The invention relates to monitoring of processes in which yarn is drawn from a bobbin.
Many types of textile machinery which process yarns, either to improve the yarn properties or to fashion them into fabrics, rely on previously wound bobbins of yarn suspended so that the yarns can be unwound ‘end over end’, often at high speed, into the active processing parts of the machine. An example is provided by known draw texturing machines, which are familiar to the skilled person.
The word “yarn” as used herein refers to any elongate flexible fibre able to be wound on a bobbin, regardless of its purpose or material. Yarns may be natural or synthetic, and may be for use in fabric or for other purposes.
The structure which supports the bobbins, and guides the yarns to the active elements of the processing machine, is known as a creel.
The bobbins 14 do not rotate as the yarn is drawn from them. The yarn is drawn along a direction which is roughly axial with respect to the bobbin, allowing the yarn to move freely off the bobbin 14. The yarn is of course wound circumferentially about the bobbin. As it unwinds, the point of disengagement of the yarn from the bobbin moves about it circumferentially. A free portion of the yarn, between the bobbin 14 and an eyelet guide through which the yarn is drawn, whirls about the bobbin and is thrown outward somewhat due to its own weight, so that the yarn forms a rotating envelope known as a balloon.
To facilitate continuous machine operation the yarn from a reserve bobbin is spliced onto the free end of each active bobbin so that the supply of yarn to the processing section of the machine is maintained when the active bobbin is exhausted. The empty tubes of the used bobbins are removed and reserve bobbins installed and spliced onto the active bobbin as required. Typically the yarn is withdrawn from the creel 10 at a constant speed of several hundred metres/min. Depending on the processing speed of the machine and the size of the supply bobbins it can take between several hours or several days for this transfer from active bobbin to reserve bobbin to take place. Traditionally the used bobbins are replaced by manually patrolling and identifying the creel locations where a transfer from the active bobbin to the reserve has taken place.
Manual recording of the transfer details per processing location is useful for production control and especially quality control, since many processing faults result from faults which are already present in the supplied bobbins due to upstream processing errors. In certain processes the transfer splice itself may be a significant fault requiring the processed yarn to be segregated and downgraded to second quality. Manual monitoring involves labour and consequent expense, which it would be desirable to avoid through automation of the required monitoring.
Creel monitoring systems have been devised which use a pair of motion sensors, one located at the active bobbin and one at the reserve bobbin, so that the transfer from active to reserve bobbin can be logged directly into the production and quality control system of the textile plant. This necessitates the motion sensors being mounted close to their respective bobbins (active & reserve) and cables carrying power and signal to the sensors along the often moveable framework of the creel. These systems often require manual threading of the sensor when the new reserve bobbin is spliced in and inevitably human error causes failure to thread the sensor properly or at all rendering these systems unreliable. Other systems have been used which rely on micro-switches in the yarn's path, but these rely on some component making contact with the yarn and that component is subject to rapid wear and consequent failure.
An improved method and apparatus is therefore needed for monitoring of withdrawal of yarn from the bobbin.
According to the present invention there is a method of monitoring drawing of yarn from a bobbin, in which
Reference to the yarn being drawn axially from the bobbin does not imply that the yarn's path is necessarily precisely axial, but simply that the yarn is drawn off the bobbin from one end, rather than being drawn along a radial direction in a manner that would involve rotation of the bobbin. Where reference is made to the period P, it must be understood that this implies a certain corresponding frequency f which is the reciprocal of the period, and that any estimate or calculation based upon or involving the period P thus also involves the corresponding frequency f. References to determination of the period P or to uses of the period P must be understood to include reference to use or determination of the corresponding frequency f.
Specific embodiments of the present invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
To facilitate replacement of the bobbins 24a, 24b, the bobbin support arrangements 22a, 22b are each rotatably mounted, enabling them to turn between an “in-use” position shown in solid lines in the drawing and a “loading” position shown in phantom, and each is provided with a respective handle 26 to assist an operator in moving them between the two positions. With the bobbin support arrangement in the loading position, the operative is able to remove the exhausted bobbin and replace it with a full one, also shown in phantom in the drawing.
In their in-use positions, the bobbin support arrangements 22a, 22b each support their respective bobbins 24a, 24b in such an orientation that the bobbins' axes are directed (at least approximately) toward a guide 28 through which the yarn is drawn, which takes the form of an eyelet in the present embodiment.
A free portion 30 of the yarn of the active bobbin 24a leads from the bobbin to the guide 28, and as described above it whirls about the bobbin 24a forming what is referred to as the balloon by those skilled in the art. The drawing shows the free portion 30 to be straight but in practice it bows outward somewhat to form a curve.
In accordance with the invention, the creel 20 incorporates a sensor module 32 which senses the balloon in order to monitor drawing of yarn from the bobbins 24a, 24b. In the present embodiment the sensor is optical. Specifically, it responds to light in the visible part of the spectrum. In other embodiments it could in principle respond to electromagnetic radiation in other frequency ranges, e.g. in the ultraviolet or infra-red parts of the spectrum.
In the illustrated embodiment the guide 28 through which the yarn passes to enter the creel's guide structure is incorporated in the sensor module 32, but in other embodiments these may be separately formed.
In the present embodiment the sensor is used in a reflective configuration. A light source (which in this embodiment is incorporated in the sensor module 32, although in other embodiments it may be separate from it) is arranged to emit light in a direction generally away from the sensor module 32 and to illuminate the balloon. Light reflected from the balloon is detectable by the sensor module 32 and is modulated by the revolving motion of the yarn about the bobbin 24a. In other embodiments the sensor arrangement may be of transmissive type, using a light source directed toward the sensor module 32 through the balloon, so that the balloon's shadow modulates the light received at the sensor module. A dedicated light source may prove unnecessary.
The sensor provides an output signal which varies periodically due to the modulation provided by the whirling yarn. The sensor signal may of course include some noise, but signal processing techniques familiar to the skilled person can be applied to obtain from the signal a value for the frequency (or equivalently the period) of signal variation, and hence of the frequency (period) of the movement of the free portion 30 of the yarn about the active bobbin 24a. In principle the signal processing could for example make use of numerical frequency analysis techniques such as a Fast Fourier Transform, but in practice the computational complexity of such approaches is found to be unnecessary and a simple technique, e.g. involving smoothing the signal and then determining the frequency at which it crosses a threshold value, are found to be adequate for the purpose. This may be referred to as a “zero-crossing” technique, although the signal in this instance does not necessarily fall to zero unless an offset is subtracted from it.
The monitoring arrangement thus provides an output which is a real time indication of the period of the movement of the yarn about the active bobbin 24a, which will be referred to below as the “period P”. It will be apparent to the skilled person that calculations and other determinations based on the period P could equally well be based on the corresponding frequency.
The period P can in embodiments of the invention used to determine (a) when transfer takes place from one bobbin to another and (b) the approximate quantity of yarn remaining on the bobbin and/or the approximate running time prior to exhaustion of the bobbin.
To appreciate how these determinations are made, note first of all that the free portion of the yarn 30 is drawn from the outermost layer of the body 34 of yarn wound on the bobbin 24a. The diameter of this body of yarn reduces as yarn is drawn from it. In
The period P is at a minimum immediately prior to transfer from one active bobbin 24a to the next, since at that point the diameter of the body 34 of yarn is at its smallest. Upon transfer to the next active bobbin, the period P abruptly changes to a maximum value as yarn begins to be drawn from the full bobbin. This change in the period P is detected and interpreted as an indication of when transfer takes place. Thus the output from the sensor module 32 is processed to provide a real time or almost real time indication of the moment of transfer.
In a practical system each pair of bobbin support arrangements 22a, 22b on a creel or on a number of creels is typically provided with a respective sensor module 32, outputs from all sensor modules 32 being digitised (e.g. through analogue to digital converters) and transmitted to a computer or computer network schematically represented at 36. The sensor data may be presented to a user through a graphical interface, providing the user with real time data on each bobbin pair. The data logged and presented by such a system may for example include a log of bobbins installed, of transfers between bobbins, and of approximate time to exhaustion of active bobbins. Such data helps to ensure that new bobbins are installed when needed to maintain production, without need of constant manual supervision, but also assists in tracking processing of specific batches of yarn from known sources, which may for example assist in tracing the source of any problems in production back to specific supplies of yarn.
The embodiment described above serves as an example of one possible manner of implementation of the invention, but is non-limiting and numerous variants, changes and modifications are possible without departing from the scope of the present invention according to the appended claims. The illustrated embodiment uses a single sensor module 32 having a single sensor arranged to monitor the balloon of both bobbins 24a, 24b, whichever is currently active, which is advantageous in terms of simplicity and economy, although the invention could be implemented using a respective sensor for each of the pair of bobbins 24a, 24b.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1720479 | Dec 2017 | GB | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4330094 | Mayer | May 1982 | A |
5201346 | Cox | Apr 1993 | A |
20010037545 | Stuttem | Nov 2001 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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0425118 | Feb 2003 | EP |
1283528 | Jul 1972 | GB |
Entry |
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Great Brittan search report issued in corresponding GB Application 1283528 dated Jun. 7, 2018. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20190177108 A1 | Jun 2019 | US |