Cleaning device for a rotor spinning unit

Information

  • Patent Application
  • 20030177750
  • Publication Number
    20030177750
  • Date Filed
    January 07, 2003
    21 years ago
  • Date Published
    September 25, 2003
    21 years ago
Abstract
The present invention relates to a cleaning device (1) of a rotor spinning unit with a cleaning head (63) and an extensible device (12, 31) to extend and retract at least the cleaning head (63). According to the invention, the cleaning head (63) is replaceable and connected to the extensible device (12, 31).
Description


[0001] The present invention relates to a cleaning device for a rotor spinning unit with a cleaning head and an extensible device for the extension and retraction of at least the cleaning head.


[0002] In a known rotor spinning machine a traveling service unit contains a cleaning device for the cleaning of a spinning rotor (DE 24 57 034 A1). The cleaning device has a telescope-like extensible compressed-air pipe whose forward end can be retracted in part once the service unit has positioned itself in front of the spinning rotor. At the forward end of the compressed-air pipe a nozzle to blow out the compressed air and a cleaning brush are provided for the cleaning of the inside of the rotor plate. During the cleaning process, compressed air is blown out of the nozzle and the telescopic pipe is rotated by a motorized drive so that the cleaning brush rotates inside the rotor plate.


[0003] It is the object of the present invention to provide a cleaning device for a rotor spinning unit that would make it possible to achieve a constantly high cleaning effect and adaptation to a modified rotor spinning unit while simplifying maintenance of the cleaning device.


[0004] This object is attained through the characteristics of the independent claims.


[0005] According to claim 1, a cleaning device with a cleaning head and an extensible device for extension and retraction of at least the cleaning head is provided for a rotor spinning unit. The extensible device can be designed as an extensible telescoping device, a swiveling device, a combination of swiveling and telescoping device or similar device. The cleaning head is positioned by means of the extensible device e.g. in the rotor plate of a spinning rotor or directly adjoining a yarn draw-off nozzle. The cleaning device is preferably placed in a service unit traveling e.g. along a plurality of spinning stations of a rotor spinning machine. By displacing and aligning the service unit it is positioned across from the rotor spinning unit in such manner that the cleaning head can be positioned by the extensible device in or at the element of the rotor spinning unit to be cleaned. The cleaning head may be equipped with at least one compressed-air nozzle, at least one scraper, at least one cleaning bristle or a combination of these elements. Due to the fact that the cleaning head is replaceable and connected to the extensible device, it can simply be replaced when worn or dirty. This is necessary, for example, when a scraper, a bristle or a nozzle of the cleaning head is soiled or clogged up. Or else a replacement can be made when e.g. an element of the rotor spinning unit is replaced in order to provide a cleaning head that is adapted to the inside and/or outside form of the replaced element. Optimal cleaning of the replaced element of the rotor spinning unit can then be achieved with the adapted cleaning head. An example of a replaceable element is a spinning rotor that has a different rotor pot geometry after the replacement.


[0006] If the cleaning head is used to clean a spinning rotor, preferably at least one first cleaning element is assigned to the rotor channel and at least one second cleaning element to the rotor side. By assigning the cleaning elements, these can be adapted especially to the shape of the rotor pot in order to clean the channel and e.g. the sidewalls or the bottom of the rotor pot by means of specially designed cleaning elements. While mostly fibers must be removed from the rotor channel after a yarn breakage for example, rather resistant dirt must be removed from the pot bottom or from the sloped sidewall. In one embodiment for example, it is advantageous to clean the rotor channel by means of one or several bristles, while the sidewalls are scraped by means of a scraper.


[0007] In a variant of the invention a first and a second cleaning head are installed on the extensible device, whereby the first one is provided for the cleaning of a spinning rotor and the second one for the cleaning of a yarn draw-off nozzle. They are preferably at such distance from each other or can be positioned by the extensible device at such distance from each other that in their end positions the first cleaning head is positioned in the spinning rotor while the second cleaning head is positioned at the yarn draw-off nozzle. Each cleaning head can be driven by its own drive unit or by a common drive unit.


[0008] In a first embodiment the cleaning head, of which at least one is provided, is held in a seat installed on the extensible device. In another embodiment the cleaning head, of which at least one is provided, is mounted on a drive unit to rotate the cleaning head and is replaceable. If several cleaning heads are used, a holder can be provided on fixed seats and/or drive units. In case of a fixed seat the element to be cleaned, e.g. the spinning rotor, can be put in motion by a separate drive that may be mounted e.g. on the extensible device or by a drive already used for the element to be cleaned.


[0009] If the cleaning head is attached by means of a catch or snap-in connection that can be opened, or by means of a bayonet connection to the seat or to the driving unit, the cleaning head can be replaced quickly, e.g. without any tool.


[0010] In an advantageous embodiment of the cleaning head for the cleaning of a yarn draw-off nozzle, the rotational axis of the cleaning head is not aligned coaxially with the symmetry axis of the yarn draw-off nozzle. The cleaning head rotating at an angle seizes deposits on the yarn draw-off nozzle and transports them to its edge. As soon as the impurities have been transported over the edge of the yarn draw-off nozzle they are thrown off at that location by the cleaning head. Thereby the dirt adhering to the cleaning elements is prevented from being transported in a circular motion to the yarn draw-off nozzle without finally being removed from it.


[0011] In another embodiment of the cleaning head the latter is supplied with compressed air and the compressed air is blown from the nozzle in the direction of the element to be cleaned. The bristles and/or scraper of the cleaning head are advantageously placed at a distance from the nozzle. As a result the nozzle can blow directly on the element of the rotor spinning unit to be cleaned. In addition the dirt loosened by the compressed air from the element to be cleaned is carried away from the soiled area. Here the bristles and/or scraper advantageously provide a free passage for the compressed air at the outer circumference of the cleaning head so that the loosened impurities are blown away from the cleaning head and the element to be cleaned between the bristles and/or the scrapers.


[0012] In another embodiment the seat and/or the drive unit are provided with a compressed-air supplying device with a locking device for the cleaning head. When the cleaning head is used, an actuator of the cleaning head actuates the locking device of the seat or the drive unit so that the locking device opens the compressed-air passage to the cleaning head. Here the compressed-air passage to the cleaning head is closed by the locking device when the cleaning head is removed from the seat or the drive unit or when the inserted cleaning head does not have an actuator, e.g. when the cleaning head does not need compressed air.


[0013] In an advantageous embodiment the extensible unit of the cleaning device is a combination of a linear-movement device executing a linear back and forth movement in one direction, and of an extensible arm that is moved by a telescoping guide and is capable of pivoting. The extensible unit can then execute a linear movement simultaneously with a swiveling movement. In this way a complex and precise movement of the extensible arm becomes possible with little mechanical expenditure. If the cleaning device is installed e.g. on a service unit, a cleaning head for the cleaning of the spinning rotor or the extensible unit in rest position need not be positioned directly in a position across from the rotor. Only for cleaning is the cleaning head extended from a border zone of the service unit towards the spinning rotor. Thereby it is possible to place e.g. a piecing unit for the piecing of the yarn on the service device directly across from the rotor without crowding the cleaning device in such a configuration.


[0014] In another embodiment the cleaning head has at least one cleaning element that comes into contact with the element to be cleaned at least intermittently during the rotation and thereby cleans it. At least one compressed-air nozzle is installed on the rotating cleaning head to blow air into the contact zone between the cleaning element and the element to be cleaned, at least when contact is made between at least one cleaning element and the element to be cleaned. In that case the compressed air reaches the contact zone situated in the sense of movement of the cleaning element. Thereby a removal of the dirt deposit by blowing in the area most affected by dirt deposits within range of one or several cleaning elements is ensured.


[0015] In an advantageous embodiment the cleaning element or cleaning elements are not evenly distributed around the outer circumference of the cleaning head, but the cleaning elements are arranged with distances or gaps between them on the outer circumference so that the compressed-air nozzle can blow into the gaps. In another embodiment at least one compressed-air nozzle can be positioned in such manner relative to the rotating cleaning head so that the stream of compressed air coming from the compressed-air nozzle is directed into the path of the (at least one) cleaning element.


[0016] If the cleaning head is mounted so as to be capable of movement relative to the compressed-air nozzle or if the compressed-air nozzle is mounted so as to be capable of movement relative to the cleaning head, a movement of the two elements relative to each other makes it possible to blow over different areas of the cleaning head. In an especially advantageous embodiment the compressed-air nozzle is used to clean the cleaning head as well as the element to be cleaned. In that case the compressed air is blown on the element to be cleaned when the nozzle or the cleaning head is in a first position, so that it is freed of deposited dirt. In a second position of the compressed-air nozzle or of the cleaning head, the stream of compressed air is directed on the cleaning head, so that the latter is blow-cleaned preferably while it rotates.


[0017] For the cleaning of a yarn draw-off nozzle, the compressed-air nozzle is aligned preferably coaxially with the yarn draw-off nozzle, so that the stream of compressed air that is blown through the yarn draw-off nozzle continues into the yarn draw-off direction that follows.






[0018] An example of an embodiment of the invention is explained through figures.


[0019]
FIG. 1 shows a lateral perspective view of a cleaning module of a piecing robot, as seen from the right side,


[0020]
FIG. 2 shows a lateral perspective view of a cleaning module of a piecing robot, as seen from the left side,


[0021]
FIG. 3A shows a perspective view of the rotor cleaning unit,


[0022]
FIG. 3B shows a cross-section of the rotor cleaning unit of FIG. 3A,


[0023]
FIG. 4 shows a schematic representation of the arrangement of a cleaning unit for a yarn draw-off nozzle and


[0024]
FIG. 5 shows a schematic front view of a rotor cleaning head.






[0025]
FIGS. 1 and 2 show perspective lateral views of a cleaning module 1 installed in a piecing robot (not shown) of a rotor spinning machine. The cleaning module 1 is attached to the piecing robot by means of supports 11. The supports 11 bear a bearing plate 10 on which a magneto-pneumatic linear drive 12 is installed. A longitudinally displaceable travel plate 30 is mounted on guide rails 33. Magnets that can be displaced by means of compressed air and move the travel plate 30 via magnetic coupling as they are shifted are mounted within the guide rails 33. The compressed air for the displacement of the magnets within the guide rails 33 is supplied through the compressed-air connections 18, 19. One end of the linear drive 12 is mounted by means of a swivel pin 13 on the bearing plate 10 so as to be capable of swiveling. As the travel plate 30 is extended and retracted, the linear drive 12 is swiveled by means of a sliding guide. In the shown embodiment the bearing plate 10 ends in a guiding groove 15 into which a guide pin 14 assigned to the travel plate 30 enters. As the travel plate 30 is displaced, the guide pin 14 is displaced along the guiding groove 15, so that the linear drive 12 executes a swiveling movement imposed by the guiding groove 15. At the end points of the travel way of the travel plate 30 within the linear drive 12 the end position is detected by means of limit switches 16, 17.


[0026]
FIGS. 1 and 2 show the linear drive 12 with the travel plate 30 fully extended. In the retracted state the travel plate 30 is pulled back to the rear stopping point that is detected by the limit switch 16.


[0027] A holding hoop 32 and a boom 31 are attached to the travel plate 30. The holding hoop 32 serves to hold and guide electrical and compressed-air lines to the cleaning units. A first cleaning unit 40 for the cleaning of a spinning rotor 80 and a second cleaning unit 60 for the cleaning of a yarn draw-off nozzle 82 while the rotor cover 83 is open are located on the boom 31. The first cleaning unit 40 is mounted on a holder 41 at the forward end of the boom 31. The holder 41 supports an electric motor 42 and a compressed-air supply 43 to convey compressed air to a cleaning head 45. The cleaning head 45 is replaceable and is inserted in an adapter seat 44 that is in turn connected to the motor shaft of the electric motor 42 (see FIG. 3B).


[0028] The second cleaning unit 60 is located on the boom 31, behind the first cleaning unit 40. An electric motor 62 to drive a brush head 63 is mounted on a swiveling boom 61. The swiveling boom 61 is mounted on a two-axle swivel bearing 66 on the boom 31. The piston of a pneumatic lifting cylinder 64 is connected via a ball head articulation 66 and a mounting element to the boom 31. The piston rod is connected by its forward end on a second two-axle swivel bearing 65 to the forward end of the swiveling boom 61. The piston of the lifting cylinder 64 is supplied with compressed air through compressed-air connections and is extended or retracted. Extending the piston rod causes the swiveling boom 61 to be swiveled downward so that the brush head 63 comes to lie on the yarn draw-off nozzle in order to clean the latter through the rotational movement of the brush head 63.


[0029]
FIG. 1 schematically shows the yarn draw-off nozzle 82 that is mounted in a hinged rotor cover 63 of a spin box of the rotor spinning machine. As drawn, the position of the symmetrical axis of the yarn draw-off nozzle, indicated by a dotted line, in relation to the rotational axis, indicated by a dotted line, of the brush head 63 causes the bristles of the brush head 63 to come into contact only momentarily with the yarn draw-off nozzle. During a complete revolution the bristles are intermittently not in contact with the surface of the yarn draw-off nozzle. As a result the dirt is picked up from the surface of the yarn draw-off nozzle and is thrown off from the bristles by centrifugal force during the passage through the contact-free zone. In addition a blow nozzle 67 is installed on the boom 31 and is directed on the yarn draw-off nozzle 82 when the boom 31 and the travel plate 30 are extended. Before the second cleaning unit 60 swivels down, it can thus clean off the larger dirt particles from the yarn draw-off nozzle by blowing compressed air on it. In addition, following the downward swiveling of the second cleaning unit 60, the brush head 63 can be blown clean by the compressed air coming from the blow nozzle 67. When cleaning with the brush head 63 is completed and the second cleaning unit 60 has swiveled up, loose dust deposits can again be cleaned by means of compressed air from the yarn draw-off nozzle 82.


[0030]
FIG. 3A shows a perspective view of the first cleaning unit 40, shown again in detail in cross-section in FIG. 3B. Bristles 46 adapted to the inside shape of the rotor pot of the rotor 80 are installed on the cleaning head 45. The bristles 46B are long and narrow in axial direction, so that they enter the groove of the spinning rotor during the rotation of the cleaning head 45. The bristles 46a are shorter and further extended in axial direction than the bristles 46, so that they clean the sidewall of the spinning rotor. A nozzle 47 on the side of the cleaning head 45 directs a stream of compressed air on the rotor channel and blows dirt loosened by the bristles 46b out of the rotor pot. For this the bristles 46 are placed at a distance from each other in circumferential direction, so that the compressed air blown in through the nozzle 47 is diverted between the bristles 46 in axial direction to the rear (to the left in the cut-away drawing of FIG. 3B), so that the dirt is removed from the rotor pot. Compressed air is conveyed via an axial bore 51 in the cleaning head 45 to the nozzle 47. The bore 51 is connected via a passage 52 to an axial bore 54 in the adapter seat 44. Compressed air is in turn supplied to the bore 54 through several channels 50 distributed over the circumference, extending in radial direction and connected to a groove 49 formed in circumferential direction on the adapter seat 44. The adapter seat 44 is attached to the motor axle 55 and is mounted rotatably within the compressed-air supply 43. The rotational bearing between the adapter seat 44 and the compressed air supply 43 at the same time seals off the groove 49 against loss of compressed air to the outside. Compressed air is conveyed through a bore in the compressed-air supply 43 and through a compressed-air connection 48 to the groove 49.


[0031] As FIG. 3B shows, the cleaning head 45 and the adapter seat 44 are connected to each other by means of stud screws inserted into a threaded bore 53. A connection between the cleaning head 45 and the adapter seat 44 is advantageously established by means of a snap-in connection, a catch connection or a bayonet connection. For example, instead of the threaded bores 53, blind holes are provided into which spring-loaded pointed pegs are introduced and are pressed inward in radial direction by the adapter seat 44. When the cleaning head 45 has been inserted into the adapter seat 44, the pegs catch in depressions on the outer circumference of the peg of the cleaning head inserted into the adapter seat 44. Thereby secure locking of the cleaning head 45 in the adapter seat 44 and also rapid replacement without tools is made possible.


[0032] Instead of the free passage 52, a compressed-air connection between the bores 51 and 54 can also be provided, whereby the bore 54 is closed off in the adapter seat 44 when the cleaning head 45 is removed. The adapter seat 44 can be supported e.g. on a spring-loaded ball that is pressed against a hemispherical cup as the adapter seat opens as soon as the cleaning head is removed. When a cleaning head 45 is inserted into the adapter seat 44 with an actuating device for the compressed-air connection (e.g. protruding pegs that press the ball back), the compressed-air passage between adapter seat 44 and cleaning head 45 is opened. In this case it is also possible to use a cleaning head having no actuating device, so that no compressed air emerges from the adapter seat 44.


[0033] Thanks to the interchangeability of the cleaning head 45, the latter can thus be replaced rapidly when it is worn or can be exchanged against a clean cleaning head. Even when spinning rotors with different dimensions are used, a special cleaning head, designed for the spinning rotor can be used and can then obtain optimal cleaning results. The brush head 63 of the second cleaning unit 60 is also advantageously replaceable and connected to the electric motor 62, so that the brush head can also be exchanged rapidly. Instead of a brush head 63 it is also possible to provide a cleaning head which, additionally or alternatively is equipped with scrapers or additionally or alternatively with compressed-air nozzles blowing compressed air on the yarn draw-off nozzle 82 as it rotates. The connection between the cleaning head and the second cleaning unit 60 can also be in form of a catch, a snap-in connection, a bayonet connection or similar device.


[0034] Instead of the electric motors 42 and/or 62, a pneumatic drive can be provided for the cleaning head. In that case the air released by the pneumatic drive is advantageously directed in such manner that they blow-clean the other elements of the spinning rotor unit (housing, rotor cover, opener roller, fiber channel etc.) Alternatively, the exhaust air of the pneumatic drive is conveyed e.g. in hoses into an area from which no dust is raised, e.g. in or at the service unit.


[0035]
FIG. 4 shows once more the relative positioning of the blow nozzle 67 located on the boom 31 above the yarn draw-off nozzle 82, as has already been shown schematically in FIG. 1. When the boom 31 is in position, the blow nozzle 67 is aligned coaxially with the yarn draw-off nozzle 82. The air stream directed from the blow nozzle 67 therefore blows centrally on the yarn draw-off nozzle to remove the dirt attached to it. Part of the compressed-air stream enters through a central opening in the yarn draw-off nozzle into an adjoining small yarn draw-off tube 84. The small yarn draw-off tube 84 follows the yarn draw-off nozzle 82 and continues the yarn draw-off channel, whereby only part of the small yarn draw-off tube is shown here. The air stream blows out impurities in the small yarn draw-off tube 84 such as fibers etc. towards its outlet.


[0036] The cleaning operation of a spinning station by the cleaning module 1 can here take the following course: Following a yarn breakage the piecing robot with the cleaning module 1 cleaning module 1 travels to the spinning station. The piecing robot opens the cover of the spin box, whereby the rotor cover 83 is swiveled by 90° in the example shown in FIG. 1 or 4, so that the yarn draw-off nozzle 82 is taken from its vertical into a horizontal position. When the rotor cover 83 has been opened the cleaning module 1 is extended by means of the magneto-pneumatic linear drive 12 and the cleaning head 45 of the first cleaning unit 40 is positioned in the rotor plate of the spinning rotor. At the same time this positioning aligns the blow nozzle 67 coaxially with the yarn draw-off nozzle 82. The yarn draw-off nozzle 82 and the small yarn draw-off tube 84 are blow-cleaned by a continuous or intermittently interrupted compressed-air stream coming from the blow nozzle 67. The cylinder 64 then extends the swiveling boom 61 so that the brush head 63 comes into contact with the inside wall of the yarn draw-off nozzle 82. The brush head 63 takes up the dirt deposits from the surface of the yarn draw-off nozzle 82 as a result of its rotation and conveys it to the side where it is thrown off by centrifugal force. At the same time, either intermittently during the rotation of the brush head, continuously during the rotation of the brush head or at intervals during the rotation of the brush head 63, compressed air is blown from the blow nozzle 67 on the bristles of the brush head 63, so that even entwined fibers or sticky impurities are blown off the bristles. Following this cleaning process the brush head 63 is swiveled back by means of the lifting cylinder 64, and another stream of compressed air can additionally be directed by the blow nozzle 67 on the yarn draw-off nozzle 82 to blow away possibly loosened impurities. In that case especially the impurities loosened from the brush head 63 and deposited in the small yarn draw-off tube 84 are blown out of the latter.


[0037]
FIG. 4 shows an embodiment of a compressed-air supply 85 located between the brush head 63 and the electric motor 62 is e.g. identical with the compressed-air supply 63 of the first cleaning unit 40 as shown in cross-section in FIG. 3B. Thereby the compressed air, for example, can be conveyed to nozzles at the inner circumference of the brush body of the brush head 63, so that compressed air is blown from the brush body to the outside along the bristles. Or else, a nozzle is installed directly at the compressed-air supply 85 and blows a stream of compressed air 86 as shown in FIG. 4 on the bristles, thus cleaning them.


[0038]
FIG. 5 shows another embodiment of a cleaning head 45′ for the cleaning of the spinning rotor instead of the cleaning head 45. As shown in the frontal view, two nozzles 47′ are installed on the outer circumference, whereby one nozzle 47′ is directed on the rotor channel and the other nozzle 47′ on the inclined inside wall of the rotor plate. The bristles 46b for the rotor channel which are standing together in a group are assigned a nozzle 56b and the bristles 46a for the cleaning of the rotor sidewall which are standing together in a group are assigned a nozzle 56a. As shown in FIG. 5, the direction of rotation of the cleaning head 45′ is clockwise and the nozzles 56a, 56b are placed in clockwise direction before the corresponding groups of bristles 46a, 476b. The directed stream of compressed air is aimed at the contact surface between the bristles and the inner surface of the rotor plate. This contact area is represented for the rotor plate by the dotted circle. Thereby impurities pushed by the bristles in clockwise direction before them are blown away from them so that the impurities are effectively removed and not merely redistributed. The great distance between the groups of bristles (in FIG. 3a an upper group and a lower group is shown) allows for sufficiently wide gaps between the bristles so that the compressed air and the impurities it contains can be blown out between the bristles and the inside rotor wall to the outside of the rotor plate. Additionally, another nozzle 57 is located at the front of the cleaning head 45′ and is directed on the bottom of the rotor plate where it blows away resistant impurities.


[0039] In further embodiments of the cleaning heads 45, 45′ the nozzles 47, 47′, 56a and 57 can be combined with each other in any desired manner. If the cleaning head is rotated in reverse, nozzles identical to the nozzles 56a, 56b can also be installed on the other sides of the groups of bristles 46a, 46b.

Claims
  • 1. Cleaning device for a rotor spinning unit with a cleaning head (45, 63) and an extensible apparatus (12, 30, 31) to extend and retract the cleaning head, characterized in that the cleaning head (45, 63) is connected to the extensible apparatus and is replaceable, in that the cleaning head (45) has cleaning elements (46) for the cleaning of a spinning rotor (80), whereby at least one first cleaning element (46b) is assigned to the rotor channel and at least one second cleaning element (46a) to the rotor wall, and/or in that a third cleaning element is assigned to the rotor bottom, and/or that the cleaning head (63) has cleaning elements for the cleaning of a yarn draw-off nozzle (82), whereby the rotational axis of the cleaning head (63) is at an angle relative to the symmetrical axis of the yarn draw-off nozzle during the cleaning process.
  • 2. Cleaning device as in claim 1, characterized in that the cleaning head is replaceable and is connected to a drive unit (42, 62) for the rotation of the cleaning head.
  • 3. Cleaning device as in claim 1 or 2, characterized in that the cleaning head (45, 63) is attached by means of a catch of snap-in connection or by means of a bayonet connection that can be opened.
  • 4. Cleaning device as in claim 4 or 5, characterized in that one or more cleaning elements (46) is a bristle and/or a scraper.
  • 5. Cleaning device as in claim 6, characterized in that the form and/or length of the bristles (46a, b) and/or the scraper is designed in function of the spinning rotor (80) to be cleaned.
  • 6. Cleaning device as in claim 8, characterized in that the rotational axis is at an angle of 45° to 90° relative to the symmetrical axis of the yarn draw-off nozzle (82).
  • 7. Cleaning device as in claim 8 or 9, characterized in that one or several of the cleaning elements is a bristle, a compressed-air nozzle and/or a scraper.
  • 8. Cleaning device as in one of the preceding claims, characterized in that compressed air can be conveyed to the cleaning head (45, 63) via the drive unit (42, 44) and in that the cleaning head has at least one nozzle (47) to blow out compressed air.
  • 9. Cleaning device as in claim 11, characterized in that at least one nozzle (47) is pointed directly at the rotor channel of a spinning rotor (80).
  • 10. Cleaning device as in claim 11 or 12, characterized in that the cleaning head (45, 63) has a plurality of bristles (46) and/or scrapers, whereby the bristles and/or scrapers are at a distance from the nozzle (47)
  • 11. Cleaning device as in claim 13, characterized in that the bristles (46) and/or the scraper are placed on the outer circumference of the cleaning head (45, 63) in such manner that they allow free passage between the direction of the air blown from the Nozzle (47) and the back of the cleaning head.
  • 12. Cleaning device as in one of the preceding claims, characterized in that a seat or the drive unit (42, 44) of the cleaning head is provided with a compressed-air supply (44) with a locking device for the cleaning head (45, 63), whereby the locking device closes off a compressed-air passage (52) going to the cleaning head (45, 63) when the cleaning head is taking out of the seat or the drive unit and opens the compressed-air passage when the cleaning head is inserted with an actuating device of the locking device.
  • 13. Cleaning device as in one of the preceding claims, characterized in that the extensible device is provided with a linear-movement apparatus (12) to extend and retract an extensible arm (31) and a sliding groove guide (14, 15), whereby the arm (31) also swivels as it is retracted or extended through the sliding groove.
  • 14. Cleaning device as in one of the preceding claims, characterized in that a first cleaning head (45) for the cleaning of a spinning rotor (80) and at least one second cleaning head (63) for the cleaning of a yarn draw-off nozzle (82) are installed on the extensible unit (12, 30, 31).
  • 15. Cleaning device as in claim 17, characterized in that the first and the second cleaning head (45, 63) can be driven by means of one common drive unit.
  • 16. Cleaning device as in claim 17, characterized in that the first cleaning head (45) can be driven via a first drive unit (42, 44) and the second cleaning head (63) via a second drive unit (61).
  • 17. Cleaning device as in claim 17, 18 or 19, characterized in that the second cleaning head (63) is mounted on the extensible device (12, 30, 31) in such manner as to be capable of swiveling.
  • 18. Service unit for a rotor spinning machine with a cleaning device (1) according to one of the preceding claims.
Priority Claims (2)
Number Date Country Kind
102 00 431.5 Jan 2002 DE
102 05 666.8 Feb 2002 DE