Claims
- 1. A tufting machine having a frame through which a backing material is fed along a longitudinal path, a reciprocatable front needle bar disposed on one side of said backing material, transversely spaced front needles carried by said front needle bar for inserting first yarns carried by said front needles through said backing material for producing successive tufts of first yarns in said backing material upon reciprocation of said front needle bar, a reciprocatable rear needle bar disposed on said one side of said backing material, transversely spaced rear needles carried by said rear needle bar for inserting second yarns carried by said rear needles through said backing material for producing successive tufts of second yarns in said backing material upon reciprocating of said rear needle bar, means for reciprocating said front needle bar and said rear needle bar, a plurality of front loopers on the other side of said backing material for cooperating with said front needles, a plurality of rear loopers on the other side of said backing material for cooperating with said rear needles and control means for controlling the lateral shifting of said front needle bar and said rear needle bar, the improvement comprising said front loopers respectively being in longitudinal alignment, in the direction of feed, with said rear loopers, said front needles being of uniform gauge spacing and being provided with yarns in spaced groups such that the front needles sew yarns to produce selected longitudinal rows of tufts of first yarns, and said control means having means for shifting said front needle bar in gauge increments to sew yarns in other selected longitudinal rows and means for shifting said rear needle bar in increments so as to fill in tufts of said second yarns intermixing them with tufts of said first yarns in respective individual longitudinal rows for producing adjacent single parallel longitudinal rows of successive tufts in said backing material, each row containing tufts of first yarns and second yarns intermixed with each other.
- 2. The tufting machine defined in claim 1 wherein said front needles are fewer in number than said front loopers and said rear needles are fewer in number than said rear loopers.
- 3. The tufting machine defined in claim 1 wherein said rear loopers are cut pile loopers and said front loopers are loop pile loopers.
- 4. A tufting machine having a frame through which a backing material is fed along a longitudinal path, a reciprocatable front needle bar disposed on one side of said backing material, transversely spaced front needles carried by said front needle bar for inserting first yarns carried by said front needles through said backing material for producing successive tufts of first yarns in said backing material upon reciprocation of said front needle bar, a reciprocatable rear needle bar disposed on said one side of said backing material, transversely spaced rear needles carried by said rear needle bar for inserting second yarns carried by said rear needles through said backing material for producing successive tufts of second yarns in said backing material upon reciprocation of said rear needle bar, means for reciprocating said front needle bar and said rear needle bar, a plurality of front loopers for cooperating with said front needles, a plurality of rear loopers for cooperating with said rear needles and control means for controlling the lateral shifting of said front needle bar and said rear needle bar, the improvement comprising said front loopers respectively being in longitudinal alignment, in the direction of feed with said rear loopers, said front needles being provided with yarns in spaced groups such that the front needles sew yarns to produce selected longitudinal rows of tufts of first yarns, and said control means controlling the lateral shifting of said front needle bar in gauge increments to sew yarns in other selected longitudinal rows and laterally shifting said rear needle bar in increments so as to fill in tufts of said second yarns intermixed with tufts of said first yarns in respective individual longitudinal rows whereby a single longitudinal row of tufts in said backing material contains successive tufts of first yarns and second yarns sewn by the needles of the front row of needles and tufts sewn by needles of the back row of needles, said front needles being fewer in number than said front loopers and said rear needles being fewer in number than said rear loopers, said front needles being spaced apart by a distance equal to the spacing of said front loopers and a multiple of said spacing.
- 5. A tufting machine having a frame through which a backing material is fed along a longitudinal path, a reciprocatable front needle bar disposed on one side of said backing material, transversely spaced front needles carried by said front needle bar for inserting first yarns carried by said front needles through said backing material for producing successive tufts of first yarns in said backing material upon reciprocation of said front needle bar, a reciprocatable rear needle bar disposed on said one side of said backing material, transversely spaced rear needles carried by said rear needle bar for inserting second yarns carried by said rear needles through said backing material for producing successive tufts of second yarns in said backing material upon reciprocation of said rear needle bar, means for reciprocating said front needle bar and said rear needle bar, a plurality of front loopers for cooperating with said front needles, a plurality of rear loopers for cooperating with said rear needles and control means for controlling the lateral shifting of said front needle bar and said rear needle bar, the improvement comprising said front loopers respectively being in longitudinal alignment, in the direction of feed, with said rear loopers, said front needles being provided with yarns in spaced groups such that the front needles sew yarns to produce selected longitudinal rows of tufts of first yarns, and said control means controlling the lateral shifting of said front needle bar in gauge increments to sew yarns in other selected longitudinal rows and laterally shifting said rear needle bar in increments so as to fill in tufts of said second yarns intermixed with tufts of said first yarns in respective individual longitudinal rows whereby a single longitudinal row of tufts in said backing material contains successive tufts of first yarns and second yarns sewn by the needles of the front row of needles and tufts sewn by needles of said back row of needles, said front needles being fewer in number than said front loopers and said rear needles being fewer in number than said rear loopers, said rear needles being spaced apart by a distance equal to the spacing of said rear loopers and a multiple of said spacing.
- 6. A tufting machine having a frame through which a backing material is fed along a longitudinal path, a reciprocatable front needle bar disposed on one side of said backing material, transversely spaced front needles carried by said front needle bar for inserting first yarns carried by said front needles through said backing material for producing successive tufts of first yarns in said backing material upon reciprocation of said front needle bar, a reciprocatable rear needle bar disposed on said one side of said backing material, transversely spaced rear needles carried by said rear needle bar for inserting second yarns carried by said rear needles through said backing material for producing successive tufts of second yarns in said backing material upon reciprocation of said front needle bar, means for reciprocating said front needle bar and said rear needle bar, a plurality of front loopers for cooperating with said front needles, a plurality of rear loopers for cooperating with said rear needles and control means for controlling the lateral shifting of said front needle bar and said rear needle bar, the improvement comprising said rear loopers respectively being in longitudinal alignment, in the direction of feed, with said rear loopers, said front needles being provided with yarns in spaced groups such that the front needles sew yarns to produce selected longitudinal rows of tufts of first yarns, and said control means controlling the lateral shifting of said front needle bar in gauge increments to sew yarns in other selected longitudinal rows and laterally shifting said rear needle bar in increments so as to fill in tufts of said second yarns intermixed with tufts of said first yarns in respective individual longitudinal rows whereby a single longitudinal row of tufts in said backing material contains successive tufts of first yarns and second yarns sewn by the needles of the front row of needles and tufts sewn by needles of the rear row of needles, said needles of said front needle bar being arranged in spaced groups of adjacent needles and said needles of said rear needle bar being arranged in spaced groups of adjacent needles, the adjacent needles of each group of needles all being of a prescribed gauge, all loopers of said front loopers and all loopers of said rear loopers being spaced from adjacent loopers by said prescribed gauge whereby said control means controls the shifting of said front needle bar and said rear needle bar so as to provide evenly spaced successive tufts in each longitudinal row of tufts.
- 7. Method of tufting for producing tufts from different yarns in parallel longitudinal rows in a backing material comprising the steps of:
- (a) feeding a backing material progressively along a longitudinal path of travel;
- (b) disposing, in the direction of feed, longitudinally aligned transversely spaced pairs of loopers on one side of said backing material for forming a transverse row of rear loopers of a prescribed gauge with respect to each other and forming a transverse row of front loopers of the same prescribed gauge as the gauge of the front loopers;
- (c) disposing a plurality of front needles in a transverse row of front needles adjacent to the other side of said backing material, said front needles being threaded with yarns so as to insert yarns carried thereby through said backing material to be caught by said front loopers;
- (d) disposing a plurality of rear needles in a transverse row of rear needles adjacent to said other side of said backing material, said rear needles being threaded with yarns so as to insert yarns carried by said rear needles through said backing material to be caught by said rear loopers; and
- (e) laterally shifting said front row of needles and said back row of needles with respect to each other according to a prescribed pattern so as to sew transversely equally spaced, longitudinal rows of yarns in said backing material while reciprocating said front and rear needles so that the tufts sewn by said front needles and the tufts sewn by said rear needles are aligned in longitudinal rows and interspersed with each other in these respective longitudinal rows.
- 8. The method defined in claim 7 wherein the tufts sewn by the front row of needles, and the rear row of needles are essentially equally spaced from each other in said respective longitudinal rows.
Parent Case Info
This is a continuation of copending application Ser. No. 07/653,766 filed on Feb. 11, 1991, now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (7)
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
61-052894 |
Mar 1986 |
JPX |
Continuations (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
653766 |
Feb 1991 |
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