Claims
- 1. A method of connecting packages of yarn to each other in a textile creel associated with a textile machine so that when one package of yarn is exhausted, another package of yarn can be used without stopping the textile machine, said method comprising providing alongside the creel hand carried manually actuatable air nozzle connected to a pressurized air hose and having a yarn air splicer mounted on and communicating with the air nozzle, the air splicer having a housing with an open ended passageway therethrough surrounded by an air chamber in the walls of the housing communicating with the passageway through a series of circularly arranged openings, air splicing the tail end of the running package of yarn to the leading end of a reserve package of yarn by simultaneously placing with one hand the tail and leading ends of the yarns extending from the packages of yarn into the passageway extending through the air splicer with the ends of the yarns being beside each other and facing in a common direction, and while with the other hand holding and manually actuating the air nozzle to direct pressurized air into the air splicer and through the series of circularly arranged openings therein and into the passageway extending therethrough for subjecting the ends of the yarns therein to air turbulences to effect an entanglement of the fiber components of the ends of the yarns with each other and to impart twist to the entangled ends of the yarns so as to form a twisted commingled projection of entangled fiber components extending laterally from the joined yarns.
- 2. A method according to claim 1 wherein the textile yarns being spliced are spun yarns and the fiber components being entangled are staple fibers.
- 3. A method according to claim 1 wherein the textile yarns being spliced are multifilament yarns and the fiber components being entangled are filaments.
- 4. A method according to claim 1 wherein the textile yarns being spliced are multifilament textured yarns and the fiber components being entangled are filaments.
- 5. A textile creel comprising a plurality of creel units spaced apart from each other and defining aisles therebetween, each creel unit having tiers of yarn packages thereon with the yarn packages arranged in cooperating pairs from which the yarn of one package of each pair is adapted to be directed to a textile machine, a source of pressurized air medially located in each aisle, a hose in each aisle having one end connected to a respective source of said pressurized air, a hand held valve having an inlet end and an outlet end, said inlet end being connected to the other end of each respective hose, an air operable yarn splicer connected to said outlet end of said valve, said yarn splicer comprising a housing having an open ended passageway therethrough, said passageway having an inlet and an exit end, the inlet end serving to receive ends of yarn to be spliced with the ends of yarn being positioned beside each other and facing in a common direction in the inlet end, the exit end serving for exhaust of the compressed air, said housing having inner and outer walls defining an air chamber therebetween, an opening in said outer wall connected to said outlet end of said valve, and a series of openings for compressed air extending through said inner wall and communicating with said air chamber and said passageway for effecting air entanglement of the ends of yarn positioned in the passageway.
- 6. Apparatus according to claim 5 including a tufting machine to which the yarns from said textile creel are directed, a creel yarn guide tube extending from each of said pairs of yarn packages to said tufting machine and in which the running yarn from each pair of yarn packages is guided from the creel to said tufting machine, a second hose positioned in each aisle and having on end connected to said source of pressurized air in the aisle, and a hand held valve having an air outlet nozzle connected to the other end of said second hose and serving for being used by the creel attendant for pneumatically conveying the yarns from the packages in the creel through the yarn guide tubes to the tufting machine in the event of yarn breakage as well as in the initial start up of the tufting machine.
Parent Case Info
This application is a division of copending application Ser. No. 089,753 filed Aug. 26, 1987 now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (26)
Foreign Referenced Citations (3)
Number |
Date |
Country |
145075 |
Nov 1981 |
JPX |
956992 |
Apr 1964 |
GBX |
2074199 |
Oct 1981 |
GBX |
Divisions (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
89753 |
Aug 1987 |
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