The object of the present invention is a device for the constant tension feeding of threads or yarns fed discontinuously to a machine, such as a textile machine, a winding machine (or coil winder) or other similar machine working on metallic wires, according to the preamble of the main claim. A method apt to implement the above-mentioned method is also an object of the invention.
Devices for feeding yarns of the type able to feed constant tension threads or yarns are known. Said devices work according to a known closed-loop control methodology obtained with a known constant tension thread feeder. The method guarantees the regular feeding of a thread or yarn independently from the feeding speed of said thread and also independently from the tension variation of the thread entering said constant tension thread feeder; all this both if the tension variation is due to the gradual emptying of the yarn packages or the bobbins of metallic wire, and if such variations are due to tears or extra-tensions due to the irregular unwinding of such threads or yarns.
A known constant tension thread feeder used in the textile field (for example object of EP 1492911 in the name of the same Applicant) comprises a tension sensor, an actuator or motor acting onto a feeding wheel or pulley and a control (electronic) unit usually comprising a processor or “DSP” (Digital Signal Processor) able to analyze the thread tension value measured by the above-mentioned sensor by comparing a wished working tension value (or SET POINT) and based upon the detected tension value. The control unit intervenes onto the motor so as to work on the pulley connected thereto by braking or feeding the thread in order to control and keep constant the tension of the thread itself fed to a textile machine (for the production of a manufactured product or for processing the thread itself).
From U.S. Pat. No. 4,752,044 an apparatus for controlling in an electronic way the tension of a thread is known wherein a rotating member is provided whereupon the thread winds for a certain number of turns and a tension detector defined by a mobile arm, acting as thread-guiding member, apt to allow detecting the thread tension through the motion thereof. In the invention according to the prior art, the mobile arm is still subjected to a position control and to the action of an electric motor apt to control the motion of such arm in order to keep the wished tension.
In the prior art, then, the presence of the motor limits the reactivity of the arm which cannot move freely in guiding the thread. The thread and the members connected thereto have an inertia so as to influence the free thread feed causing defects in the manufactured product or even the yarn break.
An analogous solution is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,669,677.
Such devices (and the methodologies implemented thereby) have performance limits in case the thread is fed to the textile machine with discontinuity that is in case the thread motion takes place with at least a first and at least a second feeding or absorption state by the textile machine different therebetween. Such different feeding states follow each other in time. The above-mentioned limits are linked to the response speed of the actuator (electric motor) or of the pulley to the “stress” of the control unit to intervene after the changed thread feeding state (for example alternating high absorption states with other very low absorption states); said absorption discontinuity is known in the knitting industry as jacquard processing. It has been noted, in particular, that also by using actuators or motors with more and more high performances, however it is not possible obtaining a performance level able to satisfy any application.
Due to this, in many case yarn storage feeders are used which limit to accumulate a certain number of thread turns onto a drum therefrom the yarn is subsequently freely unwound also in case of yarn pick-up with high absorption discontinuity. Such solution, however, has the limit of using a much more bulky device than the device mentioned previously and wherein the tension is not controlled or is not controlled in an optimum and precise way; when such unwinding tension is subjected to control, it is however controlled in a limited way and inside a determined tension interval according to a manual adjustment made onto the device.
Furthermore, the known devices working on threads fed in a discontinuous way have additional limits when the thread is of “rigid”, that is not elastic, type (under this term meaning the fact that the thread for example has an elongation value lower than 10%, considering that some elastomers easily reach an elongation of 300%), as it is the case of the metallic wires. In this case, in fact, not being able to exploit the intrinsic elasticity of the thread itself to compensate the delay of the response thereof to adapt to the changed state of the thread itself, such known devices cannot be used with said rigid threads.
The object of the present invention is to offer a method for controlling the feeding of a thread or a yarn fed in a discontinuous way to a machine such as a textile machine or a winding machine or similar machine working on a metallic wire and a device for the implementation thereof which are improved with respect to the corresponding already known methods and devices.
In particular, an object of the invention is to offer such device which can overcome the limits of a known constant tension thread feeding device of the type with pulley mentioned above in feeding a thread fed in a discontinuous way to a machine, for example a textile machine, as it happens in case of jacquard processings or selection of meshes in a knitting machine.
Another object of the present invention is to allow the use of a device for feeding constant tension thread also in case the thread is picked-up in a discontinuous way, which allows a much higher programming precision and flexibility and use than a known yarn Storage Feeder.
An additional object of the invention is to offer a device having the high dynamic acceleration/deceleration performances of a known constant tension feeding device, but which substantially overcomes any application limit of the latter in feeding (textile or metallic) threads or yarns fed in a discontinuous way.
Still another object of the invention is to offer a device which can be used with extremely rigid threads and yarns (with elasticity proximate to 0%, however lower than 10%) which further limit the application of the classical devices for feeding constant tension thread or yarn.
An additional object is to offer a device and a method allowing to obtain, in advance, information substantially predicting and indicating the fact that a sudden thread or yarn absorption increase or decrease is taking place, thus allowing an action and an anticipated reaction of the control system which could intervene in controlling the constant tension feeding device.
Still another object is to offer an invention allowing to obtain a control and a still more precise quality of the thread or yarn feeding and with still higher repeatability results with respect to the equivalent known solutions.
An additional object of the invention is to provide a device of the mentioned type able to feed, with the same performance and quality features, both an elastic thread and a rigid thread, the object of the present invention being practically able to consider elastic even rigid threads.
An additional object is to offer a device and method apt to control a machine, a textile machine or a machine for processing metallic wires, by stopping it in case a thread irrecoverable control failure has occurred, for example if the feeding device has been erroneously set and the yarn feeding quality thereof can be in some way jeopardized.
These and other objects which will result to be evident to the person skilled in the art are reached by a device and a method according to the enclosed claims.
For a better comprehension of the present invention the following drawings are enclosed by simple way of example, but not for limitative purpose, wherein:
By referring to the mentioned figures (wherein corresponding portions have identical reference numerals) and in particular to
The device 1, according to the invention, comprises a second portion or compensator 11 apt to cooperate with the thread 8 after it has passed onto the pulley 4. Such compensator, then, results to be inside the thread tension adjusting ring, as it can be seen in
Furthermore, the presence of the compensator 11 inside the adjustment ring always guarantees that the tension of the thread outgoing from the feeder 2 is always the set one.
More in particular, the compensator 11, in the simpler version (
The spring 13 of the compensator 11 could assume several working positions as it can be seen in
In other words, each modification of the thread feeding state corresponds to a variation in the absorption of the same and a corresponding variation of the position of the spring 13 of the compensator 11 with respect to the body 2A of the actuator 2; such position variation allows the control unit of the pulley 4 to intervene onto the motor controlling the latter so as to bring it into the rotation or stationary state so as to correspond to the thread varied motion state.
It results evident that the system reactivity and therefore the capability of compensating more or less high absorption discontinuities correspond to the spring force and that the possibility of compensating both positive and negative absorption variations correspond to the spring capability of remaining in position “PB” during the constant absorption phases. It is then clear that the system dynamics is strictly connected to the reactivity and thus to the mass or lightness of the used spring. Therefore, springs made of titanium or other ultra-light material such as aluminium, magnesium or alloys thereof or composite, for example carbon fibres or other, could be used. By way of example, the titanium specific gravity is 4.87 kg/dm3, lower than the steel one (7.8 kg/dm3). Such use raises the system dynamic performances to levels so as to practically guarantee any absorption variation during the thread feeding. It results then evident that an interaction between the control unit of the pulley 4 and the compensator allows to raise drastically the performances of the end device.
Thus, advantageously, it is preferable mounting inside the compensator 11 a linear Hall sensor 30 and magnetizing the spring; in this way, the control unit can know the position of the spring 13 during the operating phases and use this piece of information to control the motor acting onto the pulley 4. Upon a sudden increase in the thread consumption by the textile machine, in fact, a spring motion from the position “PB” to the position “PC” follows, which motion, properly measured and controlled by the control unit, allows for example to increase in advance the rotation speed of the pulley in order to reach quickly the new feeding speed and consequently bring the spring back to the initial position “PB”.
Once known then the position of the compensator 11, the control unit is able to make that, after a motion thereof to compensate a (positive or negative) consumption variation, the spring 13 always returns to the initial central position thereof, so as to be immediately ready to compensate a new (positive or negative) absorption variation.
By further monitoring the position variations of the compensating spring 13 it is also possible checking that such position does not ever exceed fixed limits (extra-strokes) in order to avoid that the compensator 11 may be in a place wherein it has no more room for performing the compensation in one of the two directions and in case signalling an alarm and stopping the machine.
Since the capability of compensating more or less high absorption discontinuities depends, as said, upon the force of the spring itself, an additional interaction between the control unit and the compensator 11 is that allowing the control unit to vary the force of the spring itself for example by means of driving, by the above-mentioned control unit, an associated electric motor working on the knob 21. This in order to optimize the control thereof depending upon the application or the operating conditions. In fact, by monitoring the position variations of the compensating spring 13 it may happens that such position does not ever exceed fixed limits (extra-strokes) in order to avoid that such compensator may be in a position wherein it has no more room for compensating in one of the two directions and acting consequently onto the force of the spring itself.
Thanks to the invention several advantages are obtained, which could be well understood from the preceding description. Furthermore, the use of the mobile arm 16 downwards the pulley or accumulation organ 4 allows using and controlling a “rigid” thread as if it were elastic since the motion of the arm 16 compensates the thread rigidity in case of variations of the feeding state of the thread itself. The obtained elasticity level will be then finely adjusted depending upon the spring force, adjusted manually or automatically.
In particular, in
As it can be noted in the figures under examination, the thread 8 detaches from the pulley 4 tangentially thereto, it reaches the arm 16 and returns onto the pulley in a way still tangential thereto. This allows to keep a precise triangulation for the tension measurement which is performed downwards the pulley; furthermore, it allows a greater stabilization of the thread cooperating with the arm 16.
Various embodiments of the invention have been described; still other embodiments are possible and are to be meant within the scope of the following claims. In particular, even if the preceding description makes reference to the. textile field, the invention has to be considered also extended to the field of the machines winding metallic wires or similar machines; for example, the invention can be used onto a machine winding a metallic wire which unwounds from a bobbin and which is used to implement windings for electric motors or the like. Therefore, any reference in the present text to a thread must be meant as referring both to a textile thread and to a metallic wire.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
MI2008A000410 | Mar 2008 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2009/001663 | 3/9/2009 | WO | 00 | 9/10/2010 |