A. Field
The invention relates to a method for operating a loom, having a first drive motor which drives a first element, such as a batten, and at least a second drive motor which drives a second element, such as a shedding mechanism.
B. Related Art
In looms, the motions of the individual elements must be chronologically adapted to one another. To achieve this chronological adaptation when independent drive motors are used, it is known to detect the rotational angle position of a main shaft, which in particular drives a batten, and to synchronize the drive motor or drive motors of the other elements with these rotational angle positions. This synchronization presents problems, since the main shaft rotational speed changes. Before the beating-up of an inserted weft yarn, the rotational speed of the main shaft decreases. When the batten with the weaving reed reaches the rearward position, the rotational speed of the main shaft increases. If it is a goal to synchronize the drive motor of a shedding mechanism, for instance, with the main drive motor that drives the batten, then the drive motor of the shedding mechanism must likewise perform the nonuniform motion. As a result, the shedding mechanism drive motor, which is already subjected to a heavy load, and the shedding mechanism itself are both subjected to further loads, which are intrinsically not necessary.
To reduce the energy expenditure required for fully synchronous operation, it is known (European Patent Disclosure EP 0893535 A1) to embody the control and regulating device such that a switchover can be made between hard and soft regulation. In hard regulation, which is employed during the starting of the loom, the drive motor of the shedding mechanism follows the main drive motor with very precise synchronization. During normal weaving operation, a switchover to soft regulation is then made, in which mode the drive motor of the shedding mechanism is allowed to lead or trail the main drive motor with slight deviations from synchronized operation.
It is also known (European Patent Disclosure EP 0946801 B1) to control a selvedge tuck-in device of a loom independently of the main drive motor, in accordance with a program. In the process, monitoring is done as to whether desynchronization beyond an allowable value is occurring. If this desynchronization occurs, a correction is made in accordance with a correction program.
It is known to drive all the elements of a loom by means of one common main drive motor. To make it possible to search for a weft yarn if a weft yarn has broken, it is also known (European Patent Disclosure EP 0161012 B1) to provide an additional motor for the search for the weft yarn and for slow motion. In a search for the weft yarn the main drive motor is decoupled, so that by means of the additional motor, either only the shedding means, or the loom, can be moved at low speed.
It is also known (European Patent Disclosure EP 0726345 A1) to design the loom drive such that the same functions, that is, normal weaving operation, searching for a weft yarn, and the slow motion, can all be performed with only a single main drive motor.
It is also known (French Patent Disclosure FR 2660672 A1) to provide a drive motor for the shedding means, in particular a Jacquard mechanism, and a further drive motor for all the other elements of the loom. The two drive motors are connected to one another via an electronic comparator. The electronic comparator constantly compares the information from two pickups, namely one pickup that detects the rotation position of the main shaft of the loom and one pickup that detects the rotation position of the drive motor for the shedding means, and in this way assures that the two motors operate synchronously.
It is the object of the invention to operate a loom of the type defined at the outset such that if at all possible no unnecessary loads have to be overcome by the drive motors for elements.
This object is attained in that a rotational angle course for a virtual synchronization shaft of the loom is established; and that the elements driven by the drive motors are each synchronized, in at least one predetermined rotational angle position, with the virtual synchronization shaft.
The invention proceeds from the concept that the elements of a loom need not be synchronized exactly with one another during the entire weaving cycle, but instead, only in certain rotational angle positions must the individual elements be located in suitable positions. During the rest of the weaving cycle, conversely, they can assume positions that are largely independent of one another. The virtual synchronization shaft is the element in accordance with which not only the additional elements, such as shedding mechanisms or selvedge tuck-in devices, or takeup devices or the like, but also the batten are aligned. The individual elements, including the batten, are thus no longer synchronized with the main shaft but rather with the virtual synchronization shaft, with which the batten is also synchronized. The individual elements can therefore execute their motions such that the least possible loads are imposed on their drive motors and/or the elements themselves, without the course of motion over 360° being adapted to the other elements and in particular to the motion of the batten. The invention offers advantages, particularly upon starting of a loom. A drive motor that drives components of relatively great mass, such as the batten, can be started earlier than a drive motor for a shedding mechanism, for instance. The start times of the drive motors can be adapted such that they, or in other words the elements driven by them, assume whichever rotational angle position is desired at the correct time. For instance, the drive motor of a shedding mechanism can be started such that the warp yarns cross at an angle of 320° of the virtual synchronization shaft, while the drive motor of the batten is started such that the beating-up of a weft yarn occurs at 0° or 360° of the virtual synchronization shaft. Thus it is no longer the time when the drive motors start that is important but instead the fact that the elements driven by them are located in the correct position at the correct time.
In a loom having a first drive motor which drives a first element, such as a batten, and at least a second drive motor which drives a second element, such as a shedding mechanism, the invention is realized in that a control and regulating device is provided, which forms a rotational angle course for a virtual synchronization shaft of the loom and forwards this information to control and regulating units, each assigned to one of the drive motors, which synchronize each of the elements driven by the drive motors, in at least one predetermined rotational angle position, with respect to the virtual synchronization shaft.
In a feature of the invention, it is provided that for each of the shedding means, a separate drive motor is provided, which is independent of a main drive motor that drives the batten.
Since the drive motor of the shedding means is independent of the main drive motor, it can operate under optimized conditions.
In a simple embodiment, which requires virtually no changes to be made in a loom, the drive motor of the shedding means is mounted on a frame of the loom and is connected to the drive elements of the shedding means via a resilient coupling element. The resilient coupling element is appropriate at least in order not to transmit vibration from the shedding means to the other elements of the loom, and vice versa.
In accordance with another feature of the invention, the drive motor of the shedding means is secured to a housing that contains drive elements for the shedding means. Thus the drive motor of the shedding means is maximally separate from the other elements of the loom, so that on the one hand vibration is not mutually transmitted, while on the other hand no deflections of drive forces are necessary.
Further characteristics and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the ensuing description of the exemplary embodiments shown in the drawings and from the dependent claims.
A first drive motor 10, via a gear stage 11, drives a drive shaft 12 for a batten 13. A second drive motor 44, via a gear stage 45, drives a shedding mechanism 46, embodied for instance as a dobby, which is connected to heddle shafts, not shown, via rod assembly 47.
During one weaving cycle, the shaft 12, which is typically called the main shaft, executes a rotation of 360°. At 0° or 360°, the weaving reed located on the batten 13 beats up an inserted weft yarn. The heddle shafts driven, that is, raised and lowered, by the shedding mechanism 46 and the rod assembly 47, form a shed into which a weft yarn is inserted. After the weft insertion, the shed is changed, by raising and lowering other heddle shafts, after which the next weft yarn is inserted. The change of the shed is done for instance even before the inserted weft yarn has been finally beaten-up. In this process, the warp yarns of the heddle shafts that are moving upward cross with the warp yarns of the heddle shafts that are moving downward. This crossing takes place for instance at an angle of 320° of the shaft 12, or in other words 40° before the beating-up of the inserted weft yarn.
To synchronize the motions of the batten 13 and the shedding mechanism 46, a regulating and control device 48, on the basis of data input by means of an input unit 55, establishes a rotational angle course for a virtual synchronization shaft. The two drive motors 10 and 44 are each driven as a function of the rotational angle of this virtual synchronization shaft. For the drive motor 10 of the batten 13, a control and regulating unit 49 is provided, into which the data are input by means of an input unit 53 for operation as a function of the rotational angle course of the virtual synchronization shaft. A rotational position transducer 50 is connected to the control and regulating unit 49 and senses the position of the shaft 12 and thus the position of the batten 13. In another version, a rotational position transducer 57 is located on the shaft of the drive motor 10. The control and regulating unit 49, which is connected to the drive motor 10, regulates this drive motor 10 in accordance with desired values, which are derived from the rotational angle course of the virtual synchronization shaft, in such a way that the batten 13 is synchronized, for instance in one angular position (0° or 360°), with the virtual synchronization shaft, or in other words upon beating-up of a weft yarn. The control and regulating unit 49 can also specify a program, which in particular corresponds to International Patent Disclosure WO 9927426, for the drive motor 10. The control can then be done in accordance with a predetermined torque or torque course, or a predetermined speed or speed course.
The information about the rotational angle course of the virtual synchronization shaft is also forwarded to a control and regulating unit 51, which is assigned to the drive motor 44. As a function of the rotational angle course of the virtual synchronization shaft, the drive motor 44 is operated in such a way that at a predetermined rotational angle position, such as a rotational angle position of 320° of the virtual synchronization shaft, a defined position is also assumed by the rod assembly 47 of the shedding mechanism 46. An input unit 54, with which the data the operation as a function of the virtual synchronization shaft are input is connected to the control and regulating unit 51. To detect this position, the shedding mechanism 46 has assigned to it a rotational position transducer 52, which is connected to the control and regulating unit 51. It is indicated in the drawing that this rotational position transducer 52 detects the position of the rod assembly 47. However, instead, a rotational position transducer 56 may be located on the shaft 58 of the shedding mechanism 46, or a rotational position transducer 59 may be located on the shaft of the drive motor 44.
Since the drive motors 10 and 44 are completely separate from one another and are not synchronized with each other either, but instead are in relation to one another indirectly via the virtual synchronization shaft, they are can be designed such that they drive the respective associated elements with the least possible expenditure of force. It is also possible to trigger the drive motor 10 of the batten 13 such that during the beating-up of a weft yarn, it always moves the batten at the same speed, or at a speed input by the input unit 53, regardless of the speed of the other elements of the loom, or in other words independently of the weaving speed, which might also vary, with which successive weft yams are woven in. In this way, it can be assured that each weft yam is beaten up with the same or a predetermined different force.
The shedding mechanism for instance includes a heddle shaft machine or an other heddle shaft drive, such as a dobby or cam drive or crank drive or eccentric drive or the like. The shedding mechanism may also be a Jacquard mechanism. The shedding mechanism may furthermore be embodied such that each heddle shaft is assigned an individual drive motor, or groups of heddle shafts are each assigned one drive motor.
The control and regulating device 48 is assigned an input unit 55, by way of which the data that are needed to form the rotational angle course of the virtual synchronization shaft can be input. The control and regulating units 49, 51 of the drive motors 10, 44 are assigned input units 53, 54, by way of which data can be input that determine the angular position or positions of the virtual synchronization shaft with which the drive motors 10, 44 are each synchronized, or in other words the elements driven by them are synchronized.
The drive motors 10, 44 may each be operated with a rotational angle course of their own. The drive motors 10, 44 may be operated, by means of the respective assigned control and regulating unit 49, 51 in conjunction with signals from the rotational position transducers 50, 52, in the manner described for instance in WO 9927426. However, preferably the drive motors 10, 44 are operated, by means of their respective control and regulating units 49, 51, as a function of signals of the control and regulating unit 48 and in this way as a function of the rotational angle course of the virtual synchronization shaft.
Each of the elements, and each of the drive motors 10, 44 need not be synchronized absolutely precisely with a predetermined rotational angle position of the virtual synchronization shaft. It suffices if they are synchronized with these rotational angle positions of the virtual synchronization shaft with a relatively slight tolerance. Synchronization in general is sufficiently precise if the deviation from the rotational angle position of the virtual synchronization shaft is less than 5°. A tolerance value can be defined differently for each weft insertion.
It is understood that each element, for instance the batten, or shedding mechanisms can also be synchronized with a plurality of rotational angle positions of the virtual synchronization shaft. Synchronization for the batten can be synchronized upon beating-up, for instance at 360°, at the beginning of a weft yarn insertion, for instance at 80°, and at the end of a weft yarn insertion, for instance at 240°. In this synchronizing, provision can be made that the batten remains essentially in its rear position, between the rotational angle positions of 80° and 240°. The shedding mechanism can be synchronized for the rotational angle position of the crossing, for instance at 320°, and at the beginning of the weft insertion, for instance at 80°, and at the end of the weft insertion, for instance at 240°, or in other words during the time while the shed has to remain sufficiently widely open.
When the transmission ratio between the drive motor and the driven element is an integer, it is readily possible to synchronize the drive motor, but not the driven element, with rotational angle positions of the virtual synchronization shaft.
The rotational angle course formed for the virtual synchronization shaft can be based on a constant rpm. Preferably, it is provided that the rotational angle course is defined over a plurality of weft insertions and then repeats each time. The rotational angle course can be defined as a function of different types of weft yarns to be inserted in succession, as a function of successive warp yarn bindings, as a function of the number of warp yarns to be moved upward from below or downward from above, or as a function of other conditions. In particular, a suitable rotational angle course for the virtual synchronization shaft will be defined for the starting and stopping of the loom.
It can equally well be provided that the rotational angle positions of the virtual synchronization shaft, with which positions an element is synchronized, can be varied. For instance, if a rotational angle course of the virtual synchronization shaft is defined for a plurality of weft insertions, for instance for three weft insertions, then it can be provided that the shedding mechanism is synchronized for a crossing of the warp yarns at the first weft insertion at 320°, at the second weft insertion at 315°, and a third weft insertion at 310°. After that, the sequence is repeated.
The control or regulation according to the invention of drive motors as a function of the rotational angle course of a virtual synchronization shaft is utilized, as a further feature of the invention, for driving other elements as well, for instance for driving a cloth takeup motor, a motor of a selvedge tuck-in device or a selvedge forming device, or similar devices. Moreover, the invention can also be used to drive a so-called Jacquarette, that is, a small Jacquard mechanism, which controls only a small number of warp yarns, such as 100 warp yarns, while the other warp yarns are controlled by heddle shafts or a large Jacquard mechanism.
The loom drive shown in part in
In the exemplary embodiment of
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The concept of the present invention, namely to provide a drive motor for shedding means that is drivable independently of a main drive motor 10 of a loom, is realized in the embodiment of
Since there is no mechanical connection between the main drive motor 10 and the drive motor 15 for the drive elements of the shedding means, the various locations that are most favorably spaced can be selected, both for a Jacquard mechanism 37 and for shaft drives. Both the shaft drive and a Jacquard mechanism 17 may, together with the respective drive motor 15, form a prefabricated structural unit that is assigned to the applicable loom.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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103 18 818 | Apr 2003 | DE | national |
103 18 819 | Apr 2003 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2004/003703 | 4/7/2004 | WO | 00 | 10/17/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2004/092467 | 10/28/2004 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060207674 A1 | Sep 2006 | US |