Claims
- 1. In the formation of knit fabric incorporating an inlay of spaced warp ends with filling ends laid at opposite sides of said warp ends across the full fabric width and warp knit stitch chains formed in the spaces between said warp ends, the improvement which comprises feeding said warp and filling end inlay while forming said stitch chains from knitting ends and causing loops of the stitch chains as they are formed to interlace sinuously with filling ends at both sides of the warp ends, so that the filling ends are held against the warp ends and are forced inwardly therebetween causing both warp and filling ends to undulate as a result of mutual interaction in a manner producing an appearance approaching that of woven structure.
- 2. In the formation of knit fabric, the improvement defined in claim 1 wherein said warp knit stitch chains are formed by feeding knitting ends therefor at one side of said warp ends while extending looped portions of said knitting ends between said warp ends and between filling ends laid thereat, taking said looped knitting end portions at the other warp end side and causing the same to pass over a filling end at said other side while returning them to the first warp end side at which the knitting ends therefor are fed, receiving the returned looped portions at said first warp end side and holding the same for casting off at a disposition passing over a filling end at said first side, and casting off the held looped portions at said first warp end side after extending a succeeding looped portion through each such held portion and having the succeeding extended portion taken at the other warp end side.
- 3. In the formation of knit fabric, the improvement defined in claim 1 wherein said warp knit stitch chains are formed as links-links stitch chains at the spaces between said warp ends from knitting ends fed at opposite sides of said warp ends, while causing said filling ends to be successively captured at the side of said warp ends at which they are laid by a weft-wise row of stitch chain loops formed from the knitting ends fed at the opposite warp end side.
- 4. In knitting apparatus in which means is provided for inlaying spaced warp ends and laying filling ends at opposite sides thereof across the full fabric width, together with further means for feeding knitting ends to form warp knit stitch chains in the spaces between said warp ends, the improvement which comprises means operable to form said stitch chains including first and second loop handling elements oriented in substantially perpendicular relation and caused to orbit loop handling end portions thereof symmetrically and reciprocally about a common center in respective perpendicularly related paths intersecting twice in aligned relation with the plane of said warp inlay and once significantly beyond said filling ends at each side of said warp inlay plane during each orbital cycle, said loop handling end portions being formed and the respective orbiting thereof being timed for loop transfer therebetween at the points of intersection of said orbiting paths at each side of said warp inlay plane.
- 5. In knitting apparatus, the improvement defined in claim 4 wherein the respective orbiting paths of said loop handling elements each have spaced parallel reaches at which said paths intersect and the intersections of said paths in aligned relation with the plane of said warp inlay substantially coincide with said plane.
- 6. In knitting apparatus, the improvement defined in claim 4 wherein at least one of said loop handling elements has a guide needle form at the loop handling end portion thereof for receiving a knitting end to form a stitch chain from a knitting end supply at one side of said warp inlay.
- 7. In knitting apparatus, the improvement defined in claim 4 wherein said first loop handling element has a guide needle form at the loop handling end portion thereof and the loop handling end portion of the second loop handling element has a transfer finger form, said first loop handling element being operated to form a loop in a knitting end received thereat from a supply at one side of said warp inlay incident to extending the received knitting end between warp ends of said inlay and between filling ends laid thereat, said second loop handling element being operated to take the loop thus formed upon extension thereof between said warp and filling ends and return the same to the warp inlay side at which the knitting end is supplied while causing the loop to pass over a filling end at the opposite warp inlay side as it is returned to the knitting end supply side, and said first loop handling element being further operable to retake the returned loop and hold the same for casting off at a disposition passing over a filling end at the knitting end supply side of the warp inlay after a succeeding loop is extended through the held loop and the succeeding loop is taken by said second loop handling element at said opposite warp inlay side.
- 8. In knitting apparatus, the improvement defined in claim 4 wherein said first and second loop handling elements each have a guide needle form at the loop handling end portions thereof and are reciprocally operated to form loops in knitting ends respectively received thereat from supplies at opposite sides of said warp inlay incident to alternately extending the received knitting ends between warp ends of said inlay and between filling ends laid thereat, said loop handling elements being further operated to take each loop thus formed by the other element upon extension thereof between said warp and filling ends and cause the taken loop to pass over a filling end at the adjacent warp inlay side while extending a succeeding loop therethrough to the opposite warp inlay side, and said loop handling elements being additionally operated reciprocally to cast off the taken loops alternately after they have extended a succeeding loop therethrough and this succeeding loop has been taken by the other element.
CROSS-REFERENCES TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This is a division of parent application Ser. No. 423,484, filed Dec. 10, 1973, which contains claims to the knit fabric disclosed, and has now been issued as U.S. Pat. No. 3,884,054, on May 20, 1975.
US Referenced Citations (7)
Divisions (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
423484 |
Dec 1973 |
|