The present invention relates to the field of equipment used to make drapes and more particularly equipment which enables cutting to length and preparation of cloth for sewing drapery panels and sewing in the pleats.
The applicant is unaware of another apparatus in the art which contains the same elements and performs the same functions as the invention described herein.
Applicant's U.S. Pat. No. 3,996,083 for PROCESS FOR MAKING DRAPERIES issued on Dec. 7, 1976 teaches and apparatus for facilitating the proper alignment and application of buckram to a cut piece of cloth. The apparatus described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,996,083 is not capable of holding a bolt of cloth and feeding out a selected length, does not provide a cloth cutting member which is configured to facilitate required straight and properly positioned cut, and does not facilitate the marking of a bottom hem position or the proper position for required pleats.
The present invention provides an apparatus which holds a bolt of cloth so that cloth can be fed from the bolt, feeds a selected amount of cloth from the bolt, holds the cloth in proper alignment for buckram application and cutting, provides alignment elements for the proper placement and application of buckram which is provided with adhesive,
The steps for fabricating a drapery without the use of the present invention are as follows:
The present invention eliminates the steps of measuring for length, hem or pleats and facilitates the cutting of the ‘width’ and the installation of the buckram and marking of pleats and automatically marks the hem position as the ‘width’ is being cut. A ‘width’ is a piece of drapery material which has been cut to length, has buckram installed if required, and is ready to be sewn into a drapery panel.
The steps for fabricating a drapery using the present invention are as follows:
The present invention does away with the need to measure the length to cut the material, to measure or mark hems or pleats since they are already marked, or to measure and install the buckram by hand.
Presented herein is a combination buckram applicator, pleat and hem marker and cutter for drapery material comprising, consisting of, or essentially consisting of a frame comprising and open box like structure wherein longitudinal members form each edge of the open box structure, the frame including a work table affixed to a front side of the frame, the work table including a planar surface with buckram alignment guides, a buckram bracket configured to rotatably hold a coil of buckram to be applied to drapery material, the table also including an adjustable pleat marking alignment gauge, a front drapery material clamp fixed at a front edge of the work table, and a bolt holding cradle containing rollers which is configured to either allow a bolt of drapery material to be freely spun or the rollers may be motor driven to provide drapery material tension control if desired. The frame also includes a pair of motor driven continuous loops of chain connected by two pairs of drapery material carrier rollers, a drapery ‘width’ receiver frame which is configured to be raised to a drapery ‘width’ receiving position and lowered to a drapery ‘width’ removal position, a rear drapery material clamp and shelf, the shelf being located behind a rear edge of the work table with the pair of chains moving upward vertically through a gap between the shelf and the work table, the pair chains further traversing upward to a top portion of the frame, back to a rear edge of the frame and then returning downward to a location under the shelf and the rear clamp. Power shears are slidably mounted on a drapery cutting guide with a limit switch at both ends of travel on the cutting guide, the shears have an ultraviolet hem marking sprayer. One of the limit switches senses that a cut has been performed and thus causes the controller to open the rear clamp and to drive the chain drive motor to carry a newly cut ‘width’ away from the power shears. The other of the pair of switches senses that the power shears have been return to a power shear hold position thus causing the controller to close the rear clamp onto the newly cut free end of the drapery material. There are pneumatic solenoids for controlling the ultraviolet sprayer and pneumatic cylinders for the front and rear material clamps. There is also an operator panel including operational switches and a programmable controller for controlling the chain drive motor, the cradle roller motor, and the solenoids. The programmable controller receives inputs from operator switches, limit switches and a drapery material length monitoring device. The programmable controller is programmed to receive a selected cut length value and capable of controlling the clamps and the chain drive motor to deliver drapery material at a selected position to apply buckram and to deliver the drapery material at the selected cut length whereupon a user can cut the selected length of material.
It is an object of this invention to provide an apparatus which holds a bolt of cloth so that cloth can be fed from a bolt or roll.
It is another object of this invention to provide an apparatus which feeds a selected amount of cloth for cut length from the bolt.
It is another object of this invention to provide an apparatus which holds the cloth and buckram in proper alignment for application and cutting.
It is an object of this invention to provide an apparatus which provides alignment elements for the proper placement and application of buckram.
It is another object of this invention to provide an apparatus which provides a cloth cutting device which makes and easy task of cutting the cloth to the proper length squarely and accurately.
It is another object of this invention to provide an apparatus which provides an alignment gauge for marking the proper position for pleats.
It is another object of this invention to provide an apparatus which provides an ultraviolet marker which marks the proper bottom hem position while the cutting device performs the cut.
It is another object of this invention to provide an apparatus which removes and stacks a plurality of cut portions of cloth for removal by a user.
A better understanding of the present invention will be had upon reference to the following description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which like numerals refer to like parts throughout the views wherein:
In accordance with the present invention, there is provided an apparatus for measuring a length of drapery material, applying buckram, marking for bottom hem and pleats, rod pockets or tabs, and cutting drapery material to length. Shown in
The chain pair 20/21 are driven by motor 19 which is controlled by a programmable controller 82. Controller 82 also controls solenoid valves 54 and 55 which operate pneumatic cylinders which open and close pneumatic clamps 94 and 95. Controller 82 is programmed with a selected length to which the drapery material shall be cut. When a user presses a particular switch on operator panel 80, controller 82 starts motor 19. Drapery length measuring device 90 gives controller 82 a signal as to the amount of material being pulled by means of a roller 91 which is caused to turn by the cloth passing underneath as shown in
Chain pair 20/21 carries carrier roller pairs 22/23 and 24/25 in a cyclical path upward past the work table 70 to the top of frame 12, back toward the rear of the machine and back down below the work table 70 and then upward through the space between shelf 97 and work table 70.
It is understood that at the beginning of a cycle, a free end 114 of material 110 is held by rear clamp 95. A piece of buckram has already been adhered to the material 110 a few inches below free end 114. Front clamp 95 is released and raised above table 70 and drapery material 110 by pneumatic cylinders 96 on each end of front clamp 94. At this point in the cycle, the user is ready to advance material 110 to the position for applying the next piece of buckram as determined by counter 90.
At the beginning of the cycle, the length of cut is programmed into the controller 82. The operator switches selector switch 126 to the “cut length” position and pushes the “cut length” button 122 which causes controller 82 to start motor 19. Chains 20 and 21 carry carrier roller 23 upwards between table 70 and shelf 97. Because rear clamp 95, as shown in
The user now moves selector switch 126 to the buckram advance position and presses buckram advance button 124. This causes controller 82 to run motor 19 to feed the material 110 a few inches further and automatically stop at a second position where the ‘width’ may be cut. At this point, controller 82 energizes a solenoid 54 which causes clamp 94 to be lowered down onto material 110 and hold material 110 tight against table 70. This will prevent material 110 left on work table 70 from dropping to the floor after power shears 46 are used to cut the new ‘width’. The user starts and pushes power shears 46 (
When the user has performed enough cycles and made the desired number of ‘widths’, the ‘widths’ must be removed from receiver bars 27. But first, motor 100 is started manually to lower receiver bars 27 along with the ‘widths’. Motor 100 turns shaft 72 and pulleys74 which feed cables 76 down and thus lower frames 30 with bars 27 attached thereto. Rollers 31 roll against frame 12 to keep bars 27 in a horizontal relationship as frames 30 are lowered.
A bolt of drapery material is supported in a nest of rollers forming cradle 50, as shown in
Further switches are provided on the operator panel for selection of auto/manual control, as well as motor jog switches, manual front and rear clamp switches, and a switch to raise and lower the receiver bars. These switches are helpful during initial threading of drapery material, maintenance and troubleshooting.
The foregoing detailed description is given primarily for clearness of understanding and no unnecessary limitations are to be understood therefrom, for modification will become obvious to those skilled in the art upon reading this disclosure and may be made upon departing from the spirit of the invention and scope of the appended claims. Accordingly, this invention is not intended to be limited by the specific exemplification presented herein above. Rather, what is intended to be covered is within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
This application also claims priority from Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/395,140 filed on May 8, 2010 which is incorporated by reference in its entirety herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61395140 | May 2010 | US |