This invention relates to a method and a machine for treating textile fabrics with an adjustable air flow.
In the finishing of textile fabrics, it is common practice to use continuous, open-width machines (tumblers) for treating the fabrics to obtain fibre swelling, and a soft pleasant hand for fabrics of all kinds.
These machines comprise a straight air tunnel and at least one flow diverter baffle movable between two limit positions to convey all the air in the tunnel in one direction or the other alternately.
That way, the fabric is transported at high speed towards one or the other of the tunnel openings and transferred alternately to one or the other of the two heaps at the two ends of the tunnel.
Impact grilles suitably positioned in front of the two openings of the transport tunnel bring the fabric to a stop while allowing the air to continue towards two hoods above the heaps.
Systems for slowly transferring the fabric, at production speed, feed the fabric into the first heap and withdraw an equal quantity of it from the second heap.
A machine of the above type is described in WO2006021978A1.
EP2535451A1 describes a continuous machine equipped with a baffle for diverting the air flow in the transport tunnel. The baffle has a third working position where the total horizontal component of the air flow in the tunnel is substantially zero, thus keeping the fabric substantially stationary.
The machine last mentioned, although it allows a lower frequency of fabric impact against the grilles to be obtained, does not allow the intensity of the impact to be reduced without also reducing flow rate and drying speed.
The aim of this invention is to provide a method and a machine for treating textile fabrics with air by means of a system of variable air flow distribution in the fabric transport tunnel.
More specifically, this invention has for an aim to provide a method and a machine where the air flow entering the entering the transport tunnel can be divided adjustably into a larger fraction in one direction and a smaller fraction in the other direction.
In particular, this invention has for an aim to provide a method and a tumbler machine for continuous open-width treatment of a fabric by means of a system of air distribution in the fabric transport tunnel, where the system can work in two distinct operating modes:
The above aims are achieved by a method and a machine according to the accompanying independent claims.
The solution proposed allows reducing the intensity of the impact of the fabric against the grilles while maintaining unchanged the total air flow acting on the fabric and without interrupting its alternating motion inside the tunnel.
This meets the strongly felt need to exert less mechanical action on the fabric, that is, to reduce its transport speed and impact force, without reducing the flow rate and hence the fabric drying speed.
These and other advantages, as well as the features of the machine, will be better understood from the following description with reference to the accompanying drawings provided by way of non-limiting example.
In the drawings:
This system 14—shown enlarged and in more detail in
As a result, the valves 16,18 can operate in two distinct modes.
In effect, each baffle 17 (19) can alternately adopt two limit positions 17′,17″ (19′,19″), illustrated in
In the first case, in each cycle, each of the two channels 16a,16b (18a,18b) is completely shut off, thereby causing all the air flowing into the tunnel to be diverted in one direction or the other. This is the traditional mode of operation of the state of the art which provides the maximum speed and force of fabric transport but not the maximum drying capacity, as will become clearer as this description continues.
In the second case (illustrated in more detail in
In this operating mode, the resultant force by which the fabric is transported by the air is obviously directed in the direction of the larger flow component, with an intensity equal to the difference between the forces exerted by the two components.
The mechanical transport and impact action on the fabric is therefore proportional to the difference between the above described flow components.
Conversely, in this operating mode, the drying action on the fabric is at its maximum and is proportional to the sum of the air flows in both directions.
Advantageously, in this operating mode, the ratio F2/F1 (F2′/F1′) of the smaller flow component to the larger flow component is between 0.2 and 0.8, that is, between 20% and 80%.
In a preferred embodiment, the total air flow entering from above the fabric is different from the total air flow entering from below the fabric. Further, the top flow also differs from the bottom flow in that the oppositely directed flows are divided by a different percentage.
A continuous open-width tumbler may usefully be constructed in such a way as to allow it to work simultaneously in both of the operating modes described, at the user's discretion, so that it can be used for treating different fabrics and/or for different process needs.
The diverting valves must in this case be able to adopt four different configurations:
To achieve these four configurations, each valve is advantageously driven by a pneumatic, four-position actuator, for example a pneumatic cylinder 20 with three different chambers in series, of a type readily available on the market (see
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, illustrated in
By suitably supplying the four chambers of the pair of cylinders, the cylinders can be set to four different stroke values, two of which are the end limit values and two are intermediate values. The latter vary according to the values assigned to the reduced pressure “R”.
In other words, the operator can choose whether to make the cylinder pistons travel the total forward-return stroke “CT”, illustrated by the configurations (a) and (b) of
To better understand the operation of the pneumatic actuator, the letter “S” denotes exhausting and the letter “X” shutoff of the ports indicated.
As schematically illustrated by the configurations (c) and (d) of
It is evident that with two actuators operating in the manner described above, the movements of the baffles 17,19 can be adjusted independently of each other, which in turn means that it is possible to regulate the air flow intensity above and below the fabric as needed and independently of each other.
The possibility of regulating the air flow in one direction in a variable ratio to the simultaneous air flow in the other direction means that the fabric can be transported through the air process tunnel at speeds which can be adjusted between the maximum value and lower, more limited values.
That means the fabric drying speed—which is approximately proportional to the total quantity of hot air entering the process tunnel—can be made independent of the frequency and intensity of fabric impacts on the grilles, on which the intensity of the fabric softening and swelling treatment depend directly.
The latter possibility can lead to important technological applications in continuous tumbler machines that are very widely used for processing a large variety of fabrics, each having different requirements, often very different from each other.
Finally, when the alternating movement of the fabric in the tunnel is not accomplished at the same speed, or in the same times, when it is transferred in either direction, it is possible to act in order to vary these times up to make them equal or even different at will.
This is advantageously obtained by differentiating appropriately between them the values of the reduced pressure “R” when the tissue goes in one direction than when it goes in the opposite direction, either with manual settings or with automatic control systems.
In this case, in practice, the movement of the deflector (17 or 19) of the valve will no longer be symmetrical with respect to the centreline of the valve itself, but conveniently asymmetric.
This possibility can be very useful, for example, to remedy particular behaviours of the fabric and/or to compensate any geometrical dissymmetry of the tunnel.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PO2014A000001 | Mar 2014 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2015/051626 | 3/5/2015 | WO | 00 |