The present invention generally relates to tufting carpets, and in particular to a method and system for tufting loop pile and cut pile tufts in a backing material to form patterned carpets.
In the field of tufting carpets, it has been known to tuft carpets having spaced rows of loop pile and cut pile tufts, including the formation of loop pile and cut pile tufts in the same longitudinal tuft rows of the carpets. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 3,919,953 discloses an apparatus and method for tufting spaced rows of loop pile and cut pile tufts formed in a backing material using a multi-needle tufting machine having two transverse rows of needles with each row cooperating with a series of loop pile loopers or cut pile hooks. Still further, U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,224,434 and 5,499,588 disclose methods and apparatus for producing cut pile and loop pile tufts in the same longitudinal rows of tufting and which further provide for the shifting of the needle bars carrying spaced rows of needles to provide enhanced pattern effects such as the formation of cut and loop pile tufts in the same tuft rows.
For higher or finer gauge tufting machines, i.e., 5/32- 1/16 gauge machines, however, as the spacing between the needles is narrowed for forming finer gauge carpets, problems exist whereby the cut pile hooks can engage the previously formed loop pile tufts, potentially resulting in the cutting or pulling of such tufts, creating defects in the carpet. Additionally, there are increasing demands for the capability of tufting machines to produce carpets with wider varieties of pattern designs and effects, including at finer gauges.
Accordingly, it can be seen that a need exists for a method and system of forming cut pile and loop pile tufts in a backing material to form patterned carpets that addresses the foregoing related and unrelated problems in the art.
Briefly, described, the present invention generally relates to a method and apparatus for forming or introducing loop pile and level cut loop pile tufts of yarns into a backing fabric passing through a tufting zone of a tufting machine to form tufted carpets at varying pile heights. The tufting machine generally will include first and second rows of transversely spaced needles that receive a series of yarns from a yarn source or yarn feed drive mechanism. The needles generally are spaced along needle bars at a prescribed gauge spacing, i.e., ½ inch- 1/16 inch, etc., and are reciprocated into and out of engagement with a backing material passing through a tufting zone of the tufting machine for introduction of tufts of yarn into the backing material to form tufted carpets. The yarns can be fed to the needles using a variety of yearn fed rolls or systems, including scroll, roll and single end yarn feed systems to provide varying pattern effects including pile height differentials. For example, the yarns can be fed to the needles from an Infinity Yarn Feed System as manufactured by Card-Monroe Corp. The needle bars also can be shifted laterally to provide further pattern effects.
A looper mechanism is mounted below the backing material and generally includes spaced, transversely extending rows of loop pile loopers and level cut loop pile hooks or loopers mounted along the upstream and downstream or loop pile and cut pile sides, respectively, of the tufting zone. Each of the loop pile loopers generally includes a shank portion attached to a looper support and a bill or forward portion extending forwardly from the shank portion toward an associated needle. The bill of each looper will engage or strike a take-off portion of its associated needle to engage and pickup a loop of yarn from the needle for forming loop pile tufts in the backing material. Similarly, the level cut loop pile hooks each include a shank or body portion and a throat portion that extends forwardly from the shank portion and terminates in a hooked or curved forward end, and a clip that is moved into engaging position by an actuator for forming loop pile tufts according to the pattern design being tufted. Each level cut loop pile hook will engage an associated needle at a pickup or takeoff portion thereof so as to pickup and form loops of yarns along the throat portion of the hook. Each level cut loop pile hook further generally will include a knife assembly associated therewith, which includes a knife or cutting blade that is moved in a reciprocal cutting motion so as to sever or cut selected ones of the loops of yarn collected along the throat of its associated level cut loop pile hook to form cut pile tufts in the backing material.
With the system of the present invention, the level cut loop pile hooks and loop pile loopers generally are staggered transversely from each other. As a result, the loop pile loopers can be aligned with a gap between each of the level cut loop pile hooks and each of the level cut loop pile hooks accordingly are aligned with the gaps defined between each of the loop pile loopers. As the needles penetrate the backing, the loop pile loopers and level cut loop pile hooks will be reciprocated into engagement with their associated needles, and in some applications, can be positioned so as to pass between each other such that the loop pile loopers will pass through the gaps between the level cut loop pile hooks to engage the second or rear, downstream row of needles, while the level cut loop pile hooks will reach through the gaps between the loop pile loopers and engage the first or upstream row of needles of the tufting machine to enable level cut loop pattern formation and functionality with or without a pile differential on the cut-loop side of the tufting machine.
Further, the knives can be of the same or of an opposite hand cutting to the takeoff or pickup needles of the first row of needles and can be positioned on the pickup side their associated level cut loop pile hooks, so as to be positioned along the same side of their level cut loop pile hooks as the needle being engaged by the level cut loop pile hooks. In such an arrangement, during operation of the tufting machine, the loop pile loopers and level cut loop pile hooks will tend to pass between each other and engage the opposite row of needles as the needles penetrate the backing material to form both loop pile and level cut loop pile tufts of yarns in the backing material, as the knives of each of the cut pile hooks are moved in a reciprocating cutting motion to engage and cut the loops collected along the throat portions of their associated level cut loop pile hooks to form the cut pile tufts as needed. Additionally, as the clips of the level cut loop pile hooks are actuated and moved to their engaged position, they will prevent the capture and retention of loops of yarn on the level cut loop pile hooks to enable formation of additional loop pile tufts in the backing material.
Various objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon a review of the following detailed description when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Referring now in greater detail to the drawings in which like numerals indicate like parts throughout the several views, the present invention generally relates to a method and system for forming tufting carpets having loop pile and cut pile tufts of yarns Y1 and Y2 formed therein for forming various sculpted or other patterned effects in the carpet. As illustrated in
The tufting machine generally will include two spaced rows of needles 17 and 18, although only one needle 17, 18 of each row is shown for clarity. The first or forwardmost row of needles 17 generally comprise cut pile needles for inserting level cut loop pile yarns Y1 in the backing 11, while the second or rear row of needles 18 comprise loop pile needles for inserting loop pile yarns Y2 into the backing material 11 as shown in
Mounted beneath the tufting zone 10 is a looper mechanism 30, as indicated in
As shown in
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
As additionally shown in
In similar fashion to the loop pile loopers 31, as the level cut loop hooks 33 are reciprocated in the direction of arrow 56, their hooked, forward ends 58 can pass through an associated gap 34 between adjacent loop pile loopers 31 as needed, and will engage the takeoff portions 19 of their associated cut pile needles 17 along the upstream or front side of the tufting zone 10, as the needles 17 are reciprocated to their lowered, engaging position, penetrating in the backing material. As the hooked front ends 58 of the level cut loop hooks 33 engage takeoff portions 19 of their associated needles 17 and pick up and pull the yarns away from the needles 17, the needles generally begin to move along their return stroke, as they are reciprocated upwardly, after which the level cut loop hooks 33 begin to be moved rearwardly in the direction of arrow 56′. As a result, a series of loops of yarn 72 will be formed along the throat portions 57 of the level cut loop pile hooks. These loops of yarn will extend about the clips 60 when the clips are in their extended positions and thus generally will be pulled free from the level cut loop pile hooks as they are reciprocated rearwardly in the direction of arrow 56′. When the clips are in their retracted positions, however, the loops of yarn 72 will be captured on the throats of the level cut loop hooks, as indicted in
As further illustrated in
Typically, in conventional tufting machines, the knife will be of the same “hand” cutting as the level cut loop pile hook, i.e., a right hand cutting blade for a right hand takeoff level cut loop pile hook, or a left hand cutting blade for a left hand takeoff level cut loop pile hook, and generally will be positioned on the opposite side of the takeoff or pickup region of the loop pile loopers. With the level cut loop pile hook assemblies 32 of the present invention, however, the knives 81 (
As the loop pile loopers and level cut loop pile hook assemblies 31 and 32 (
Additionally, the actuators 69 of the level cut loop pile assemblies 32 also can be engaged selectively as required by the pattern being formed to form additional loop pile tufts. As the selected actuators are engaged, they extend their cylinder rods so as to cause the clips 61 of selected ones of the level cut loop pile hook assemblies 32 to be moved to their extended positions. The loops of yarn are thus extended about the forward ends of the clips and are kept from being captured and retained by the hooked ends 58 of their associated level cut loop pile hooks 33. As the level cut loop pile hooks thereafter are reciprocated rearwardly in the direction of arrow 56′, the loops of yarns formed about the clips/level cut loop pile hooks of yarns are pulled off the level cut loop pile hooks to form additional loop pile tufts and thus are not engaged and cut by the knives 81.
The present invention thus enables the passing of the loop pile loopers and level cut loop pile hooks through the gaps defined therebetween with the incidents of previously sewn loops of yarn being engaged by the level cut loop pile hooks during the production of finer or smaller gauge (i.e., 5/32- 1/16 gauge) carpets being minimized, while allowing the formation of varying loop and level cut lop pile effects in the same backing fabric or carpet. The present invention further enables the stagger between the rows of needles to be reduced to as short as approximately ½ inch-approximately ¼ inch or less without the knives engaging the previously sewn loops or otherwise engaging and interfering with the operation of the loopers. As a result, given the reduction in the stagger, the problems of side matching, i.e., matching of the left and right seam of a carpet, are minimized since the stagger can be reduced, which correspondingly reduces the stretching and/or necking of the backing material as the backing material passes passing through the tufting zone. The use of varying yarn feeds also enables formation of variable pile height loop pile tufts together with level cut loop pile tufts in the same carpet or tufted article.
It will be further understood by those skilled in the art that while the present invention has been described above with reference to preferred embodiments, numerous variations, modifications, and additions can be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention as set forth in the following claims.
The present patent application is a continuation of previously filed, U.S. Non-Provisional patent application Ser. No. 11/755,366, filed May 30, 2007, which application was a formalization of previously filed Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/892,666, filed Mar. 2, 2007, by the inventor named in the present invention, the specifications and drawings of each of these applications being specifically incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11755366 | May 2007 | US |
Child | 12327841 | US |