This invention relates generally to the manufacture of knitted fabric having a pile extending from a surface thereof, and more particularly to the manufacture of a tubular-shaped knitted fabric having a pile extending from an outer surface thereof in small diameters suitable for use as a covering for a paint roller.
Since the 1930s, rollers have been utilized for applying paint and other coatings to walls, ceilings, floors, and other surfaces. Typically, a roller includes two components, in the form of a handle assembly and a roller cover for installation onto the handle assembly. The handle assembly typically consists of a grip element having a generally L-shaped metal frame extending therefrom, with the free end of the metal frame having a rotatable support for the roller cover to be mounted thereon. The roller cover typically consists of a thin, hollow cylindrical core which fits onto the rotatable support of the handle, with a plush pile fabric being secured to the outer periphery of the roller cover. The core may be made of any appropriate material, such as cardboard or plastic. The pile fabric has traditionally been applied as a strip of fabric which is helically wound onto the outer surface of the core, with adjacent windings of the fabric strip being located as closely adjacent as possible to each other to provide the appearance of a single continuous pile fabric covering on the core.
The use of helically wound strips to provide the pile on roller covers is undesirable because, even where great care is taken in precisely cutting and winding the strips of fabric onto the core, the resulting juncture between two adjacent strips still sometimes results in noticeable marks being left on the surface being painted or otherwise coated by the roller cover. Even where the resulting juncture is initially carefully made, the pile fibers along the sides of the juncture are sometimes lost during use of the roller cover, as a result of the fabric being cut into strips. The precise cutting and winding operations required to produce a roller cover giving satisfactory performance can substantially increase the cost of manufacturing a roller cover.
The use of helically wound coverings on prior rollers has been necessary primarily due to the fact that the pile fabrics suitable for use as roller coverings could only be knitted in a tubular form having large diameters, such as 24 inches for example, having a circumference far larger than the outer periphery of the core of a typical roller. These large diameter knitted fabrics were then slit to form a flat sheet of fabric having a pile extending from one surface thereof. The large sheet of fabric was then cut into strips for winding about the core to form the completed roller.
For the most popular type of knitted fabric for roller covers, having a pile formed from small tufts, known as slivers, of fabric knitted into a knitted backing, another drawback existed in prior methods and apparatuses which were only capable of producing tubular-shaped knitted coverings having the pile extending from an inner surface of the tubular-shaped length of knitted covering. As a result, even if the tubular-shaped covering could have been produced in a diameter small enough to be simply slipped over the core of a roller, it would have been necessary to first turn the entire length of tubular knitted covering inside-out in order to move the pile from the inside to the outside of the tube of fabric.
In a commonly assigned U.S. patent application bearing Ser. No. 11/740,119, titled “Tubular Sliver Knit Fabric For Paint Roller Covers,” the disclosure and teachings of which are incorporated herein in their entireties by reference, the inventor of the present invention discloses a tubular sliver knit fabric for a roller cover having the pile extending from the outer surface of the knitted fabric and an inner diameter defined by the base fabric which is small enough in diameter to be slipped over the core of a roller, thereby eliminating the operations of cutting and helically winding strips of fabric onto a core as was required for fabrication of prior roller covers.
It is desirable, therefore, to provide an improved method and apparatus for knitting material having a pile extending therefrom, in a form which is more amendable for use as a covering for a core of a paint roller. It is also desirable to provide an improved method and apparatus for knitting the covering of a roller without having to resort to the traditional practice of helically winding strips of the knitted fabric onto a core. It is particularly desirable to provide a method and apparatus for knitting the covering of a roller in accordance with the inventor's commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/740,119 referenced above.
The invention provides a method and apparatus for forming a tubular-shaped knitted covering for a paint roller, or the like, having a pile extending from an outer surface of the covering, through use of a dial needle knitting arrangement. The dial needle knitting arrangement includes a dial, a plurality of dial needles operatively disposed in the dial, a dial cam box disposed adjacent to the dial and operatively connected to the dial needles, a backing yarn feeding arrangement, and a pile yarn feeding arrangement.
Using the dial needle knitting arrangement, a length of tubular-shaped fabric can be provided with the dial needles in such a manner that the backing yarn is exposed on an interior surface of the length of tubular-shaped fabric, and the pile extends outward from an exterior surface of the length of tubular-shaped fabric. The invention allows a tubular-shaped knitted covering having pile extending from an outer surface thereof to be knitted in a small enough diameter that the covering may be simply pulled over and attached to the outer periphery of the core of a roller, to form a completed roller, without having to helically wind strips of the pile covered fabric onto the core in the manner required by prior methods and apparatuses for forming a roller cover.
In one form of the invention, a knitting apparatus for forming a tubular-shaped knitted covering for a paint roller having a pile extending from an outer surface of the covering, includes a dial knitting arrangement having a dial, a plurality of dial needles operatively disposed in the dial, a cam box disposed adjacent to the dial and operatively connected to the dial needles, a backing yarn feeding arrangement and a pile yarn feeding arrangement. The dial is rotatably mounted for rotation about a vertical axis of rotation, and has a periphery of the dial disposed about the axis of rotation. The dial further has a plurality of substantially radially directed dial needle slots opening in an upward direction. The dial cam box is non-rotatably mounted above the dial, and has a downwardly-facing and opening dial needle cam track therein. The dial needles each have a body thereof disposed in a respective dial needle slot, of the plurality of dial needle slots. The dial needles have hooked ends thereof that are outwardly extendable beyond the periphery of the dial, and a dial needle cam lobe extending upward from the dial needle body beyond the dial needle slot and into sliding engagement with the dial needle cam track. The dial needle cam lobes and the dial needle slots are configured such that rotation of the dial causes the dial needles to be selectively moveable radially within the dial needle slots through interaction of the dial needle cam lobes with the dial needle cam track. The backing yarn and pile yarn feeding arrangements are operatively disposed adjacent the periphery of the dial and are adapted for feeding the backing yarn and pile yarn to the dial needles along selected segments of the periphery of the dial.
In some forms of the invention, where the pile yarn is a sliver fiber, the pile yarn feeding arrangement includes a doffer arrangement having a doffer wheel including a sliver feeding surface thereof which is operatively disposed adjacent to a sliver-feed segment of the periphery of the dial, in such a manner that the hooked ends of the dial needles are adapted to receive sliver fiber from the sliver feeding surface of the doffer wheel during operation of the knitting apparatus. The dial needles may be configured to be moveable radially to a tuck position in which the hooks of the dial needles are extended beyond the periphery of the dial, but the previous loop of the backing is not cast off, and the sliver feeding surface is disposed such that the hooks of the dial needles can receive the sliver fiber from the sliver feeding surface while the dial needles are in the tuck position. Because the dial needles need to move radially outward only to the tucked position, rather than a fully extended position, they are better supported within the dial needle slots than they would be in a fully extended position, thereby providing enhanced durability and robustness to the dial knitting arrangement, according to the invention.
The invention is also applicable to knitted fabrics having a pile formed from a length of face yarn, rather than from slivers, wherein the pile yarn feeding arrangement is a face yarn feeder having an output thereof operatively disposed adjacent to a face-yarn-feed segment of the periphery of the dial, in such a manner that the hooked ends of the needles are adapted to pull loops of the face yarn from the output of the face yarn feeder during operation of the knitting apparatus. A cutting arrangement may be operatively disposed for cutting the loops of face yarn to form a pile on the outside of the tubular-shaped knitted covering.
In some forms of the invention, an apparatus or method is provided for knitting a covering including multiple successively knitted courses, with two adjacent courses being knitted simultaneously, and the pile yarn being sliver fibers in one course of the two simultaneously knitted courses and the pile yarn being a face yarn in the other course of the two simultaneously knitted courses. For use of the invention in knitting such a fabric, the pile yarn feeding arrangement may include a doffer arrangement and a face yarn feeder. The doffer arrangement may include a doffer wheel having a sliver feeding surface thereof operatively disposed adjacent to a sliver-feed segment of the periphery of the dial in such a manner that the hooked ends of the dial needles can receive the sliver fiber from the sliver feeding surface of the doffer wheel during operation of the knitting apparatus for knitting one of the two simultaneously knitted courses. The face yarn feeder may have an output thereof operatively disposed adjacent to a face-yarn-feed segment of the periphery of the dial in such a manner that the hooked ends of the dial needles can pull loops of the face yarn fiber from the output of the face yarn feeder during operation of the knitting apparatus. A cutting arrangement may also be provided for cutting the loops of face yarn to form a portion of the pile on the outside of the tubular-shaped knitted covering.
A method and/or apparatus, according to the invention, may be utilized for forming a roller covering having multiple successively knitted courses with two or more adjacent courses being knitted simultaneously, and the pile yarn being sliver fibers in the two or more simultaneously knitted courses. The pile yarn feeding arrangement, in these forms of the invention, may include a separate doffer arrangement for each of the two or more simultaneously knitted courses, with each doffer arrangement including a doffer wheel having a sliver feeding surface thereof operatively disposed adjacent to a sliver-feed segment of the periphery of the dial, in such a manner that the hooked ends of the dial needles can receive the sliver fibers from the sliver feeding surface of the doffer wheel during operation of the knitting apparatus for knitting one of the two simultaneously knitted courses.
In forms of the invention utilized for forming a covering having multiple successively knitted courses with two or more adjacent courses being knitted simultaneously, the backing yarn feeding arrangement may include a first and second backing yarn feeder operatively disposed adjacent the periphery of the dial and adapted for feeding the backing yarn to the dial needles along selected segments of the periphery of the dial for supplying backing yarn for each of the two simultaneously knitted courses.
Some forms of the invention may further include a take-down arrangement disposed below the dial for urging the tubular-shaped knitted covering having outwardly extending pile to move substantially downward along the rotational axis from the dial. Some forms of an apparatus, according to the invention, may include a main bed disposed below and supporting the dial, the dial cam box and the take-down arrangement. The take-down arrangement may be disposed below the main bed.
A take-down arrangement, according to the invention, may include a powered drive roller for urging movement of the tubular-shaped knitted covering with outwardly extending pile, with the powered drive roller being operatively connected to be driven in synchronization with the dial by a common drive motor. In some forms of the invention, a take-down arrangement, according to the invention, rotates about the axis of rotation in synchronization with the dial, and is operatively connected to be rotated about the rotational axis by the common drive motor.
Some forms of the invention may also include a cylinder needle knitting arrangement having a cylinder, a plurality of cylinder needles operatively disposed in the cylinder, and a cylinder cam box disposed adjacent the cylinder and operatively connected to the needles. The cylinder may be rotatably mounted for rotation about the vertical axis of rotation and have a radially outer periphery thereof disposed about the axis of rotation. The cylinder may further include a plurality of substantially axially directed needle slots opening in an upward direction at an upper end of the cylinder. The cylinder cam box may be non-rotatably mounted about the cylinder and have a radially inward facing and opening cylinder needle cam track therein. The cylinder needles may each have a body thereof disposed in a respective cylinder needle slot of the plurality of cylinder needles slots, and a hooked end thereof that is upwardly extendable beyond the upper end of the cylinder. The body of the cylinder needles may further include a cam lobe extending radially outward beyond the cylinder needle slot and into sliding engagement with the cylinder needle cam track, such that rotation of the cylinder causes the cylinder needles to be selectively moveable axially within the cylinder needle slots through interaction of the cylinder needle cam lobes with the cylinder needle cam track. The cylinder and dial are operatively connected for synchronized rotation with respect to one another about the axis of rotation. The dial is disposed axially along the axis of rotation above the upper end of the cylinder. In embodiments of the invention wherein the cylinder needle knitting arrangement is utilized in conjunction with the dial for forming loops of face yarn during formation of the pile, the vertical spacing between the dial and the upper end of the cylinder may be adjustable to thereby allow for adjustment of the length of the pile fibers.
In some forms of the invention having a cylinder needle knitting arrangement, the cylinder needles and cylinder cam box are removable, to allow operation of the knitting machine with only the dial, dial needles and dial cam box. In other forms of the invention, the dial, dial needles and dial cam box are removable, to allow operation of the knitting machine with only the cylinder, cylinder needles and cylinder cam box. In some forms of the invention, the components of both the dial needle knitting arrangement and the cylinder needle knitting arrangement are selectively removable, to thereby allow practice of the invention in a variety of forms.
In forms of the invention utilizing a dial knitting arrangement, a cylinder knitting arrangement, and a take-down arrangement, the dial and cylinder knitting arrangements and the take-down arrangement may all be operatively interconnected to a common drive motor to be rotated about the axis of rotation by the common drive motor.
Forms of the invention utilizing both a dial needle knitting arrangement and a cylinder needle knitting arrangement may be configured such that knitting of the base fabric is carried out totally by the dial knitting arrangement, and both the dial and cylinder knitting arrangements being utilized for knitting the pile yarn into the base fabric. For example, where a roller covering is manufactured according to the invention to include multiple successively knitted courses, with two adjacent courses being knitted simultaneously, and the pile yarn being sliver fibers in one course of the two simultaneously knitted courses and the pile yarn being a face yarn and the other course of the two simultaneously knitted courses, the knitting apparatus may be configured such that knitting of the base fabric and the sliver fibers is carried out totally by the dial knitting arrangement, with both the dial and cylinder knitting arrangements being utilized for knitting the face yarn.
Other aspects, objects and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following detailed description of exemplary embodiments considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings of those exemplary embodiments.
The accompanying drawings incorporated in and forming a part of the specification illustrate several aspects of the present invention and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention. In the drawings:
While the invention will be described in connection with certain preferred embodiments, there is no intent to limit it to those embodiments. On the contrary, the intent is to cover all alternatives, modifications and equivalents as included within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
A tubular sliver knit segment 20 of the type shown in
Referring next to
The foundation of the tubular sliver knit segment 20 is the knit base material 22, which may be knit in a highly modified single jersey circular knitting process on a radically redesigned circular knitting machine, according to the invention, such as one of the exemplary embodiments described below. The knit base material 22 has a plurality of courses (which are rows of loops of stitches which run across the knit fabric), five of which are shown and designated by the reference numerals 30, 32, 34, 36, and 38, and a plurality of wales (which are vertical chains of loops in the longitudinal direction of the knit fabric), three of which are shown and designated by the reference numerals 40, 42, and 44. The respective courses 30, 32, 34, 36, and 38 are knitted sequentially from the lowest course number to the highest course number.
By way of example, the construction of the portion of the tubular sliver knit segment 20 in the area of the course 36 and the wale 42 will be discussed herein. A loop 46 formed in a yarn segment 48 is located in this area, with a loop 50 formed in a yarn segment 52 being located in the course 34 below the loop 46, and a loop 54 formed in a yarn segment 56 being located in the course 38 above the loop 46. The loop 46 extends through the loop 50 from the outside to the inside of the tubular sliver knit segment 20 (shown in
A tuft of pile fibers 24 having a loop portion 58 and opposite end portions 60 and 62 is knitted into the knit base material 22 together with the loop 46. The loop portion 58 of that particular tuft of pile fibers 24 is located adjacent the top of the loop 46, and the opposite end portions 60 and 62 of that particular tuft of pile fibers 24 extend outwardly from the interior of the loop 46, above the loop 50 and below the loop 54. In a similar manner, each of the other tufts of the pile fibers 24 is knitted into the knit base material 22 with a different loop.
Note that in each of
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The doffer roll 90 is rotating in a clockwise direction, and it carries sliver fibers 94 in the wire face 92, the sliver fibers 94 being supplied from a sliver rope (not shown) being fed into the head (not shown) that contains the doffer roll 90 and the wire face 92. As may be seen in
Referring now to
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Those skilled in the art will appreciate that while the process shown in
A wide variety of materials may be used to knit the tubular sliver knit segment 20, and the tubular sliver knit paint roller cover fabric of the present invention may be made of virtually any of the materials used for knitting sliver knit fabrics in the past. For example, the yarn may be made of synthetic yarns, with the pile being made of natural or synthetic fibers, or a blend of natural and synthetic fibers. Synthetic fibers used in the knit base may be, for example, polyester, acrylic, polypropylene, aramid, and spandex, or a blend of any of the aforementioned. Fibers used in the pile may be, for example, wool, polyester, acrylic, nylon, modacrylic, rayon, polypropylene, and aramid, or a blend of any of the aforementioned. Experience has shown that the invention may be practiced with efficacy using yarn deniers as high as 900, and fiber lengths between approximately three-eighths of an inch (nine and one-half millimeters) and four inches (one hundred two millimeters), although yarn deniers and fiber lengths outside these ranges may be useable as well. It will be understood, by those having skill in the art, that the aforestated values and ranges of yarn denier and length are provided solely for purposes of explanation and illustration of exemplary embodiments of the invention and are not to be taken as limitations on the scope or practice of the invention.
As shown in
The frame 116 defines a main vertical axis of rotation 122 and includes an upper main bed 124 and a lower main bed 126. The upper and lower main beds 124, 126 are connected to, and spaced axially from, one another by three main bed supports 130, 132, 134.
The drive arrangement 118 includes an upper rotatable plate, in the form of an upper large gear 136 which is operatively attached by an upper large gear bearing 138 to the upper main bed 124 for rotation about the main axis of rotation 122 within a cavity inside of the upper main bed 124. In similar fashion, a lower rotatable plate, in the form of a lower large gear 140 is operatively attached by a lower large gear bearing 142 to the lower main bed 126 for rotation about the main axis of rotation 122 within a cavity inside of the lower main bed 126.
The drive arrangement 118 also includes a main drive shaft 144 which is rotatably mounted for rotation about a second axis of rotation 146 which extends substantially parallel to the main vertical axis of rotation 122. The main drive shaft 144 is operatively connected to the upper and lower large gears respectively through upper and lower gear trains 148, 150, each of which has a drive gear fixedly attached to the main drive shaft 144 connected in a gear mesh relationship through an idler gear to the upper and lower large gears 136, 140 respectively. By virtue of this arrangement, rotation of the upper and lower large gears 136, 140 are synchronized to one another in a fixed relationship to rotation of the main drive shaft 144. The common drive motor 120 is operatively coupled, through a cogged belt drive arrangement 152 to the main drive shaft 144, for rotatably driving the main drive shaft 144 about the second axis of rotation 146.
The dial 104 is attached to and axially disposed below the upper large gear 136 by a dial drive shaft 154 for rotation about the main vertical axis of rotation 122. Specifically, an upper end of the dial drive shaft 154 is fixedly attached to the upper large gear 136, and the dial 104 is fixedly attached to the lower, distal, end of the dial drive shaft 154.
As shown in
As best seen in
The dial needles 106 each have a body 168 thereof disposed in a respective dial needle slot 158. Each of the dial needles 106 also has a hooked end 170 that is outwardly extendable beyond the periphery 156 of the dial 104, and a needle cam lobe 172 extending upward beyond the dial needle slot 158 and into sliding engagement with the dial cam box needle track 166, in such a manner that rotation of the dial 104 causes the dial needles to be selectively moveable radially within the dial needle slots 158 through interaction of the dial needle cam lobes 172 with the dial needle cam track 166. Each dial needle also includes a latch 173 (see
As schematically illustrated in
As will be understood by those having skill in the art, and as illustrated schematically in
It will be noted that, the exemplary embodiment of the knitting apparatus 100, described above and shown in
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The first exemplary embodiment of the knitting apparatus 100, according to the invention, also includes a machine support structure extending below the lower main bed 126 and adapted for supporting the knitting apparatus 100 on a support surface external to the knitting apparatus 100, as illustrated by the legs 117 in
The second exemplary embodiment of the knitting apparatus 200 is identical in all respects to the first exemplary embodiment of the knitting apparatus 100 described above, except that the second exemplary embodiment of the knitting apparatus 200 includes a cylinder needle knitting arrangement 201 and replacement of the doffer-type pile yarn feeding arrangement 112 of the first exemplary embodiment 100 with a different type of pile yarn feeding arrangement 208 for feeding the pile yarn 222 to the dial and cylinder knitting arrangements 102, 201. It may also be necessary to replace the dial cam box 108 with a different dial cam box 206 having a cam track 207 defining a different shape than the dial cam track 166 of the first exemplary embodiment 100 described above.
As shown in
The cylinder cam box 204 is non-rotatably mounted to the lower main bed 126 (in the same manner as shown in
As shown in
It will be further noted, that the cylinder needles 203 each include a cutting blade portion 230 disposed adjacent the hooked end 218 of the needle 203 rather than having the pivoting latches 173 (see
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It will be noted, by those skilled in the art, that, in the following description, reference is made only to the knitting process occurring in three phases I1, II1, III1, for the first pile and backing yarns 236, 240, but it will be understood by those having skill in the art that an identical process is being carried out in three steps I2, II2, III2, during a single rotation of the dial 104 and cylinder 202 about the main vertical axis of rotation 122.
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Those having skill in the art will recognize that, although only the process of knitting the first pile and backing yarns 236, 240 have been described, and illustrated in
Those having skill in the art will recognize that, although the first and second exemplary embodiment of the knitting machines 100, 200 described hereinabove have both been configured for knitting of a tubular-shaped roller covering 20, 220, having two courses of the backing knitted on a single rotation of the dial 104, in other embodiments of the invention, fewer or more courses of the knitted fabric can be formed in a single rotation of the dial 104. In similar fashion, it will be recognized that in the exemplary embodiments of the invention presented herein, both the dial and the cylinder, and embodiments having a cylinder with needles, have had an identical number of 56 needles, with the cylinder needles spaced alternately between the dial needles. The invention may also be practiced in other embodiments having different numbers of needles, and differing numbers of needles in the cylinder and the dial. Also, both the dial and the cylinder in the first and second exemplary embodiments 100, 200 described above utilized only a single cam track in both the dial and the cylinder. In other embodiments of the invention, multiple cam tracks may be utilized.
Although the invention has been described herein with relation to several exemplary embodiments of knitting machines 100, 200, 300, the variations described above are by no means exhaustive.
Moving now to
It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the paint roller cover core 322 may constitute plastic tubular core stock that has been cut to single paint roller size (typically nine inches (229 millimeters)). (Alternately, it may be cut to a longer length, such as, for example, sixty-four inches (1625 millimeters); if such a longer length is used, following installation of the tubular cut pile knit segment 320 onto the plastic tubular core stock, it may be cut into the desired size shorter paint roller covers, such as, for example, seven nine inch (229 millimeters) paint roller covers.) Finishing the paint roller covers typically will include the steps of combing the combination sliver and cut pile knit fabric on the paint roller cover and, in some embodiments, shearing the pile to the desired length. These finishing steps may occur either before or after cutting longer segments to the desired length. Finally, the edges of the paint roller covers are beveled, and any loose yarn fibers may be vacuumed off.
Referring now to
The tubular knit segment 320 is of a length that corresponds to the length of the paint roller cover core 322. For purposes of the example discussed herein, it will be assumed that the paint roller cover core 320 is approximately nine inches (229 millimeters) long and that the tubular knit segment 320 is approximately nine to nine and one-quarter inches (235 millimeters) long, which are lengths that are selected to allow the paint roller cover core 322 and the tubular knit segment 320 to be used for the manufacture of a single nine inch (229 millimeter) long paint roller cover. It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the paint roller cover core 322 and the tubular knit segment 320 could alternately be sized for use in manufacturing a plurality of paint roller covers of any of several different lengths. For example, the paint roller cover core 322 and the tubular knit segment 320 could each be approximately sixty-four inches (1625 millimeters) long, which is a sufficient length to allow them to be used for the manufacture of seven nine inch (229 millimeter) long paint roller covers.
Since inner diameter of the tubular knit segment 320 is approximately the same as the paint roller cover core 322, the tubular knit segment 320 need not be capable of substantial stretching when it is pulled onto the paint roller cover core 322. The tubular knit segment 320 taught herein is resilient and will closely fit the outer diameter of the paint roller cover core 322.
In
Finishing the paint roller covers may include the steps of combing the pile on the paint roller cover and shearing the pile knit fabric to the desired length. Finally, the edges of the paint roller covers are beveled, and any loose yarn fibers may be vacuumed off.
In some embodiments of the invention, an apparatus and/or method according to the invention may be utilized for forming a tubular knit segment including low melt yarns for the backing material. Such tubular knit segments having low melt yarns may then be utilized in accordance with commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/132,774, the teachings of which are incorporated herein in their entirety.
The use of low melt yarns for the base of a sliver knit fabric is discussed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,766,668, to Sinykin, which patent is assigned to the assignee of the present invention, and which patent is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. This patent used heat to activate the low melt material in the base, heating the sliver knit fabric to a temperature for a sufficient period of time to permit the low melt material to melt about the central and/or intermediate portions of the sliver fibers. The sliver knit fabric was then cooled so that the low melt material returned to a hardened state and captured a portion of the sliver fibers to lock them to the base of the fabric. This represents a substantially different use of bicomponent fibers than that made by the present invention, as will become evident below.
In accordance with some embodiments of the present invention, low melt yarn together with either the sliver fibers or cut pile segments formed from a pile yarn (or both) are knitted into the tubular knitted pile fabric segment. The manufacture of a tubular knitted pile fabric with sliver fibers is disclosed in the above-incorporated by reference U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/740,119, which produces a tubular knitted sliver pile fabric with the pile side facing outwardly and with a diameter suitable for conversion into a paint roller cover (paint roller covers typically have an inner diameter of approximately one and one-half inches (38 millimeters)). The manufacture of a tubular knitted pile fabric with cut pile segments formed from a pile yarn is disclosed in the above-incorporated by reference U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/116,022, which produces a tubular knitted cut pile fabric with the pile side facing outwardly and with a diameter suitable for conversion into a paint roller cover (paint roller covers typically have an inner diameter of approximately one and one-half inches (38 millimeters)). Alternately, either of the tubular knitted pile fabric segments could be either slightly larger or slightly smaller than the inner diameter of a paint roller cover.
The tubular knitted pile fabric is then placed onto a cylindrical mandrel which is the approximate size of the inner diameter of a paint roller cover (typically approximately one and one-half inches (38 millimeters)). The cylindrical mandrel may be made, for example, of steel (which may optionally have a non-stick coating such as PTFE or silicone) and has a heating mechanism contained inside which is capable of rapidly heating the outside of the mandrel to a desired temperature. The cylindrical mandrel is heated to the desired temperature, which is less than 343 degrees Centigrade (less than 650 degrees Fahrenheit) or any temperature suitable for activating the low melt yarn. One temperature range that may be acceptable is between approximately 190 and 218 degrees Centigrade (between 375 and 425 degreed Fahrenheit). This temperature is sufficient to melt the lower melting point component of the low melt yarn used in the backing or base of the tubular knitted pile fabric, and is maintained for a period of between approximately five seconds and approximately ninety seconds, preferably approximately five to approximately sixty seconds.
The melted lower melting point component of the low melt yarn used in the backing or base of the tubular knitted pile fabric flows into the cylindrical form of the outside of the cylindrical mandrel. The melted lower melting point component also flows between the backing loops and the central and/or intermediate portions of the sliver fibers or the loops of the cut pile yarn segments, and locks the sliver fibers or cut pile yarn segments into the tubular knitted pile fabric. This greatly reducing the degree of shedding of pile fibers from the tubular knitted pile fabric. It also converts the backing from a fabric into a unitary cylindrical assembly which, when cooled, will become substantially rigid. The mandrel is then cooled or allowed to cool, after which the rigid, cylindrical pile fabric assembly is removed from the mandrel.
In an alternate embodiment, one or more layers of a dry adhesive film may be first wound on a non-stick mandrel, following which the tubular knitted pile fabric segment is placed over the dry adhesive film. The mandrel is then heated to cause the dry adhesive film and the lower melting point component of the low melt yarn used in the backing or base of the tubular knitted pile fabric to melt together with the adhesive bonding material to create an even more rigid cylindrical assembly having a pile surface.
The rigid, cylindrical pile fabric assembly is finished by combing and shearing the pile fabric to the desired length. The edges of the unfinished paint roller covers are beveled, and any loose sliver fibers are then vacuumed off.
It may therefore be appreciated from the above detailed description of the preferred embodiment of the present invention that it provides a tubular pile knit paint roller cover fabric having pile that is suitable for use in the manufacture of a paint roller cover. The tubular knit paint roller cover fabric of the present invention is manufactured with the pile side facing outwardly rather than inwardly, thereby obviating the need to invert it prior to mounting it on a paint roller cover core. The tubular knit paint roller cover fabric of the present invention is of a size suitable for mounting on a paint roller cover core in a seamless manner, without cutting it except for cutting it to a length fitting the length of paint roller cover core material on which the tubular knit paint roller cover fabric is to be mounted.
The tubular knit paint roller cover fabric of the present invention is well suited for use in its application on a paint roller cover, and will not experience any significant degradation of the tubular knit paint roller cover fabric due to its contact with a wide variety of paints, enamels, stains, etc. The tubular knit paint roller cover fabric of the present invention is manufactured in a manner in which the pile loops and/or sliver fibers are securely retained by the knit base material such that the shedding of pile fibers from the tubular knit paint roller cover fabric is minimized. The tubular knit paint roller cover fabric of the present invention is also manufacturable in extended length segments that may later be cut to tubular segments of any desired length.
The tubular knit paint roller cover fabric of the present invention is of a construction which is both durable and long lasting when it has been secured to a paint roller cover core, and the resulting paint roller cover will provide the user with an acceptably long lifetime. The tubular knit paint roller cover fabric of the present invention is also inexpensive to manufacture, thereby enhancing its market appeal and to affording it the broadest possible market. In addition, it is believed that utilizing a pile having a combination sliver fiber and cut pile in alternating courses on a paint roller has not heretofore been known. This new pattern provides desirable decorative effects and performance characteristics. Finally, all of the aforesaid advantages and objectives of the tubular knit paint roller cover fabric of the present invention are achieved without incurring any substantial relative disadvantage.
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All references, including publications, patent applications, and patents cited herein are hereby incorporated by reference to the same extent as if each reference were individually and specifically indicated to be incorporated by reference and were set forth in its entirety herein.
The use of the terms “a” and “an” and “the” and similar referents in the context of describing the invention (especially in the context of the following claims) is to be construed to cover both the singular and the plural, unless otherwise indicated herein or clearly contradicted by context. The terms “comprising,” “having,” “including,” and “containing” are to be construed as open-ended terms (i.e., meaning “including, but not limited to,”) unless otherwise noted. Recitation of ranges of values herein are merely intended to serve as a shorthand method of referring individually to each separate value falling within the range, unless otherwise indicated herein, and each separate value is incorporated into the specification as if it were individually recited herein. All methods described herein can be performed in any suitable order unless otherwise indicated herein or otherwise clearly contradicted by context. The use of any and all examples, or exemplary language (e.g., “such as”) provided herein, is intended merely to better illuminate the invention and does not pose a limitation on the scope of the invention unless otherwise claimed. No language in the specification should be construed as indicating any non-claimed element as essential to the practice of the invention.
Preferred embodiments of this invention are described herein, including the best mode known to the inventors for carrying out the invention. Variations of those preferred embodiments may become apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art upon reading the foregoing description. The inventors expect skilled artisans to employ such variations as appropriate, and the inventors intend for the invention to be practiced otherwise than as specifically described herein. Accordingly, this invention includes all modifications and equivalents of the subject matter recited in the claims appended hereto as permitted by applicable law. Moreover, any combination of the above-described elements in all possible variations thereof is encompassed by the invention unless otherwise indicated herein or otherwise clearly contradicted by context.
This patent application is a continuation-in-part of co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/871,307, filed Oct. 12, 2007, the entire teachings and disclosure of which are incorporated herein by reference thereto, and also claims priority to co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/116,022, filed May 6, 2008, the entire teachings and disclosures of which are also incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090095025 A1 | Apr 2009 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11871307 | Oct 2007 | US |
Child | 12249455 | US | |
Parent | 12116022 | May 2008 | US |
Child | 11871307 | US |