The present invention relates to a positive yarn feeder for textile machines and the like, particularly of the type provided with a voltage-controlled or current-controlled motor.
The positive yarn feeders usually draw the yarn from a spool and feed the yarn at a regulated speed and tension to a machine arranged downstream, such as a loom, a knitting machine, a spooler, and the like.
The feeder comprises a motor which drives a yarn-feeding reel on which a number of yarn loops are wound. The motor is driven by an electronic power supply unit consisting of a bridge of electronic switches controlled by a control unit which processes various signals from external sensors, such as yarn tension signals, voltage signals and/or current signals deriving from the driving of the motor, feedback signals from speed sensors and/or position sensors associated to the motor, etc. On the basis of such signals, the control unit cyclically closes the switches of the electronic power supply unit in order to control the motor speed and, consequently, the yarn speed, which is proportional to the motor speed. The above control units are substantially capable of operating in real time by means of circuits which implement voltage/current, nested control loops, which may be speed-controlled loops or position-controlled loops;
The positive yarn feeders of the prior art utilize stepping motors or, preferably, brushless motors, which are more suited to applications in which high speeds and high accelerations are required, such as the present application. In particular, the brushless motors currently in use for weft feeders comprise a hollow, cylindrical stator provided with field windings that are received in a fine groove pattern cut in the inner surface of the stator.
However, as well known to the persons skilled in the art, very expensive and accurate machinings are required to carry out the above arrangement of grooves and windings, mainly in consideration of the small size of the motors used for yarn feeders, which are about 45 to 50 mm in diameter. Moreover, this arrangement makes it difficult to install position sensors within the stator, as required to subject the motor to a speed/position feedback control.
Furthermore, the use of brushless motors of the above type in positive yarn feeders causes the driving torque to be affected by so-called “ripple” phenomena. Such phenomena limit the passband of the control system, thereby affecting the accuracy of the yarn-feeding process with consequent flaws in the evenness of the fabric or mesh. These problems have become more and more serious with increasing speeds of the yarn-processing machines, about 1000 m of yarn per minute at the present date.
It is a main object of the present invention to provide a positive yarn feeder for textile machines and the like, in which the control of the yarn-feeding process is more regular and more accurate than in the known feeders.
It is another object of the invention to provide a positive yarn feeder in which the torque ripple, in the motor that drives the yarn-feeding reel, is considerably reduced, or even deleted, with respect to the known feeders provided with brushless motors.
It is a further object of the invention to improve the above yarn feeder to have low manufacturing costs and a small overall size.
The above object and other aims and advantages, which will better appear below, are achieved by a positive yarn feeder having the features recited in claim 1, while other advantageous features are stated in the other claims.
A few preferred embodiments of the invention will be now described with reference to the attached drawings, wherein:
With reference to
Motor M is a permanent-magnet, synchronous brushless motor driven by an electronic power supply unit via a three-phase switching bridge SP provided with electronic switches. A control unit UC receives a yarn tension signal T from sensor ST, voltage signals V and current signals I deriving from the driving of the motor, feedback signals FB from position sensors associated to the motor, which will be better described below, as well as general external signals S, and generates a sequence of commands C which drive bridge SP to feed the yarn with a desired speed and tension.
Having now reference to
According to a second preferred embodiment of the invention, shown in
With both the above arrangements, the magnetic member, i.e., the cylinder or the disc, may have four or five pairs of pole shoes (five in the figures), or a number of pairs that is a multiple of four or five, depending on design requirements concerning the speed control or position control of the motor, as well known to the persons skilled in the art.
The diagram of
In a third embodiment of the invention, shown in
With a motor according to the invention, the excitation coils do not need to be wound directly on the pole shoes of the stator, as required with the traditional motors. On the contrary, the coils can be wound separately and then installed within the stator, with an enhanced ease of installation.
Moreover, the stator excitation coils are only three, in case of three-phase motors, or four, in case of biphase motors, with consequent possibility of manufacturing small-sized motors at low cost.
Furthermore, since the above motors have a high merit coefficient, with a high efficiency in converting the electric power into driving torque, the driving torque is increased with respect to the traditional motors, for equal size.
A further advantage of the invention is that the driving torque supplied by the motor is affected by a low value of harmonic distortion and residual torque and, when subjected to a sinusoidal driving, by a very low level of torque ripple, with consequent enhanced performance of the whole system.
Furthermore, since the Hall sensors are arranged in the angular gaps between the coils, they do not require any additional housing to be installed, with further opportunity of manufacturing small-sized motors at low cost.
A preferred embodiment of the invention has been described herein, but of course many changes may be made within the scope of the appended claims.
The disclosures in Italian Patent Application No. TO2005A000225 from which this application claims priority are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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TO2005A000225 | Apr 2005 | IT | national |