The invention relates to a device for the hydrodynamic treatment of a woven fabric, or also a knitted fabric, of a certain width, with a jet bar and a jet strip arranged in it with a multitude of orifices arranged closely adjacent to each other for the formation of a water curtain directing hard water jets at the filaments and their crossing points of the fabric, or such.
A method usable for this device, and a product achieved thereby is known for U.S. Pat. No. 5,281,441. Depending on the yarn used, the individual fibers are not distributed parallel to one another by means of the water needling, but are adhered on top of one another, and do not result in the previously known pattern according to
It is known to direct the water jets in the web-travel direction at an angle against the product web; in this regard, reference is made to U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,214,819, 3,873,255, 5,737,813, 5,806,155, or 6,253,429. However, this does not enable the water jets to have an influence on the warp and weft of a fabric. The sample applies to the solution according to U.S. Pat. No. 4,960,630, according to which the water jets are like a fan. In this configuration, the water jets adjacent to each other interfere with one another.
Another solution of the lateral effect on the fibers has become known in an application on the hydrodynamic treatment of a non-woven fiber material as describes in U.S. Pat. No. 6,877,196. The evening out of the thickness of the non-woven material is performed by angled impacting water jets that are projected from a water bar that is normally arranged parallel to the product web, however, the jet strips are equipped with orifices extending at an angle to the product web. According to
Starting from the device of the type descried above, the invention is based on the task of finding a device, with which all filaments of a fabric may be treated across their entire length and distribution with water jets, while spreading the fibers apart.
In order to solve this task, the invention provides that for the shifting, spreading, evening out, and, if necessary, also for splitting the fibers of all yarns, the jet bar is aligned at an even distance across its length, but at an angle to the longitudinal direction of the product web, and across its entire effective width, and that additionally all the jet orifices of the jet strip are directed not perpendicularly, but at an angle, and therefore the water jets are also angled to the product web. In this case it is also advantageous if the discharging water jets of jet bars, or jet strips that are arranged behind one another, are directed against one another in order to avoid any shifting of the product web on the endless belt carrying it.
A device of the type according to the invention is illustrated by way of an example in the drawings. They show:
a and 3b a product web with jet bars extending transversely but across the effective width of the web and having different angles to the web-travel direction.
a and 4b a product web with jet bars extending transversely to web-travel direction, but with jet strips supported in it with jet orifices extending at angles in segments.
a, 5b, and 5c a product web with jet bars extending transversely, in the jet strips of which two jet orifice rows are integrated with the orifices being inclined in opposite directions, or two jet bars with only one jet orifice row each, which are then each inclined in opposite directions.
As shown in
In order to achieve this mechanically, according to
It is also advantageous if laterally aligned, and laterally spraying jet bars are combined with jet bars whose jet strips have orifices aligned perpendicularly on the product web. In this regard, an embodiment of jet bars and assigned jet strips would be meaningful having jet orifices in the center spraying laterally in both directions, and a jet bar is arranged in front and behind, with jet strips that are aligned as usual in the prior art perpendicularly onto the product web 2.
According to
In a jet bar according to
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