WO1994019525A1 - Compressively treating flexible sheet materials - Google Patents

Compressively treating flexible sheet materials Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO1994019525A1
WO1994019525A1 PCT/US1994/000991 US9400991W WO9419525A1 WO 1994019525 A1 WO1994019525 A1 WO 1994019525A1 US 9400991 W US9400991 W US 9400991W WO 9419525 A1 WO9419525 A1 WO 9419525A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
web
drive roll
retarder
ridges
grooves
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1994/000991
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Richard R. Walton
Richard C. Walton
George E. Munchbach
Original Assignee
Richard C. Walton
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
Application filed by Richard C. Walton filed Critical Richard C. Walton
Priority to JP51898494A priority Critical patent/JP3428995B2/en
Priority to DE69423961T priority patent/DE69423961T2/en
Priority to EP94909505A priority patent/EP0685010B1/en
Priority to BR9405766A priority patent/BR9405766A/en
Publication of WO1994019525A1 publication Critical patent/WO1994019525A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06CFINISHING, DRESSING, TENTERING OR STRETCHING TEXTILE FABRICS
    • D06C21/00Shrinking by compressing

Definitions

  • the invention relates to the longitudinal compressive treatment of webs in which a stationary retarder surface acts upon a driven web to cause the web to slow and longitudinally compact or crepe in a treatment zone.
  • This technique sometimes referred to as microcreping because of its ability to produce fine crepes, is exemplified by our prior U.S. Patents 3,810,280, 4,142,278 and 5,060,349, which are incorporated herein by reference.
  • a particularly- advantageous retarder sheet for a microcreper comprises a large multiplicity of parallel ridges and grooves biased obliquely to the direction of drive of the web.
  • a web treated by such a retarder member may tend to travel at an angle to the feeding direction of the roll, and deform into a parallelogram.
  • the treated web may retain this deformation even after it is wound onto a take-up roll.
  • Previous methods of correcting this parallelogram deformation have resulted in deformations to the web, for instance stretching that has tended to defeat the purpose of the compressive treatment, or uneven stretching of the web that give the web an undesired, Moire textured appearance.
  • the invention in general, in a first aspect, relates to an apparatus for longitudinal compressive treatment of a continuous web of material, the apparatus comprising a cylindrical drive roll for advancing the web, a smooth- surfaced primary member to press the web against the drive roll, and a generally-stationary retarder downstream of the primary member to engage and retard the web before the web has left the drive roll.
  • the initially-effective retarder surface of the retarder which has a large multiplicity of parallel ridges and grooves extending across the width of the web, is combined with a reorienting retarding surface.
  • the ridges of the initially-effective retarding surface are uniformly biased obliquely to the direction of drive of the web, and are effective to cause longitudinal compression of the web together with orientation of the web to flow at an angle to the original direction of drive of the web induced by the drive roll.
  • the reorienting retarding surface is disposed to be effective after an incremental advance of the web at the angle, the reorienting retarding surface constructed to have a supplementary retarding, effect that is cooperative with said drive roll to reorient the travel of the web to a direction generally parallel to the original direction of drive.
  • the retarder has two ridge-and-groove regions, the upstream region providing the initially-effective retarder surface, and the more- downstream region forming the reorienting retarding surface.
  • the ridges of the downstream region are biased in a reverse angle relative to that of the ridges and grooves of the upstream ridge-and-groove region.
  • the bias angle of the downstream region e.g., forty-five degrees
  • the bias angle of the upstream region e.g., thirty degrees.
  • the reorienting retarding surface comprises roughening of the surface within the grooves of the retarder, the ridges having smooth flat tops over which the web can slide. The roughening is applied to the surface within the grooves of the retarder by plasma coating.
  • the drive roll has a rougher surface than the surface within the grooves of the retarder.
  • the retarder comprises a sheet- form member that can be reoriented in the machine to expose a different portion of the sheet to wear.
  • the ridges have flat top surfaces for engaging the web, which, in certain preferred embodiments, are plated with a hard, smooth material.
  • the ridges have sharp edges.
  • the primary member and retarder comprise an assembly of superposed sheet members extending across the width of the web on the drive roll.
  • Microcrepers according to the invention offer a number of advantages.
  • the knit web is stretched, cut, and pulled through a number of processing steps. Because the web is in longitudinal tension during much of this manufacture process, the web tends to neck down, that is, to reduce in width and stretch in length. These manufacturing steps tend to impart uneven deformations to the web, degrading the appearance of the web and impairing easy manufacture of dimensionally-stable finished goods.
  • a microcreper according to the invention when used as the last stage in a knit manufacture line before the knit is cut and sewn, tends to widen the web, correcting the necking-down. The uneven tensions in the web are allowed to even out across the length and width of the web, improving the manufacturing characteristics of the web.
  • the multiple grooves and ridges of the retarder surface produce a treated web with especially desireable properties.
  • the web comes off the microcreper straight, without parallelogram deformation. Because the retarder surface does not have sharp points, as would be found on a roughened retarder surface, the retarder surface does not pick loops from nor cause fuzziness in the web, nor does it ablate dust from the web.
  • the invention in a second aspect, relates to an apparatus for longitudinal compressive treatment of a continuous web of material, the apparatus comprising a cylindrical drive roll for advancing the web, an assembly of sheet-form members to press the web against the drive roll, said drive roll and primary member being wider than the web, and a tape of a tough, slippery material, the tape held generally stationary in the portion of the engagement region between the sheet assembly and the drive roll not occupied by the web.
  • the tape may preferably be of polyester film.
  • Fig. 1 is a perspective view of a so-called bladeless microcreper.
  • Fig. la is a top plan view, partially cut away, detailing the treatment region of the microcreper of Fig.
  • Fig. lb is a diagrammatic cross-section on enlarged scale taken on lines lb/lb of Fig. la.
  • Figs, lc-le are sectional views of the microcreper.
  • Figs. 2 and 3a are a perspective views of sheet assemblies.
  • Fig. 2a is a sectional view of a retarder sheet.
  • Figs. 3 and 4 are plan views of the underside of retarder sheets.
  • Fig. 3b is a side plan view of a sheet assembly.
  • Fig. 4a is a sectional view of a retarder sheet.
  • Fig. 5 is a side plan view of a sheet assembly.
  • Fig. 6 is a perspective view of a microcreper, partially cut-away.
  • Fig. 1 shows a microcreper according to the invention.
  • a cylindrical drive roll 100 rotates in direction 106 to advance a web of material 190 past feeding shoe surface 112 and retarder surface 114.
  • the roll is typically steel, of e.g. 12-inch diameter, and has a web-gripping surface 102 provided by fine carbide particles applied by plasma coating.
  • the feeding and retarder surfaces are provided as an assembly of sheet- form members mounted in a sheet holder 200 and extending forward. The assembly passes under presser member 150 and over roll surface 102 where it engages web 190 against the roll. Referring to Figs, la and lb, the sheet assembly comprises a primary feeding member 112 closest to the roll, and a retarder sheet 114.
  • the roll-facing surface of the retarder sheet comprises a large multiplicity of parallel ridges and grooves biased obliquely to the direction of drive 106 of the web.
  • the retarder sheet is shown partially cut away, so that the substrate, forming the bottom of the grooves, exposing ridges 202.
  • the web 190 engages the ridges, friction causes longitudinal compression of the web, and the web orients to flow at an angle 107 to the original direction of drive 106 induced by the drive roll, as shown in region 170.
  • the ridges are set at 30°, and the web flows at 20°.
  • the retarder surface comprises reorienting retarding surface, not shown, so that after the web has advanced incrementally beyond the region 170 of angled flow, the reorienting retarding surface reorients the travel of the web to a direction generally parallel to the original direction of drive, as shown in region 172.
  • the web no longer following the grooves, ratchets past the remaining grooves and ridges.
  • the sheet assembly consists of a primary feeding member 112, one or more retarder sheets 114 which support a retarder surface formed by ridges 202 and grooves 204, and a conformer member 118 of form specially curved to apply force to the tip portion of the sheet assembly.
  • each of feeding primary 112, retarder 114, and conformer members 118 are formed of sheets of blue spring steel.
  • Feeding primary member 112 has a smooth under-surface and is arranged, by the influence of presser member edge ISO- 7 , to press web 190 into driven engagement with the surface 102 of drive roll 100.
  • the downstream edge 112' of primary member 112 lies slightly downstream from alignment with presser member edge 150' »
  • Retarder sheet 114 has a large multiplicity of grooves 204 and ridges 202 set obliquely to the direction of drive of the web.
  • the sheet form members are positioned by sheet holder 200, with the free end of the pre-curved conformer member 118 engaged upon the retarder sheet 114 near the free tip of the latter.
  • the head comprising the presser member 150, the holder 200 and the sheet assembly 110, are rotated as a unit by pneumatic actuators, not shown, to the operative position of Figs lb and lc.
  • Fig. Id and the magnified view of Fig. le show a microcreper in operative position.
  • Pressure member 150 forces each of the sheet members, particularly primary member 112, into engagement with web 190 against roll 100.
  • the retarder sheet 114 is bowed to conform to the roll, as a result of pressure applied to its tip region by the cantilevered end of conformer member 118.
  • Fig. le As seen most clearly in Fig. le, as the web emerges from under the edge 112' of the primary member 112, it expands vertically to fill the cavity between roll 100 and retarder sheet 114, and compresses longitudinally. The web is retarded at the leading edge of each ridge 202. Referring to Figs.
  • the roll-facing surface of a retarder sheet has a retarder surface comprising a large multiplicity of parallel ridges 202 and grooves 204 biased obliquely to the direction of drive of the web.
  • the overall thickness of the polished steel sheet is 0.010"
  • the ridges are 0.010" wide
  • the grooves are 0.040" wide and 0.005" deep.
  • Bias angles of 10° to 50° from the direction of drive have been found useful, and 30° to 45° preferable, varying with the material to be treated. Because this retarder surface does not have sharp points (as would be found on a roughened retarder surface) , the biased retarder surface does not pick loops from the web, nor cause fuzziness in the web, nor raise dust.
  • the retarder sheet of Figs. 2 and 2a is modified so that the web, after initially being diverted by the grooves and ridges to travel at an angle to the original direction of drive induced by the drive roll, is reoriented to travel in a direction generally parallel to the original direction of drive 106, thereby causing the web to ratchet past the grooves and ridges 202.
  • This reorienting overcomes a deficiency of the unmodified retarder sheet, in that the web emerges from the microcreper in a square conformation, rather than deformed into a parallelogram.
  • Figs. 3, 3a and 3b show an embodiment of the invention in which the retarder sheet of the invention is divided into three regions.
  • the center region 310 uses 0.010" ridges and 0.040x0.005" grooves biased at 30°, as in the retarder sheet of Fig. 2.
  • a strip 312 of 0.010" ridges and 0.040x0.005" grooves back-biased at -45° is appended on the downstream edge.
  • half or more of the retarder sheet is covered under the primary sheet member, the edge 112' of which is shown in phantom. As the retarder sheet wears, it can be reversed end-for-end, exposing the other -45° region 314, doubling the life of the retarder sheet.
  • the full length of the center 30° portion 310 (measured in the direction of drive of the web) is typically two inches, about n of which is typically exposed out from under the primary member.
  • the length of -45° sections 312 and 314 is typically n . Because the grooves of both the 30° and - 45° regions are set on the same 0.050" centers, the grooves do not meet end-for-end at the boundary 316 between the regions. As most clearly seen in Fig. 3b, the sheet is pre-curved to conform to the circumference of the roll,, and conformer member.118 exerts its maximum force very near the downstream edge of the retarder. Thus, the downstream edge of the retarder surface exerts a larger force on the web than more-upstream portions of the retarder.
  • the 30°/-45° embodiment can either be milled into a single sheet as shown in Fig. 3, or the embodiment can be formed of a 45° sheet lapped over a 30° sheet, as shown in Figs. 3a and 3b.
  • the embodiment of Figs. 3, 3a and 3b is especially useful for knits thicker than 0.030", for instance fleecy knits with a nap.
  • the web is fed through the microcreper with the nap face against the roll.
  • a 30° single-region 410 retarder sheet is plasma-coated with tungsten carbide to a roll surface 100-120 RMS.
  • the plasma coating is sanded or stoned off of the ridges.
  • the retarder sheet has slightly-roughened grooves 404 and smooth ridges 402.
  • the roll is also typically plasma-coated, to a surface roughness of RMS 100-110.
  • the retarder grooves are somewhat smoother than the roll surface.
  • the embodiment of Fig. 4 is especially useful for treating knits of 0.025" thickness or less, for instance pique, jersey and interlock knits which are typically about 0.015" thick.
  • the retarder surface includes an uncoated 30° ridge-and- groove retarder sheet 502 followed by a plasma-coated 30° ridge-and-groove retarder sheet 504. This retarder surface works well to reduce shine or gloss on the surface of the web.
  • edges of the ridges especially the upstream edge of each ridge, be relatively sharp.
  • the edges should be periodically resharpened, for instance, by replacing, the retarder sheet, by reversing the member and exposing a new surface, by stoning the faces smooth, or by running the microcreper with no web engaged, thereby polishing the retarder sheet against the face of the roll.
  • the retarder sheet especially the faces of the ridges, can be chrome-plated for longer life.
  • each of the three retarder sheets would work just as well. Bias angles for regions 310, 410, 502, and 504 from 20° to 40° may be useful, and for edge strip 312 from -40° to -50°.
  • the configuration of the ridges and grooves may vary with the nature of the web.
  • the grooves should be wider than the ridges, preferably several times wider.
  • the ridges should be on centers no wider than 0.25" and no narrower than 0.010", and will typically be near the inter-rib spacing of the knit.
  • the retarder sheet should be fairly thin, typically 0.010", so that it is flexible enough to conform to the roll. This, in turn, limits the depth of the grooves to no more than the thickness of the retarder sheet.
  • All knit fabrics have ribs or similar surface features produced by the loops of the knit. In some knits, the ribs are subtle, for instance the lines where threads of adjacent loops cross. Some knits have obvious ribs; these should not be crushed by the microcreper. It has been found preferable that the ridge-to-ridge spacing of the retarding surface be about equal to the rib-to-rib spacing of the fabric, up to a few times larger. It is believed that the ridges should have flat top faces, rather than, for instance, a saw-tooth profile.
  • Chemical-milling is. the preferred method of embossing the grooves into the retarder sheet, though various ablating, grinding and machining methods are also possible.
  • a microcreper is typically the last step in the line before the knit web is inspected and batched (rolled or folded) for shipment to a finished goods manufacturer.
  • Knitting machines typically knit a tube of material; before batching the material undergoes a number operations, including slitting, that impart desireable and undesirable deformations to the web.
  • undesirable deformations are those that stretch the web longitudinally, causing it to neck down laterally, and those that stretch the web non-uniformly. Further, the weight of the yarn varies, imparting further non- uniformity to the web.
  • a microcreper with a grooved retarder sheet according to the invention generally causes the web to compact longitudinally and regain some of its lateral width, and allows much of the non-uniform deformation to even out across the length and width of the web, without deforming the web into a parallelogram. Further, the described retarder surfaces allow this evening-out to occur in spite of the unevenness of the yarn, etc. For instance, a grooveless plasma-coated retarder sheet has been found to produce streaks in the web where irregularities in the web are retarded differentially and unevenly stretch the web.
  • the retarder sheets of the invention result in webs with especially desireable properties, apparently because the diagonal ridges and grooves function as small compaction zones: each ridge tends to isolate irregularities in one groove's compaction zone from the next groove's zone. Also, the web receives multiple compressive treatments as it is driven under multiple grooves and ridges before it leaves the retarder surface.
  • the web follows the drive roll 100 and is gradually pressed between the roll and the smooth under- surface of the primary member 112, into driving engagement with the gripping surface of the roll. When the web emerges from under the edge 112' of the primary.
  • the web thickens and engages the drive roll sufficiently that the urging of the drive roll takes over and causes the web to resume travel essentially parallel to the original direction of drive, so that the web passes over the ridges of the downstream portion of the retarder.
  • the web initially slides along the 30° ridges, during which it may be progressively compressed longitudinally.
  • the web reaches the -45° section, because of the curvature of the retarder member and the force exerted by conformer member 118, significant retarding can be applied at this downstream edge of the retarder.
  • the now-thickened web is forced to leave the original grooves and pass over the ridges of the reverse set. Therefore, in this region, the web is caused to more tightly engage the drive roll surface, and the forward urging of the drive roll causes the web to reorient to essentially follow the direction of the drive roll.
  • the web under treatment is often narrower than the full width of the drive roll and sheet assembly.
  • the sheet assembly 110 drags on the drive roll 100, and both wear prematurely.
  • a roll 600 of a tough, slippery plastic tape 602, for instance 8" x 5 mil mylar, can be mounted between the sheet assembly 110 and the drive roll 100.
  • the tape roll is mounted on a fixed shaft so that it does not unroll under the force applied by the drive roll, but can be inspected every hour or so and advanced as necessary by an operator.
  • the drive roll slips against the relatively slippery and inexpensive tape 602 instead of wearing against the relatively hard and expensive sheet assembly 110.
  • the tape can be positioned on the shaft, by sliding in the direction of the axis of the roll, so that the space between the edge of the tape and the edge of the web is narrow enough so that the sheet assembly is cantilevered at both ends of the space and does not drag on the roll.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Treatment Of Fiber Materials (AREA)
  • Shaping Of Tube Ends By Bending Or Straightening (AREA)

Abstract

Apparatus for longitudinal compressive treatment of a continuous web of material. The apparatus comprises a cylindrical drive roll (100) for advancing the web, a smooth-surfaced primary member (112) to press the web against the drive roll, and a generally stationary retarder (114) downstream of the primary member to engage and retard the web before the web has left the drive roll. The retarder surface has a large multiplicity of parallel ridges (202) and grooves (204) set on a diagonal, and effective to cause longitudinal compression of the web and to cause the web to flow at an angle to the original direction of drive. The retarder surface also has a reorienting retarding surface, effective after the web advances incrementally at the angle, to effect further compression and to reorient the travel of the web to be generally parallel to the original direction of drive.

Description

COMPRESSIVELY TREATING FLEXIBLE SHEET MATERIALS
Background of the Invention The invention relates to the longitudinal compressive treatment of webs in which a stationary retarder surface acts upon a driven web to cause the web to slow and longitudinally compact or crepe in a treatment zone. This technique, sometimes referred to as microcreping because of its ability to produce fine crepes, is exemplified by our prior U.S. Patents 3,810,280, 4,142,278 and 5,060,349, which are incorporated herein by reference.
As described in our '349 patent, a particularly- advantageous retarder sheet for a microcreper comprises a large multiplicity of parallel ridges and grooves biased obliquely to the direction of drive of the web. However, in some cases a web treated by such a retarder member, as it passes from the smooth primary surface to the obliquely-grooved retarder surface, may tend to travel at an angle to the feeding direction of the roll, and deform into a parallelogram. The treated web may retain this deformation even after it is wound onto a take-up roll. Previous methods of correcting this parallelogram deformation have resulted in deformations to the web, for instance stretching that has tended to defeat the purpose of the compressive treatment, or uneven stretching of the web that give the web an undesired, Moire textured appearance.
Summary of the Invention It is an object of the invention to provide an improved microcreper that uses a retarder surface with a large multiplicity of parallel ridges and grooves biased obliquely to the direction of drive of the web, but which produces a treated web without having a detrimental tendency to travel at an angle to the feed direction of the roll and without distorting the web into a parallelogram, and that does not impart a Moire pattern, or other blemishes, to the web. In general, in a first aspect, the invention relates to an apparatus for longitudinal compressive treatment of a continuous web of material, the apparatus comprising a cylindrical drive roll for advancing the web, a smooth- surfaced primary member to press the web against the drive roll, and a generally-stationary retarder downstream of the primary member to engage and retard the web before the web has left the drive roll. According to the invention, the initially-effective retarder surface of the retarder, which has a large multiplicity of parallel ridges and grooves extending across the width of the web, is combined with a reorienting retarding surface. The ridges of the initially-effective retarding surface are uniformly biased obliquely to the direction of drive of the web, and are effective to cause longitudinal compression of the web together with orientation of the web to flow at an angle to the original direction of drive of the web induced by the drive roll. The reorienting retarding surface is disposed to be effective after an incremental advance of the web at the angle, the reorienting retarding surface constructed to have a supplementary retarding, effect that is cooperative with said drive roll to reorient the travel of the web to a direction generally parallel to the original direction of drive. In one preferred embodiment, the retarder has two ridge-and-groove regions, the upstream region providing the initially-effective retarder surface, and the more- downstream region forming the reorienting retarding surface. The ridges of the downstream region are biased in a reverse angle relative to that of the ridges and grooves of the upstream ridge-and-groove region. In preferred cases, the bias angle of the downstream region, e.g., forty-five degrees, is larger than the bias angle of the upstream region, e.g., thirty degrees. In another preferred embodiment, the reorienting retarding surface comprises roughening of the surface within the grooves of the retarder, the ridges having smooth flat tops over which the web can slide. The roughening is applied to the surface within the grooves of the retarder by plasma coating. The drive roll has a rougher surface than the surface within the grooves of the retarder.
These and other preferred embodiments may include the following features. The retarder comprises a sheet- form member that can be reoriented in the machine to expose a different portion of the sheet to wear. The ridges have flat top surfaces for engaging the web, which, in certain preferred embodiments, are plated with a hard, smooth material. The ridges have sharp edges. The primary member and retarder comprise an assembly of superposed sheet members extending across the width of the web on the drive roll.
Microcrepers according to the invention offer a number of advantages. During the process of manufacturing knit goods, the knit web is stretched, cut, and pulled through a number of processing steps. Because the web is in longitudinal tension during much of this manufacture process, the web tends to neck down, that is, to reduce in width and stretch in length. These manufacturing steps tend to impart uneven deformations to the web, degrading the appearance of the web and impairing easy manufacture of dimensionally-stable finished goods. A microcreper according to the invention, when used as the last stage in a knit manufacture line before the knit is cut and sewn, tends to widen the web, correcting the necking-down. The uneven tensions in the web are allowed to even out across the length and width of the web, improving the manufacturing characteristics of the web. The multiple grooves and ridges of the retarder surface produce a treated web with especially desireable properties. The web comes off the microcreper straight, without parallelogram deformation. Because the retarder surface does not have sharp points, as would be found on a roughened retarder surface, the retarder surface does not pick loops from nor cause fuzziness in the web, nor does it ablate dust from the web.
In a second aspect, the invention relates to an apparatus for longitudinal compressive treatment of a continuous web of material, the apparatus comprising a cylindrical drive roll for advancing the web, an assembly of sheet-form members to press the web against the drive roll, said drive roll and primary member being wider than the web, and a tape of a tough, slippery material, the tape held generally stationary in the portion of the engagement region between the sheet assembly and the drive roll not occupied by the web. The tape may preferably be of polyester film.
Other advantages and features of the invention will become apparent from the following description of a preferred embodiment, and from the claims.
Brief Description of the Drawings of Preferred Embodiments
Fig. 1 is a perspective view of a so-called bladeless microcreper.
Fig. la is a top plan view, partially cut away, detailing the treatment region of the microcreper of Fig.
1.
Fig. lb is a diagrammatic cross-section on enlarged scale taken on lines lb/lb of Fig. la. Figs, lc-le are sectional views of the microcreper.
Figs. 2 and 3a are a perspective views of sheet assemblies.
Fig. 2a is a sectional view of a retarder sheet. Figs. 3 and 4 are plan views of the underside of retarder sheets.
Fig. 3b is a side plan view of a sheet assembly.
Fig. 4a is a sectional view of a retarder sheet.
Fig. 5 is a side plan view of a sheet assembly. Fig. 6 is a perspective view of a microcreper, partially cut-away.
Description of the Preferred Embodiments Fig. 1 shows a microcreper according to the invention. A cylindrical drive roll 100 rotates in direction 106 to advance a web of material 190 past feeding shoe surface 112 and retarder surface 114. The roll is typically steel, of e.g. 12-inch diameter, and has a web-gripping surface 102 provided by fine carbide particles applied by plasma coating. The feeding and retarder surfaces are provided as an assembly of sheet- form members mounted in a sheet holder 200 and extending forward. The assembly passes under presser member 150 and over roll surface 102 where it engages web 190 against the roll. Referring to Figs, la and lb, the sheet assembly comprises a primary feeding member 112 closest to the roll, and a retarder sheet 114. The roll-facing surface of the retarder sheet comprises a large multiplicity of parallel ridges and grooves biased obliquely to the direction of drive 106 of the web. The retarder sheet is shown partially cut away, so that the substrate, forming the bottom of the grooves, exposing ridges 202. As the web 190 engages the ridges, friction causes longitudinal compression of the web, and the web orients to flow at an angle 107 to the original direction of drive 106 induced by the drive roll, as shown in region 170. For instance, in Fig. la the ridges are set at 30°, and the web flows at 20°. The retarder surface comprises reorienting retarding surface, not shown, so that after the web has advanced incrementally beyond the region 170 of angled flow, the reorienting retarding surface reorients the travel of the web to a direction generally parallel to the original direction of drive, as shown in region 172. The web, no longer following the grooves, ratchets past the remaining grooves and ridges.
Referring to Fig. lc, from the bottom up, the sheet assembly consists of a primary feeding member 112, one or more retarder sheets 114 which support a retarder surface formed by ridges 202 and grooves 204, and a conformer member 118 of form specially curved to apply force to the tip portion of the sheet assembly. Typically, each of feeding primary 112, retarder 114, and conformer members 118 are formed of sheets of blue spring steel. Feeding primary member 112 has a smooth under-surface and is arranged, by the influence of presser member edge ISO-7, to press web 190 into driven engagement with the surface 102 of drive roll 100. The downstream edge 112' of primary member 112 lies slightly downstream from alignment with presser member edge 150' » Retarder sheet 114 has a large multiplicity of grooves 204 and ridges 202 set obliquely to the direction of drive of the web. The sheet form members are positioned by sheet holder 200, with the free end of the pre-curved conformer member 118 engaged upon the retarder sheet 114 near the free tip of the latter. To reach the operative condition, the head, comprising the presser member 150, the holder 200 and the sheet assembly 110, are rotated as a unit by pneumatic actuators, not shown, to the operative position of Figs lb and lc.
Fig. Id and the magnified view of Fig. le show a microcreper in operative position. Pressure member 150 forces each of the sheet members, particularly primary member 112, into engagement with web 190 against roll 100. The retarder sheet 114 is bowed to conform to the roll, as a result of pressure applied to its tip region by the cantilevered end of conformer member 118. As seen most clearly in Fig. le, as the web emerges from under the edge 112' of the primary member 112, it expands vertically to fill the cavity between roll 100 and retarder sheet 114, and compresses longitudinally. The web is retarded at the leading edge of each ridge 202. Referring to Figs. 2 and 2a, the roll-facing surface of a retarder sheet has a retarder surface comprising a large multiplicity of parallel ridges 202 and grooves 204 biased obliquely to the direction of drive of the web. As shown in Fig. 2a, in one such retarder sheet, the overall thickness of the polished steel sheet is 0.010", the ridges are 0.010" wide and the grooves are 0.040" wide and 0.005" deep. Bias angles of 10° to 50° from the direction of drive have been found useful, and 30° to 45° preferable, varying with the material to be treated. Because this retarder surface does not have sharp points (as would be found on a roughened retarder surface) , the biased retarder surface does not pick loops from the web, nor cause fuzziness in the web, nor raise dust.
In the invention, the retarder sheet of Figs. 2 and 2a is modified so that the web, after initially being diverted by the grooves and ridges to travel at an angle to the original direction of drive induced by the drive roll, is reoriented to travel in a direction generally parallel to the original direction of drive 106, thereby causing the web to ratchet past the grooves and ridges 202. This reorienting overcomes a deficiency of the unmodified retarder sheet, in that the web emerges from the microcreper in a square conformation, rather than deformed into a parallelogram. Figs. 3, 3a and 3b show an embodiment of the invention in which the retarder sheet of the invention is divided into three regions. The center region 310 uses 0.010" ridges and 0.040x0.005" grooves biased at 30°, as in the retarder sheet of Fig. 2. In addition, a strip 312 of 0.010" ridges and 0.040x0.005" grooves back-biased at -45° is appended on the downstream edge. Typically, half or more of the retarder sheet is covered under the primary sheet member, the edge 112' of which is shown in phantom. As the retarder sheet wears, it can be reversed end-for-end, exposing the other -45° region 314, doubling the life of the retarder sheet. The full length of the center 30° portion 310 (measured in the direction of drive of the web) is typically two inches, about n of which is typically exposed out from under the primary member. The length of -45° sections 312 and 314 is typically n . Because the grooves of both the 30° and - 45° regions are set on the same 0.050" centers, the grooves do not meet end-for-end at the boundary 316 between the regions. As most clearly seen in Fig. 3b, the sheet is pre-curved to conform to the circumference of the roll,, and conformer member.118 exerts its maximum force very near the downstream edge of the retarder. Thus, the downstream edge of the retarder surface exerts a larger force on the web than more-upstream portions of the retarder.
The 30°/-45° embodiment can either be milled into a single sheet as shown in Fig. 3, or the embodiment can be formed of a 45° sheet lapped over a 30° sheet, as shown in Figs. 3a and 3b. The embodiment of Figs. 3, 3a and 3b is especially useful for knits thicker than 0.030", for instance fleecy knits with a nap. The web is fed through the microcreper with the nap face against the roll. Referring to Fig. 4, in a second embodiment, a 30° single-region 410 retarder sheet is plasma-coated with tungsten carbide to a roll surface 100-120 RMS. The plasma coating is sanded or stoned off of the ridges. Thus, as shown in section in Fig. 4a, the retarder sheet has slightly-roughened grooves 404 and smooth ridges 402. The roll is also typically plasma-coated, to a surface roughness of RMS 100-110. Thus, the retarder grooves are somewhat smoother than the roll surface. The embodiment of Fig. 4 is especially useful for treating knits of 0.025" thickness or less, for instance pique, jersey and interlock knits which are typically about 0.015" thick.
Referring to Fig. 5, in a third embodiment, the retarder surface includes an uncoated 30° ridge-and- groove retarder sheet 502 followed by a plasma-coated 30° ridge-and-groove retarder sheet 504. This retarder surface works well to reduce shine or gloss on the surface of the web.
It is desireable that the edges of the ridges, especially the upstream edge of each ridge, be relatively sharp. As the retarder sheet wears, the edges should be periodically resharpened, for instance, by replacing, the retarder sheet, by reversing the member and exposing a new surface, by stoning the faces smooth, or by running the microcreper with no web engaged, thereby polishing the retarder sheet against the face of the roll.
The retarder sheet, especially the faces of the ridges, can be chrome-plated for longer life.
Note that the mirror image of each of the three retarder sheets would work just as well. Bias angles for regions 310, 410, 502, and 504 from 20° to 40° may be useful, and for edge strip 312 from -40° to -50°. The configuration of the ridges and grooves may vary with the nature of the web. The grooves should be wider than the ridges, preferably several times wider. The ridges should be on centers no wider than 0.25" and no narrower than 0.010", and will typically be near the inter-rib spacing of the knit. The retarder sheet should be fairly thin, typically 0.010", so that it is flexible enough to conform to the roll. This, in turn, limits the depth of the grooves to no more than the thickness of the retarder sheet.
All knit fabrics have ribs or similar surface features produced by the loops of the knit. In some knits, the ribs are subtle, for instance the lines where threads of adjacent loops cross. Some knits have obvious ribs; these should not be crushed by the microcreper. It has been found preferable that the ridge-to-ridge spacing of the retarding surface be about equal to the rib-to-rib spacing of the fabric, up to a few times larger. It is believed that the ridges should have flat top faces, rather than, for instance, a saw-tooth profile.
The choice from among the three embodiments, or from among other embodiments within the claims, will vary with the material to be treated, and the desired result of the treatment.
Chemical-milling is. the preferred method of embossing the grooves into the retarder sheet, though various ablating, grinding and machining methods are also possible. In a knit manufacturing line, a microcreper is typically the last step in the line before the knit web is inspected and batched (rolled or folded) for shipment to a finished goods manufacturer. Knitting machines typically knit a tube of material; before batching the material undergoes a number operations, including slitting, that impart desireable and undesirable deformations to the web. Among the undesirable deformations are those that stretch the web longitudinally, causing it to neck down laterally, and those that stretch the web non-uniformly. Further, the weight of the yarn varies, imparting further non- uniformity to the web.
A microcreper with a grooved retarder sheet according to the invention generally causes the web to compact longitudinally and regain some of its lateral width, and allows much of the non-uniform deformation to even out across the length and width of the web, without deforming the web into a parallelogram. Further, the described retarder surfaces allow this evening-out to occur in spite of the unevenness of the yarn, etc. For instance, a grooveless plasma-coated retarder sheet has been found to produce streaks in the web where irregularities in the web are retarded differentially and unevenly stretch the web. The retarder sheets of the invention, with biased grooves and a grooved reorienting retarding surface, result in webs with especially desireable properties, apparently because the diagonal ridges and grooves function as small compaction zones: each ridge tends to isolate irregularities in one groove's compaction zone from the next groove's zone. Also, the web receives multiple compressive treatments as it is driven under multiple grooves and ridges before it leaves the retarder surface. Referring again to Fig. le, in these three embodiments, the web follows the drive roll 100 and is gradually pressed between the roll and the smooth under- surface of the primary member 112, into driving engagement with the gripping surface of the roll. When the web emerges from under the edge 112' of the primary. it immediately engages the ridges 202 of the retarding surface or against previously compressed material, and longitudinally compacts. In the case of embodiments employing roughening of the surface within the grooves of the retarder, e.g. Figs, lb and 2, the roughening resists sliding of the web along the biased ridges 202, causing enhanced compaction. Thus, the web thickens and engages the drive roll sufficiently that the urging of the drive roll takes over and causes the web to resume travel essentially parallel to the original direction of drive, so that the web passes over the ridges of the downstream portion of the retarder.
In the 30°/-45° embodiment of Figs. 3, 3a and 3b, the web initially slides along the 30° ridges, during which it may be progressively compressed longitudinally. When the web reaches the -45° section, because of the curvature of the retarder member and the force exerted by conformer member 118, significant retarding can be applied at this downstream edge of the retarder. Also, the now-thickened web is forced to leave the original grooves and pass over the ridges of the reverse set. Therefore, in this region, the web is caused to more tightly engage the drive roll surface, and the forward urging of the drive roll causes the web to reorient to essentially follow the direction of the drive roll. Referring to Fig. 6, the web under treatment is often narrower than the full width of the drive roll and sheet assembly. The sheet assembly 110 drags on the drive roll 100, and both wear prematurely. A roll 600 of a tough, slippery plastic tape 602, for instance 8" x 5 mil mylar, can be mounted between the sheet assembly 110 and the drive roll 100. The tape roll is mounted on a fixed shaft so that it does not unroll under the force applied by the drive roll, but can be inspected every hour or so and advanced as necessary by an operator. Thus, the drive roll slips against the relatively slippery and inexpensive tape 602 instead of wearing against the relatively hard and expensive sheet assembly 110. The tape can be positioned on the shaft, by sliding in the direction of the axis of the roll, so that the space between the edge of the tape and the edge of the web is narrow enough so that the sheet assembly is cantilevered at both ends of the space and does not drag on the roll. Other embodiments are within the following claims. What is claimed is:

Claims

1. An apparatus for longitudinal compressive treatment of a continuous web of material, the apparatus comprising: a cylindrical drive roll for advancing the web, a smooth-surfaced primary member arranged over the drive roll to press the web into driven engagement with the drive roll, and a generally-stationary retarder downstream of said primary member positioned to engage and retard the web before the web has left said drive roll, said retarder defining an initially-effective retarder surface facing the web, comprising a large multiplicity of parallel ridges and grooves in a set extending across the width of the web to be treated, the ridges and grooves being uniformly biased at an angle to the direction of drive of the web, and effective to cause longitudinal compression of the web together with orientation of the web to flow at a flow angle to the original direction of drive of the web induced by said drive roll, and a reorienting retarding surface disposed to be effective after an incremental advance of the web at said flow angle, said reorienting retarding surface constructed to have a supplementary retarding effect that is cooperative with said drive roll to reorient the travel of the web to a direction generally parallel to said original direction of drive.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said parallel ridges and grooves form a first ridge-and-groove region, and said reorienting retarding surface comprises a second ridge-and-groove region downstream from said first ridge- and-groove region, with a large multiplicity of parallel grooves and ridges lie at a reverse bias angle relative to the bias angle of the ridges and grooves of said first ridge-and-groove region.
3. The apparatus of claim 2 wherein said reverse bias angle is larger than the bias angle of said first groove-and-ridge region.
4. The apparatus of claim 3 wherein the bias angle in said first ridge-and-groove region is about thirty degrees and the reverse bias angle in said second ridge- and-groove region is about forty-five degrees.
5. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said reorienting retarding surface comprises roughening of the surface within said grooves, and said ridges have smooth flat top surfaces over which the web can slide.
6. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein said roughening is applied to the surface within said grooves by plasma coating.
7. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein said drive roll has a rougher surface than the surface within said grooves.
8. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said retarder comprises a sheet-form member mountable in first and second orientations within said apparatus, said retarder comprising first and second portions, wherein in said first configuration, said first portion is exposed to wear and said second portion is not exposed to wear, and in said second configuration, said second portion is exposed to wear and said first portion is not exposed to wear.
9. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said ridges have flat top surfaces over which the web can slide.
10. The apparatus of claim 9 wherein said ridges have sharp edges.
11. The apparatus of claim 9 wherein said flat- surfaced ridges are plated with a hard, smooth material.
12. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the primary member and retarder comprise an assembly of superposed sheet members extending across the width of the web on said drive roll.
13. The apparatus of claim 1 for use with a predetermined web of knit fabric with ribs, and the ridge-to-ridge spacing of said initially-effective retarder surface is between one and five times the rib- to-rib spacing of the knit.
14. The apparatus of claim 1 for use with a predetermined web of knit fabric, and the ridge-to-ridge spacing of said initially-effective retarder surface is between one and five times the loop length of the knit.
15. A method.of longitudinal compressive treatment of a sheet material, the method comprising: providing a continuous web of said material; providing an apparatus comprising: a cylindrical drive roll for advancing the web, a smooth-surfaced primary member arranged over the drive roll to press the web into driven engagement with the drive roll, and a generally-stationary retarder downstream of said primary member positioned to engage and retard the web before the web has left said drive roll, said retarder defining an initially-effective retarder surface facing the web, comprising a large multiplicity of parallel ridges and grooves in a set extending across the width of the web to be treated, the ridges and grooves being uniformly biased at an angle to the direction of drive of the web, and effective to cause longitudinal compression of the web together with orientation of the web to flow at a flow angle to the original direction of drive of the web induced by said drive roll, and a reorienting retarding surface disposed to be effective after an incremental advance of the web at said flow angle, said reorienting retarding surface constructed to have a supplementary retarding effect that is cooperative with said drive roll to reorient the travel of the web to a direction generally parallel to said original direction of drive; and passing the web through said apparatus to treat said web.
16. The method of claim 15 wherein said material comprises a fleece knit, and said parallel ridges and grooves form a first ridge-and-groove region wherein said grooves are biased at about thirty degrees relative to said direction of drive, and said reorienting retarding surface comprises a second ridge-and-groove region with a large multiplicity of parallel grooves and ridges biased at about forty-five degrees relative to said direction of drive and in a reverse direction to the angle of said first ridge-and-groove region, said second ridge-and- groove region being downstream of said first ridge-and- groove region, the ridges of both said first and second regions having smooth flat top surfaces over which the web can slide.
17. The method of claim 15 wherein said material comprises a pique, jersey, or interlock knit of thickness less than 0.025", and said reorienting retarding surface comprises roughening of the surface within said grooves, and said ridges have smooth flat top surfaces over which the web can slide.
18. A method for manufacture of knit fabric, comprising the steps: knitting yarn into a knit tube; processing said knit tube in a processing line that includes apparatus to slit said knit tube into a flat configuration, wherein as a by-product of said processing, said web is deformed to have variations in density across its length and width; processing said deformed web in a microcreping apparatus comprising: a cylindrical drive roll for advancing the web, a smooth-surfaced primary member arranged over the drive roll to press the web into driven engagement with the drive roll, and a generally-stationary retarder downstream of said primary member positioned to engage and retard the web before the web has left said drive roll, said retarder defining an initially-effective retarder surface facing the web, comprising a large multiplicity of parallel ridges and grooves in a set extending across the width of the web to be treated, the ridges and grooves being uniformly biased at an angle to the direction of drive of the web, and effective to cause longitudinal compression of the web together with orientation of the web to flow at a flow angle to the original direction of drive of the web induced by said drive roll, and a reorienting retarding surface disposed to be effective after an incremental advance of the web at said flow angle, said reorienting retarding surface constructed to have a supplementary retarding effect that is cooperative with said drive roll to reorient the travel of the web to a direction generally parallel to said original direction of drive; said microcreping processing effective to reduce the variation of density of said web across its length and width.
19. An apparatus for longitudinal compressive treatment of a continuous web of material, the apparatus comprising: a cylindrical drive roll for advancing the web, a an assembly of one or more sheet-form members arranged over the drive roll to press the web into driven engagement with the drive roll, said drive roll and sheet assembly being wider than the web, and a tape of a tough, slippery material, said tape held generally stationary in the portion of the engagement region between said sheet assembly and said drive roll not occupied by the web.
20. The apparatus of claim 19 wherein said tape is composed essentially of polyester film.
PCT/US1994/000991 1993-02-22 1994-01-26 Compressively treating flexible sheet materials WO1994019525A1 (en)

Priority Applications (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP51898494A JP3428995B2 (en) 1993-02-22 1994-01-26 Compression processing of flexible sheet material
DE69423961T DE69423961T2 (en) 1993-02-22 1994-01-26 UPHOLSTERY TREATMENT OF FLEXIBLE COATINGS
EP94909505A EP0685010B1 (en) 1993-02-22 1994-01-26 Compressively treating flexible sheet materials
BR9405766A BR9405766A (en) 1993-02-22 1994-01-26 Compressive treatment of flexible sheet materials

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US2055193A 1993-02-22 1993-02-22
US08/020,551 1993-02-22

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1994019525A1 true WO1994019525A1 (en) 1994-09-01

Family

ID=21799238

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US1994/000991 WO1994019525A1 (en) 1993-02-22 1994-01-26 Compressively treating flexible sheet materials

Country Status (8)

Country Link
US (1) US5678288A (en)
EP (1) EP0685010B1 (en)
JP (1) JP3428995B2 (en)
CN (1) CN1118176A (en)
BR (1) BR9405766A (en)
DE (1) DE69423961T2 (en)
TW (1) TW260721B (en)
WO (1) WO1994019525A1 (en)

Families Citing this family (19)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20060027311A1 (en) * 1997-02-07 2006-02-09 The Family Trust U/T/A Decorative elements provided with a curled or crimped configuration at point of sale or point of use
US20020127371A1 (en) * 2001-03-06 2002-09-12 Weder Donald E. Decorative elements provided with a circular or crimped configuration at point of sale or point of use
US6071574A (en) * 1997-07-11 2000-06-06 Southpac Trust International, Inc. Folded corrugated material and method for producing same
US6402675B2 (en) 1997-07-11 2002-06-11 Southpac Trust International, Inc. System for producing corrugated decorative grass
US6221000B1 (en) 1997-07-11 2001-04-24 Southpac Trust Int'l, Inc. Folded corrugated material
USD419780S (en) * 1998-11-04 2000-02-01 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Embossed tissue
USD415353S (en) 1998-11-04 1999-10-19 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Embossed tissue
USD419779S (en) * 1998-11-04 2000-02-01 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Embossed tissue
USD417962S (en) * 1998-11-04 1999-12-28 Kimberly-Clark Worldwide, Inc. Embossed tissue
US6681461B1 (en) * 2000-10-20 2004-01-27 Frank Catallo Dual-slip compressive shrink-proofing apparatus for fabric and related method
US6685615B2 (en) 2001-02-08 2004-02-03 Southpac Trust International, Inc. Corrugated decorative grass formed of paper and polymeric film and method for producing same
US20040175519A1 (en) * 2002-10-01 2004-09-09 Weder Donald E. Self erecting pot
WO2007079502A2 (en) 2006-01-06 2007-07-12 Micrex Corporation Microcreping traveling sheet material
US8127410B2 (en) * 2009-01-14 2012-03-06 Frank Catallo Spring steel slip sheet for a compactor and for extending into a compression zone defined by a feed roll and a retard roll for shrinking a fabric
CN102021709B (en) * 2010-10-28 2012-06-27 周传良 Decorative home textile fabric and production process thereof
JP5642009B2 (en) * 2011-04-01 2014-12-17 ユニ・チャーム株式会社 Nonwoven fabric, absorbent article containing the nonwoven fabric, and method for producing the nonwoven fabric
US10046537B2 (en) 2012-09-28 2018-08-14 Celgard, Llc Porous membranes, materials, composites, laminates, textiles and related methods
IT201700038499A1 (en) * 2017-04-07 2018-10-07 Red Carpet S R L A COMPACTING MACHINE
IT201700108694A1 (en) * 2017-09-28 2019-03-28 Ferraro Spa APPARATUS AND METHOD OF COMPACTION FOR FABRICS

Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2890515A (en) * 1952-07-02 1959-06-16 Bleachers Ass Ltd Apparatus for ornamentation of fabrics
US3452409A (en) * 1966-02-04 1969-07-01 Bancroft & Sons Co J Mechanical treatment of materials for longitudinally compressing the same
US3597814A (en) * 1969-01-24 1971-08-10 Bancroft & Sons Co J Machine for mechanically treating materials having a movable flexible retarder
US3810280A (en) * 1971-02-16 1974-05-14 R Walton Method and apparatus for longitudinal compressive treatment of flexible material
US4118814A (en) * 1975-11-17 1978-10-10 Gerald Herbert Holtom Manufacture of boat hulls and other hollow articles
US4717329A (en) * 1986-12-30 1988-01-05 Bird Machine Company, Inc. Apparatus for compressively treating travel flexible sheet material
US5060349A (en) * 1987-04-02 1991-10-29 Richard R. Walton Compressive treatment of webs
US5117540A (en) * 1990-09-24 1992-06-02 Richard R. Walton Longitudinal compressive treatment of web materials

Family Cites Families (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE1018716B (en) * 1954-10-22 1957-10-31 Waldhof Zellstoff Fab Method and device for generating longitudinal waves in a moving material web
US3260778A (en) * 1964-01-23 1966-07-12 Richard R Walton Treatment of materials
US3390218A (en) * 1964-10-06 1968-06-25 Johnson & Johnson Method of pleating sheet materials
CH439199A (en) * 1964-07-18 1967-07-15 Beckers Gustav Device for the continuous upsetting of flat webs of material
US3426405A (en) * 1966-07-11 1969-02-11 Richard Rhodes Walton Confining device for compressive treatment of materials
US3427376A (en) * 1966-09-27 1969-02-11 Du Pont Softening nonwoven fabrics
US3581614A (en) * 1968-09-10 1971-06-01 Fab Con Machinery Dev Corp Fabric tube slitter and opener
US3975806A (en) * 1973-02-07 1976-08-24 Richard Rhodes Walton Apparatus for compressively treating flexible sheet materials
BR7705293A (en) * 1976-08-11 1978-05-23 J Tilburg PROCESS AND APPARATUS FOR TREATING SHEET MATERIAL
US4041581A (en) * 1976-10-07 1977-08-16 Compax Corporation Method for compacting woven gauze bandages
US4142278A (en) * 1976-10-29 1979-03-06 Richard R. Walton Compressive treatment of web materials
WO1981000082A1 (en) * 1979-06-28 1981-01-22 Tilburg R Creping machine and method
DE3309819C2 (en) * 1982-03-19 2000-11-23 Rhodes Walton Richard Method and device for upsetting treatment of a material web

Patent Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2890515A (en) * 1952-07-02 1959-06-16 Bleachers Ass Ltd Apparatus for ornamentation of fabrics
US3452409A (en) * 1966-02-04 1969-07-01 Bancroft & Sons Co J Mechanical treatment of materials for longitudinally compressing the same
US3597814A (en) * 1969-01-24 1971-08-10 Bancroft & Sons Co J Machine for mechanically treating materials having a movable flexible retarder
US3810280A (en) * 1971-02-16 1974-05-14 R Walton Method and apparatus for longitudinal compressive treatment of flexible material
US4118814A (en) * 1975-11-17 1978-10-10 Gerald Herbert Holtom Manufacture of boat hulls and other hollow articles
US4717329A (en) * 1986-12-30 1988-01-05 Bird Machine Company, Inc. Apparatus for compressively treating travel flexible sheet material
US5060349A (en) * 1987-04-02 1991-10-29 Richard R. Walton Compressive treatment of webs
US5117540A (en) * 1990-09-24 1992-06-02 Richard R. Walton Longitudinal compressive treatment of web materials

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
See also references of EP0685010A4 *

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP0685010B1 (en) 2000-04-12
US5678288A (en) 1997-10-21
EP0685010A1 (en) 1995-12-06
TW260721B (en) 1995-10-21
DE69423961D1 (en) 2000-05-18
EP0685010A4 (en) 1996-03-27
DE69423961T2 (en) 2000-11-02
JPH08506862A (en) 1996-07-23
BR9405766A (en) 1995-11-28
CN1118176A (en) 1996-03-06
JP3428995B2 (en) 2003-07-22

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US5678288A (en) Compressively treating flexible sheet materials
JP2877384B2 (en) Web processing machine and web processing method
EP0551327B1 (en) Longitudinal compressive treatment of web materials
US3260778A (en) Treatment of materials
US4662037A (en) Method and apparatus for slitting and providing selvedge by ultrasonic means on hook and loop type fastener tapes
US4512065A (en) Mechanical surface finishing apparatus for textile fabric
US3656672A (en) Method for splitting oriented plastic materials into fibrous structures
US4316928A (en) Mechanically surface finished textile material
US3015145A (en) Method and apparatus for treating web materials, such as fabrics
US4468844A (en) Mechanical surface finishing process for textile fabric
MXPA02008904A (en) Pile fabric having conditioned pile ends.
US4894196A (en) Method and apparatus for longitudinal compressive treatment of webs
JP2003515679A (en) Apparatus and method for softening a woven web material
US4432926A (en) Method and apparatus for imparting two-way properties to flexible webs
GB2116593A (en) Microcreping with surface diversion retarding
JP2538448B2 (en) Fabric lowering device for flat knitting machine
US3353237A (en) Fabric shearing machine having web smoothing means
KR20070005833A (en) The surface treatment method and apparatus for a textile fabric
EP0709510B1 (en) Device to switch fabrics for napping machines
KR790001372B1 (en) Pre-finishing method of raised fabric
KR100645383B1 (en) Apparatus and method for softening a fabric web material
EP0176566A4 (en) Longitudinal compressive treatment of webs.
JPH07150438A (en) Vertically drawing method for weft and apparatus therefor

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 94191243.4

Country of ref document: CN

AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): BR CA CN JP KR

AL Designated countries for regional patents

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): AT BE CH DE DK ES FR GB GR IE IT LU MC NL PT SE

DFPE Request for preliminary examination filed prior to expiration of 19th month from priority date (pct application filed before 20040101)
121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application
WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 1994909505

Country of ref document: EP

WWP Wipo information: published in national office

Ref document number: 1994909505

Country of ref document: EP

NENP Non-entry into the national phase

Ref country code: CA

WWG Wipo information: grant in national office

Ref document number: 1994909505

Country of ref document: EP