishinganachine at the other end.
  • H is a cross-shaft suitably 'journaled on suitable bearings H on the frame of the machine.
  • h is a stripping-comb secured thereon designed to operate and to be vibrated in front of the mixing-roller.
  • I I are the feed-rollers of the finishingmachine, journaled in suitable bearings t' on the main frame of the finishing-machine.
  • J is the licker-in roller, supported, on suitable bearings J.
  • J 2 is the himper-roller
  • J 3 is the wiperroller designed to operate against the lumperroller.
  • 1" is a gear-wheel secured 011 the spindle j of the lower feed-roller.
  • j is a pinion on the opposite end of the spindle of the lower feed-roller.
  • j is a pinion on the end of the conveyerroller
  • y' is an intermediate idler-pinion connecting the pinions j and j.
  • the wiper and lumper rollers are provided with pulleys j 1' driven by belts y' 7' from the main drive of the machine.
  • K is a cross rocking shaft supported on suitable arms on the frame of the finishingmachine and designed to rock loosely thereon.
  • K is an arm secured to one end of the cross-shaft K.
  • -L is a bar slidablyheld in the guide-brackets Z Z, secured to the frames of the primary and finishing machines, respectively. It is a slot formed in the arm K through which passes a bolt 7c, provided with a nut k securing the arm to the bar L.
  • K is a crank-arm secured on the shaft K suitably journaled on the frame of the machine.
  • crank-arm K is a link connecting the bar L with the crank-arm K
  • the crank-arm K is driven by means of the pulleys K K secured on the shaft K, and spindle of the dofl'er-roller, respectively, carrying the connecting driving-belt K".
  • M is a pressure-bar connected by the arms m to the shaft K.
  • N N are evener-arms which abut the edges of the bat as it passes from the mixing-roller.
  • the evener-arms N are formed in two portions n n, provided, respectively, with the vertical and longitudinal slots n 11?.
  • the portion n is secured by a bolt a, passing through vertical slot into the bearing of the mixing-roller.
  • the portion n is secured to the portion n by a bolt n", passing through the longitudinal slot a into the portion n.
  • m represents evener-arms secured in front of the feed-rollers to the main frame in a similar manner as the eveners N N.
  • D is a saddle-piece straddling the bearing of the shaft (Z and having collars D which encircle the shaft.
  • D* is a worm-gear secured to the shaft d.
  • d is a saddle-piece designed to straddle the worm-gear D in a similar manner to the saddle-piece D.
  • the pieces D and d are provided with extension-arms (1 d.
  • D is a worm-wheel loosely secured upon the bolt (1, and d is a cam forming part of the wheel D".
  • D is an extension-piece secured at right angles to the extension-arm d and provided with a slotted portion (i in which the cam d is designed to operate. b
  • the wool passes beneath the doifer-roller in the form of a fleece and is caught by the mixing-roller, which oscillates, as hereinafter described, thereby evenly spreading the wool against the evener-arm, so as to make the bat of uniform width.
  • the wool then falls onto the conveyer in the form of a carded fleece.
  • the conveyer is driven at a very low rate of speed, preferably in proportion of one inch of travel to one hundred inches of travel of the mixing-roller.
  • the beater-rod M insures the bat being even in width before it passes between the feed-rollers by forcing it outwardly against the eveners.
  • the lumper-roller picks up the lump and carries it back to the wiper-roller.
  • the adjacent peripheries of the lumper and licker-in rollers rotate in the same direction, and the adjacent peripheries of the lumper and wiper rollers rotate in the opposite direction, while the adjacent peripheries of the wiper and licker-in rollers rotate in the same direction.
  • the lump is picked from the fleece by the lumper-roller, which carries it around to the wiper-roller, which tears the lump therefrom, so as to pull the lump apart, and then the wiper-roller carries it back into the fleece at the periphery of the licker-in roller, thus insuring the bat passing in a perfectly even state into roving.
  • the wool is fed forward automatically from the primary cardingma chine into the finishing machine, with its fibers always moving in the same longitudinal direction in relation to each other, so that the fibers are kept in a longitudinal form parallel to each other, are crimped together as it passes over the apron by reason of the difference in the rate of movement of the apron or conveyer and the mixing roller, thereby thoroughly mixing the fibers longitudinally, and thus the wool is carried forwardly in an unbroken continuous bat into the finishingmachine.
  • What I claim as my invention is 1.
  • a carding-machine the combination with the primary machine and its dofferroller, mixing-roller and comb, of a conveyer rotating at a lower rate of speed than the doffer-roller and means for driving the conveyer as and for the purpose specified.
  • a carding-machine the combination with the primary machine having the dofferroller, mixing-roller and comb, and the feedrollers of the finishing-machine, of a conveyer located intermediately, and means for driving the same at a lower rate of speed than the doffer-roller, as and for the purpose specified.
  • a carding-machine the combination of the primary machine having the dofferroller, the feed-rollers of the finishing-machine, a conveyer located intermediately, means for driving the same at a lower rate of speed than the doffer-roller, a mixing-roller and a vibrating comb located in front of the doffer-roller, as and for the purpose specified.
  • endless conveyer located between the doffer roller and feed-rollers, and a vibrating comb arranged adjacent to one end of the conveyer, of a mixing-roller located between the doflerroller and the comb, a bracket secured to the spindle of the mixing roller, a cam-wheel rotatably held thereon, means for driving the cam, a slotted bracket secured to the main frame of the machine in which said cam 0perates and evener-arms located at each. side of the said conveyer in front of the mixing roller as and for the purpose specified.
  • a bracket encircling said shaft on each side of the said worm and a worm-wheel rotatably held on said bracket and meshing with the worm-thread on the spindle, a camwheel secured to or forming part of said worm-wheel, a slotted bracket secured to the frame of the machine in which thesaid cam is designed to operate and evener-arms located on each side of the said conveyer in front of the mixing-roller as and for the purpose specified.
  • the combination with the primary machine having the dofler-roller, a conveyer, a mixing-roller and purpose eomb coacting with the doifer-roiier, said parts delivering the wool in the form of a criinped or doubled bat as and for the purpose specified.

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

Description

PATENTED MAY 2, 1905.
\ P. P-ITTS. GARDING "MACHINE;
APPLICATION FILED JULY '7. 1902. RENEWED MAB. 28.1905.
3 SHEETS-SHEET 1.
PAT-ENTED MAY 2, 1905.
F. N. PITTS.
CARDING MACHINE.
APPLIOATION FILED JULY 7. 1902. RENEWED MAR. 28.1905.
3 SKBETS-SHEET 2.
I WZ'Z 7m 1 95. 5. 91/
PATEN'I'ED MAY 2, 1905. F. N. PITTS.
GARDING MACHINE.
APPLICATION FILED JULY 1. 1902. RENEWED Mn. 28.1805.
3 SHEETS-SHEBT 3.
Wc'frwauw. (7m
UNITED STATES Patented May 2, 1905.
PATENT OFFICE.
CARDlNG-MACHINE.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent N0. 788,555, dated May 2, 1905. Application filed July 7,1902. Renewed March 28,1905. Serial No. 252,530.
cient automatic means whereby the wool or other stock or material from the primary.
carding-machine, no matter whether of low or high grade, may be doubled or mixed and conveyed directly, if preferable, to the finishing-machine," and thereby effect a saving in material or stock and a saving of time and produce a yarn of better quality than has been produced in machines of this class as at present constructed.
A subsidiary object is to keep the fiber straight as it passes from one machine into the other, so that the fibers are fed endwise and not broken or disturbed and the bat is fed in doubled or crimped form.
The invention consists, essentially, of a doubling or mixing roller connected to the discharge end of the primary machine, such roller being arranged to come in contact with the doffer-roller, a vibrating comb suitably driven and designed to coact with the mixingroller, a conveyer having one end near the doffer and mixing roller and having its opposite end extending into proximity with the feed-roller of the finishing-machine, a compressor-bar suitably operated in proximity with the feed-roller of the feeding-machine, a licker-in roller located substantially above the uppermost feed-roller and coacting therewith, and a lu'mper-roller located substantially above the licker-in roller, the parts being arranged and constructed as here nafter more particularly explained.
Figure 1 is a perspectlve view showlng a portion of the discharge end of the primary machine and the feed end of the finishingmachine, exhibiting therebetween the parts involved in my invention. Fig. 2 1s a S1111}:
5o lar view from the opposite side of the machine. Fig. 3 is a longitudinal section. Fig. 4 is a perspective detail of the evener-arm. Fig. 5 is a perspective detail of the wormgear, whereby the mixing-roller is given an oscillating movement.
In the drawings like letters of reference indicate corresponding parts in each figure.
A is the dofler-roller of the primary machine, the shaft of which is supported in suitable bearings B on the main frame.
C is the gear-wheel, secured on the end of the shaft of the dofl'er.
D is the mixing-roller, which is provided with a suitable spindle d, which is j ournaled in suitable bearings on the frame of the machine.
d is a gear-wheel secured on the end of the shaft (1 of the mixing-roller.
d is an intermediate idler-connecting the gear-wheels C and d.
E is an endless conveyor made, preferably, of slats 6, connected to endless leather belts e, which are carried at one end by the roller F, having a spindle supported in suitable journals on the main frame of the primary machine, and on spindles G, supported in suitable journals on the main frame of the finishinganachine at the other end. i
H is a cross-shaft suitably 'journaled on suitable bearings H on the frame of the machine.
h is a stripping-comb secured thereon designed to operate and to be vibrated in front of the mixing-roller.
I do not describe the mechanism whereby the comb is vibrated, as it is of ordinary construction.
I I are the feed-rollers of the finishingmachine, journaled in suitable bearings t' on the main frame of the finishing-machine.
J is the licker-in roller, supported, on suitable bearings J.
J 2 is the himper-roller, and J 3 is the wiperroller designed to operate against the lumperroller.
1" is a gear-wheel secured 011 the spindle j of the lower feed-roller.
7' is a gear secured to the end of the wiperroller. This gear meshes with the gear y", so that when the Wiper-roller is driven the lower feed-roller will be driven also by the gears j and j. V
j is a pinion on the opposite end of the spindle of the lower feed-roller.
j is a pinion on the end of the conveyerroller, and y' is an intermediate idler-pinion connecting the pinions j and j.
is a pinion on the end of the upper feedroller designed to mesh with the pinion on the lower feed-roller.
The wiper and lumper rollers are provided with pulleys j 1' driven by belts y' 7' from the main drive of the machine.
K is a cross rocking shaft supported on suitable arms on the frame of the finishingmachine and designed to rock loosely thereon.
K is an arm secured to one end of the cross-shaft K.
-Lis a bar slidablyheld in the guide-brackets Z Z, secured to the frames of the primary and finishing machines, respectively. It is a slot formed in the arm K through which passes a bolt 7c, provided with a nut k securing the arm to the bar L.
K is a crank-arm secured on the shaft K suitably journaled on the frame of the machine.
K is a link connecting the bar L with the crank-arm K The crank-arm K is driven by means of the pulleys K K secured on the shaft K, and spindle of the dofl'er-roller, respectively, carrying the connecting driving-belt K".
M is a pressure-bar connected by the arms m to the shaft K.
N N are evener-arms which abut the edges of the bat as it passes from the mixing-roller. The evener-arms N are formed in two portions n n, provided, respectively, with the vertical and longitudinal slots n 11?. The portion n is secured by a bolt a, passing through vertical slot into the bearing of the mixing-roller. The portion n is secured to the portion n by a bolt n", passing through the longitudinal slot a into the portion n.
m represents evener-arms secured in front of the feed-rollers to the main frame in a similar manner as the eveners N N.
D is a saddle-piece straddling the bearing of the shaft (Z and having collars D which encircle the shaft.
D* is a worm-gear secured to the shaft d.
d is a saddle-piece designed to straddle the worm-gear D in a similar manner to the saddle-piece D. The pieces D and d are provided with extension-arms (1 d.
D is a worm-wheel loosely secured upon the bolt (1, and d is a cam forming part of the wheel D".
D is an extension-piece secured at right angles to the extension-arm d and provided with a slotted portion (i in which the cam d is designed to operate. b
As the worm-gear revolves it rotates the worm-wheel, and the cam carried thereby revolves in the slot, and thereby carries the spindle longitudinally in its bearings, imparting a reciprocating movement thereto.
Having described the principal parts involved in my invention, I will briefly describe the operation of the same.
The wool passes beneath the doifer-roller in the form of a fleece and is caught by the mixing-roller, which oscillates, as hereinafter described, thereby evenly spreading the wool against the evener-arm, so as to make the bat of uniform width. The wool then falls onto the conveyer in the form of a carded fleece. The conveyer is driven at a very low rate of speed, preferably in proportion of one inch of travel to one hundred inches of travel of the mixing-roller. By this means the fleece is gathered or crimped together in the form of a continuous bat, as shown in Fig. 3, with its fibers perfectly mixed. The beater-rod M insures the bat being even in width before it passes between the feed-rollers by forcing it outwardly against the eveners. If there are any lumps or inequality of thickness in the bat, they are removed by the lumper-roller, which picks up the lump and carries it back to the wiper-roller. The adjacent peripheries of the lumper and licker-in rollers rotate in the same direction, and the adjacent peripheries of the lumper and wiper rollers rotate in the opposite direction, while the adjacent peripheries of the wiper and licker-in rollers rotate in the same direction. Thus the lump is picked from the fleece by the lumper-roller, which carries it around to the wiper-roller, which tears the lump therefrom, so as to pull the lump apart, and then the wiper-roller carries it back into the fleece at the periphery of the licker-in roller, thus insuring the bat passing in a perfectly even state into roving. It will be seen from this description that the wool is fed forward automatically from the primary cardingma chine into the finishing machine, with its fibers always moving in the same longitudinal direction in relation to each other, so that the fibers are kept in a longitudinal form parallel to each other, are crimped together as it passes over the apron by reason of the difference in the rate of movement of the apron or conveyer and the mixing roller, thereby thoroughly mixing the fibers longitudinally, and thus the wool is carried forwardly in an unbroken continuous bat into the finishingmachine.
B m method very short fibers may be used an fed directly in parallel relation and evenly to the finishingmachine, thereby producing a much stronger roving in a minimum space of time out of an inferior quality of fleece.
What I claim as my invention is 1. In a carding-machine the combination with the primary machine and its dofferroller, mixing-roller and comb, of a conveyer rotating at a lower rate of speed than the doffer-roller and means for driving the conveyer as and for the purpose specified.
2. In a carding-machine, the combination with the primary machine having the dofferroller, mixing-roller and comb, and the feedrollers of the finishing-machine, of a conveyer located intermediately, and means for driving the same at a lower rate of speed than the doffer-roller, as and for the purpose specified.
3. In a carding-machine, the combination of the primary machine having the dofferroller, the feed-rollers of the finishing-machine, a conveyer located intermediately, means for driving the same at a lower rate of speed than the doffer-roller, a mixing-roller and a vibrating comb located in front of the doffer-roller, as and for the purpose specified.
4. In a machine of the class described, the combination of the doffer-roller, of the primary machine, the feed-rollers of the finishing-machine, a conveyer located between the doffer and the feed rollers, means to rotate the same at a lower rate of speed than the doffer, a mixing-roller located 1n front of the doifer-roller, as and for the purpose s ecified.
5. In a machine of the class descri ed, the combination of the primary machine having the doifer-roller, the feed-rollers of the finishing-machine, a conveyer located between the doffer and the feed rollers, means to drive the same at a lower rate of speed than the doffer, a mixing-roller located in front of the dofferroller and a vibrating comb located immediately in front of and coacting with the mixing-roller, as and for the purpose specified.
6. In a machine of the class described, the
combination of the primary machine having the doffer-roller, the feed-rollers of the finishingmachine, an endless conveyer located between the doffer and the feed rollers, means for driving the same at a lower rate of speed than the doffer-roller, a mixing-roller located immediately in front of the dofl'er-roller and rotating at a higher rate of speed than the conveyer, evener-arms located at each side .of the conveyor in front of the mixing-roller,
means for imparting a reciprocating movement to the mixing-roller and a Vibrating comb operating in conjunction with the mixing-roller, as and for the purpose specified.
7. In a machine of the class described, the
combination with doffer-roller, feed-rollers,
endless conveyer located between the doffer roller and feed-rollers, and a vibrating comb arranged adjacent to one end of the conveyer, of a mixing-roller located between the doflerroller and the comb, a bracket secured to the spindle of the mixing roller, a cam-wheel rotatably held thereon, means for driving the cam, a slotted bracket secured to the main frame of the machine in which said cam 0perates and evener-arms located at each. side of the said conveyer in front of the mixing roller as and for the purpose specified.
8. In a machine of the class described, the combination with the dofler-roller, feed-rollers, endless conveyer located between the dofl'er-roller and feed-rollers, and a vibrating comb arranged adjacent to one end of the conveyer, of a mixing-roller located between the dolfer-roller and comb and. provided with a worm-thread on the spindle thereof, a bracket encircling said shaft on each side of the said worm and a worm-wheel rotatably held on said bracket and meshing with the worm-thread on the spindle, a camwheel secured to or forming part of said worm-wheel, a slotted bracket secured to the frame of the machine in which thesaid cam is designed to operate and evener-arms located on each side of the said conveyer in front of the mixing-roller as and for the purpose specified.
9. In a machine of the class described, the combination with the reci rocating mixingroller, the comb and end ess conveyer, of evener-arms located at each side of the conveyer, and secured to the main frame and abutting the edges of the bat as it passes from the mixing-roller as and for the purpose specified.
10. In a machine of the class described, the combination with the feed-rollers of the finishing-machine and the endless conveyer, of evener-arms located at each side of the conveyer in proximity to the feed-rollers to abut the edges of the bat and means for spreadin the bat against the evener-arms, as and for the purpose specified.
11. In a machine of the class described, the combination with the feed-rollers of the finishing-machine and the endless conveyer, of evenerarms located at each side of the conveyer in proximity to the feedrollers and abutting the edges of the bat, a rocking bar located above the conveyer between the evener-arms, a beater-bar connected to the cross-bar and means for imparting a rock ing motion to said shaft as and for specified.
12. In a machine of the class described, the combination with the feed-rollers of the finishing-machine and the endless conveyer, of evener-arms located at each side of the conveyer in proximity to the feed-rollers and abutting the edges of the hat, a rocking crossbar located above the conveyer between the evener-arms, a beater-bar connected to the cross-bar, an arm secured to the end of the said crossbar, a horizontal slidable bar secured in suitable guideways to the frame of the machine, a suitably-driven. shaft supported on suitable bearings on the frame of the machine, a crank-arm secured thereto connected to the slidable bar as and for the purpose specified.
13. In a carding-machine, the combination with the primary machine having the dofler-roller, a conveyer, a mixing-roller and purpose eomb coacting with the doifer-roiier, said parts delivering the wool in the form of a criinped or doubled bat as and for the purpose specified.
14. In a carding-machine, the combination with the primary machine having the d0fi"err011er, a eonveyer, a mixing-roller and comb coaeting With the do'ffer-roller and a
US25253002A 1902-07-07 1902-07-07 Carding-machine. Expired - Lifetime US788555A (en)

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Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2428709A (en) * 1941-09-29 1947-10-07 Rudolph F Hlavaty Material handling
US2725599A (en) * 1952-01-03 1955-12-06 Schorsch Ludwig Method of and apparatus for use in preparing textile fiber and spinning into yarn
US3538552A (en) * 1969-03-03 1970-11-10 Kendall & Co Carding device

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2428709A (en) * 1941-09-29 1947-10-07 Rudolph F Hlavaty Material handling
US2725599A (en) * 1952-01-03 1955-12-06 Schorsch Ludwig Method of and apparatus for use in preparing textile fiber and spinning into yarn
US3538552A (en) * 1969-03-03 1970-11-10 Kendall & Co Carding device

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