The invention relates to a loom according to the preamble of claim 1.
A loom of the type initially mentioned is known from WO 99/13145. The loom contains a warp thread tensioning device and a shedding device which has warp threads pretensioned into a first shedding position. A lifting device capable of being driven in oscillation is equipped with drivers for the warp threads, there being control means actuable by means of actuators, in order to bring the warp threads selectively into engagement with the drivers which move the warp threads into a second shedding position. There is the disadvantage that, in this loom, the lifting device equipped with the drivers has to move along the entire travel of the warp threads from the first shedding position as far as the second shedding position. The lifting device therefore has to execute a relatively long travel, which, on the one hand, is time-consuming and, on the other hand, requires higher drive forces. In order to avoid this, in WO 99/13145 there is a further exemplary embodiment, in which the warp threads assume a middle shedding position and there are two lifting devices which each have drivers in order to move the warp threads either into the top shedding position or into the bottom shedding position. This requires double the number of drivers, with the result that such a design variant is highly complicated and consequently cost-intensive.
The object of the invention is to improve a loom of the type initially mentioned.
The set object is achieved by means of the characterizing features of claim 1. Since the loom has a second lifting device which is common to all the warp threads and which moves the warp threads out of the first shedding position into a switching position effective for the first lifting device, this results, for all the warp threads, in a very simple second lifting device which, moreover, appreciably reduces the switching travel for the first lifting device, so that the first lifting device has to move a warp thread only out of the switching position into the second shedding position. Both lifting devices have to execute only a limited travel for which they require less time. Moreover, since the lifting devices can be active simultaneously, an appreciable increase in the performance of the loom is obtained. In addition, owing to this design, the useful life is also improved owing to the lower susceptibility to wear. The loom also results in lower noise emission.
Advantageous refinements of the loom are described in claims 2 to 22.
According to claim 2, the second lifting device may be a lifting beam extending over all the warp threads. The lifting travel of the second lifting device may vary greatly, and it is advantageous if, according to claim 3, the latter executes at least half the lifting travel of the warp threads in the shed.
For the design of the first lifting device, there are various design variants which are already contained in WO 99/13145. An embodiment as claimed in claim 4 is particularly advantageous, according to which the first lifting device has for each warp thread a control drop wire with a driver slot and an assigned driver, preferably of hook-shaped design, for the associated warp thread. The warp thread can be brought selectively into engagement with the driver by means of a control drop wire switchable by means of the actuator. According to claim 5, the driver slot is assigned to the displacement path of the driver and, in the switching region, is guided, via a control slot running obliquely with respect to the direction of displacement of the driver, out of the displacement path of the driver into a widened guide slot of the control drop wire. To facilitate the introduction of the warp thread into the control slot, according to claim 6, the guide slot is provided with a run-on side.
In principle, the control drop wire may be configured as a sheet steel strip. The design as claimed in claim 7 is advantageous, however, according to which the control drop wire is formed in the shape of a sleeve with two side walls, between which the driver is mounted displaceably. A reliable guidance of the warp thread from and to the driver is thereby achieved. To protect the warp thread, on the one hand, and to facilitate the run of the warp thread through the control drop wire, on the other hand, according to claim 8 at least the guide slot and the control slot are offset relative to one another in the two side walls of the control drop wire in the direction of run of the warp thread, in such a way that a deflection of the running warp thread in the control drop wire is lower than 90°, preferably 10°.
There are various possibilities for driving the drivers, there being preference, according to claim 9, for all the drivers of a row to be movable up and down by means of a common lifting knife. This affords a particularly simple and cost-effective solution.
Since the warp threads are moved in each case out of a first shedding position into the second shedding position, their displacement travel is such that the elasticity of the warp thread is not sufficient, as a rule, to ensure satisfactory functioning. It is therefore advantageous if, according to claim 10, the warp thread tensioning device has an individual thread tensioner for each warp thread on the run-in side of the warp threads to the shedding device. The tension of the individual warp thread can thereby be adapted more closely to the respective position of the warp thread in the shed. The loom may have the conventional additional catch thread devices. It is more advantageous, however, if, according to claim 11, the thread tensioner is at the same time also designed as a catch thread device.
According to claim 12, each warp thread is guided via two guide elements which are arranged at a distance from one another and between which is arranged the thread tensioner which engages on the warp thread and exerts a pretension on the warp thread. According to claim 13, the pretension may be generated by a tensioning weight. The design as claimed in claim 14 is more advantageous, according to which the pretension is generated by a tensioning spring. This also makes it possible, in particular, to arrange the thread tensioner in a position deviating from the vertical.
The thread tensioner may be provided with a closed eye. The design as claimed in claim 15 is more advantageous, however, according to which each thread tensioner has a lateral run-in eye for the warp thread. According to claim 16, each thread tensioner is provided with a guide orifice, by means of which it is mounted on a holder displaceably in the tensioning direction. Expediently, the thread tensioner is provided, in the direction opposite to the pretensioning direction, with a grip part which preferably has a signal part projecting out of the direction of displacement. Such a signal part may be, for example, a projecting head part of the thread tensioner. As a result, a thread tensioner on which a thread fault has occurred can be detected more easily, since it emerges from the plane of the thread tensioners which are operating satisfactorily.
It is particularly expedient if, according to claim 17, the thread tensioner is arranged on a holder which has a middle contact part which projects on one side and which, insulated, is embedded into lateral contact parts cooperating with the sides of the guide orifice of the thread tensioner. In the event of a faulty warp thread tension, the contact parts come into touch with an end face of the guide orifice, this touch bridging the contacts and thus triggering a fault signal.
The thread tensioner can be used in the most diverse possible looms. It is preferably used, however, in a loom according to claim 18, in which the warp thread tensioning device has a control device which is connected to the drive of a cloth take-up in such a way as to control the warp beam such that the warp threads as a whole are under a predeterminable tension force. The retaining force may be generated by means of a braking device at the warp let-off. An embodiment as claimed in claim 19 is more advantageous, however, according to which, to generate the retaining force, the warp beam is provided with specific drive which contains a selflocking gear. The warp thread tensioning device can be further improved by means of the design as claimed in claim 20, according to which it has a back bearer for the warp threads which is pretensioned by means of a tensioning spring device. The tensioning spring device is connected to the control device, so that the drives of the warp beam and of the cloth take-up can be controlled in such a way that the predeterminable tension force is maintained at the back bearer. Various variants may be envisaged for the design of the tensioning spring device. The embodiment as claimed in claim 21 is particularly advantageous, according to which the tensioning spring device has a leaf spring with a flexion converter which delivers corresponding control signals to the control device. In addition, according to claim 22, the warp thread tensioning device may be designed with a safety device which is operatively connected to the back bearer and which contains an emergency switch which responds when the force of the warp threads which occurs in the back bearer is greater than the set tension force by a determinable safety amount.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention are described in more detail below with reference to the drawings in which:
The loom is provided with a thread tensioning device which primarily contains the cloth take-up 24, the drive 28 of which is controlled by means of the control device 26 such that a predeterminable tension force common to all the warp threads 4 is given as a function of the retaining force of the warp let-off 2. The retaining force of the warp let-off may be generated by means of a braking device 29 or a specific drive, in which a motor is connected to the warp let-off via a selflocking gear. The warp thread tensioning device additionally contains, for each warp thread 4, an individual warp thread tensioner 8 which is arranged between two guide elements 30 and, in the example shown, individually pretensions, by means of a pretensioning spring 32, the warp thread 4 which runs through an eye 34.
In the shedding device 12, the warp threads 4 are pretensioned into a first shedding position F1 between a deflecting roller 36 and a cloth holder 22 which may also be designed as an expander. A first lifting device 38 serves for the individual control of the warp threads 4, said lifting device having drivers 40 which can be moved out of a switching position F2 into the second shedding position F3 by means of a lifting beam 42. With the aid of control means 46 controllable by actuators 44, the warp threads 4 can be brought selectively into engagement with the drivers 40 when the warp threads have been moved out of the first shedding position F1 into the switching position F2 by means of a common second lifting device 48, as is evident in detail in FIGS. 1 to 8. The control means 46 contain control drop wires 50 which are pretensioned by means of a pretensioning spring 52 against a lifting beam 54 on which they stand via a stop 56. The actuators 44 contain hook parts 58 which cooperate with hook parts 60 on the control drop wires 50 and, in the activated state, hold the control drop wire 50 in the lifted position. A nonactivated actuator 44 enables the displacement travel of the control drop wire 50. In
As may be gathered from
The functioning of the shedding device is illustrated in more detail with reference to
As soon as the actuator 44 releases the control drop wire 50 and the latter is lowered by the amount of the switching quantity S, during the upward movement of the driver 40 the warp thread passes via the control slot 64 into the widened guide slot 66 and consequently outside the displacement travel of the driver 40. Then, as may be gathered from
The warp beam 6a is fastened to a rocker 88 which is supported via a supporting device 90 on a leaf spring 92 provided with a flexion converter 94 which transfers its data to the control device 26a. The supporting device 90 comprises a safety device 96 containing a screw bolt 98, the head 100 of which is arranged displaceably in a holding bell 102. The holding bell 102 is connected to the rocker 88. The head 100 is supported on a stop 104 of the holding bell. A pretensioning spring 106 arranged outside the holding bell 102 is supported, on the one hand, on the screw bolt 98 via a setscrew 108 and on the holding bell 102 via a washer 110 on the other hand so that the head 100 bears with a corresponding pretensioning force against the stop 104 of the holding bell 102. The screw bolt 98 is connected, further, to the leaf spring 92. If, then, a tension force higher than the tension force set as permissible on the leaf spring 92 occurs at the back bearer 6a, the pretensioning spring 106 is compressed and the holding bell 102 is displaced on the screw bolt 98, with the result that a switch 112 connected to the holding bell 102 is closed and transmits a fault signal to the control device 26a.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1027/03 | Jun 2003 | CH | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/CH04/00337 | 6/3/2004 | WO | 12/8/2005 |