The present invention relates to a saw-tooth clothing for rollers of openers, cleaners, carders or carding machines.
Saw-tooth clothings are used in different areas of processing textile fibers. In most cases, the saw-tooth clothings are mounted in the form of wires onto rollers. In a typical fiber-preparing process, the fibers are treated on so-called carders or carding machines as a preparation for the production of yarn or nonwoven fabrics. The fibers are fed via a feeding device to a drum. Said drum is a roller which is provided with a hook- or saw-tooth clothing on its surface shell. The drum clothing together with the carding elements distributed over the circumference effects an alignment and a cleaning of the fed fibers. Depending on the product and the application, different elements arranged around the drum are used. The elements are configured as flats, cleaning elements or rollers and can also be provided with a saw-tooth clothing. Subsequent to this treatment, the fibers are taken over by a doffer roller and removed from the drum clothing. In doing so, the clothing of the doffer roller engages in the fibers held by the clothing of the drum and detaches them from the drum. From the doffer roller, in turn, the fibers are transferred to a further roller and fed to a nonwoven fabric- or sliver-forming unit. Such takeover and transfer processes from one roller to another one can also be found at worker rollers of a carding machine.
From the prior art, different embodiments of saw-tooth clothings are known. For example, DE 100 12 561 discloses a saw-tooth clothing with a wave-shaped tooth back. This shaping of the tooth back is intended to prevent a premature detachment of the fibers from the saw-tooth clothing. The provided convex projection on the tooth back is intended to prevent the fibers from sliding off. A disadvantage of the disclosed clothing is that the shape of the tooth back prevents an early detachment only during a fiber takeover, but during the transfer of the fibers by the clothing, it does not provide any protection to prevent the fibers from sliding off. Based on this problem, DE 100 12 561 discloses an extremely pointed tip of the tooth in a further embodiment. However, in the course of use of the clothing, such a tooth tip gets lost due to wear.
Furthermore, EP 1 153 162 discloses a saw-tooth clothing, the teeth of which have an undercut edge on the tooth front. Said undercut edge is formed by a recess which points from the tooth front toward the back of the tooth. The disclosed tooth form is intended to increase the fiber retention during carding. The disadvantage of the disclosed clothing is that the form of the teeth represents a one-sided structure which is designed for firmly holding the fibers.
It is an object of the invention to provide a saw-tooth clothing which, on the one side, provides for the fiber reception and fiber retention necessary for fiber processing and, on the other, affects the fiber transport and the fiber transfer to a following process stage only to such an extent that the fiber takeover can take place in a defined manner.
The object is achieved with the features of the characterizing portion of the independent claim.
In order to achieve the object, a saw-tooth clothing for rollers of a carding machine or a carder is proposed which has a multiplicity of teeth, wherein each tooth has a tooth front and a tooth back and a tooth tip, and the back of the teeth have a certain distance from the front of the in each case following tooth and form a tooth space which extends from the tip of the tooth to a root of the tooth. Between the tooth tips and the tooth root, on their tooth front and on their tooth back, the teeth have in each case an embossment which reduces the distance between the back of the teeth and the front of the in each case following tooth.
During the processing of fibers, said fibers are retained on rollers by means of clothings. For this purpose, clothings of many different designs are used, such as flexible clothings or saw-tooth clothings. With suitable counter elements, the fibers are cleaned and parallelized. Subsequently, the fibers are transferred from one roller to a next roller or, respectively, lifted by a next roller out of the clothing of the preceding roller. For this, on the one hand, the fibers have to be firmly held by a clothing on a roller during the rotational movement of the roller and, on the other, when required, have to be transferred to a clothing of a further roller.
Due to the rotational movement of the roller and therefore the movement of the clothing on the roller, the individual fibers wind to some extent around the teeth of the clothing in the case of a saw-tooth clothing. It was found that not only the tooth form or tooth position of the saw-tooth clothing used has an influence on the behavior of the fibers. Another decisive factor is the configuration of the free space between the successive teeth of the saw-tooth clothing. Through its geometry, this tooth space contributes substantially to the behavior of the individual fibers during the time in the saw-tooth clothing and the transfer to a further processing element, for example, a subsequent roller.
The fibers are retained in the saw-tooth clothing mainly by the tooth front. The tooth front extends from a tooth tip to a tooth root on the side pointing in the moving direction of the saw-tooth clothing. The side opposite to a tooth front of the same tooth is formed by the back of the tooth. In the tooth root, the tooth front of a tooth and the tooth back of the preceding tooth meet each other. The tooth space is therefore bordered by the tooth back of a tooth and the tooth front of the following tooth and extends from the tip of the tooth to the root of the tooth.
A fiber collected by the saw-tooth clothing thus can penetrate maximally to the tooth root of the saw-tooth clothing. In order to retain the fibers received by the clothing, an embossment is provided on the tooth front between the tooth tip and the tooth root. This embossment results in that at the position of said embossment, the distance between the tooth back of the preceding tooth and the tooth front of the tooth provided with the embossment is reduced. The fiber to be treated slides on the embossment on the tooth front toward the tooth root and is subsequently retained in the saw-tooth clothing by the embossment.
In order to remove the fibers from the clothing, the clothing on an adjacent roller engages with the fibers. In doing so, the fibers are accelerated in the moving direction of the clothing holding the fibers and are lifted out of the clothing via the tooth back of the tooth positioned in each case before the fibers. To ensure that the fibers cannot mutually pull each other out of the clothing due to the adhesive forces of adjacent fibers, the back of the tooth is also provided with an embossment which results in a further reduction of the distance between the tooth back and the tooth front of the following tooth.
In a preferred embodiment, the embossment on the tooth back of the one tooth is arranged opposite the embossment on the tooth front of the following tooth, whereby the embossments form a bottleneck of the tooth space. The embossments are to be considered as opposing when, viewed from the tip of the tooth in the direction of the root of the tooth, said embossments are not arranged one behind the other but at least partially overlapping. The way of viewing is always perpendicular to the tooth rib. In a cross-section arranged perpendicular to the tooth rib, the rise of the embossment on the tooth back begins before the embossment on the tooth front ends, or vice versa. The distance from the tooth rib to the beginning of the rise of the embossment on the tooth back is larger than the distance from the tooth rib to the highest point of the embossment on the tooth front. Or, in the reverse case, the distance from the tooth rib at the beginning of the rise of the embossment on the tooth front is larger than the distance from the tooth rib to the highest point of the embossment on the tooth back. The beginning of the rise of the embossment is to be defined viewed from the tip of the tooth. The highest point of an embossment corresponds to the point at which the embossment protrudes the furthest into the tooth space. This arrangement of the embossments on the tooth front or, respectively, the tooth back, results in a baggy form of the tooth space. This ensures that the fibers retained by the embossment on the tooth front in the saw-tooth clothing are also influenced by the embossment on the tooth back of the preceding tooth when the fibers are being lifted off. This influence results in a defined transfer of the fiber from one roller to the next one, wherein the transfer is determined by the clothing of the roller taking over the fiber. It was also found that the embossment on the tooth back makes a significant contribution to the retention of the fibers in the saw-tooth clothing if the embossment on the tooth back is combined with an embossment on the tooth front.
The baggy form of the tooth space is characterized in that the distance between tooth back and the tooth front of the following tooth is larger before the bottleneck than after the bottleneck. A determination of the distance between two teeth is always performed parallel to a tooth rib of the saw-tooth clothing. The basic restriction of the tooth space in the direction toward the tooth root has the effect that the tooth space cannot be clogged with fibers which cannot be lifted out of the saw-tooth clothing by a clothing of a following roller.
In a further preferred embodiment, the tooth front is formed in such a manner that a first section of the tooth front before the embossment is aligned with a second section of the tooth front after the embossment. Where applicable, this applies also to the tooth back so that a first section of the tooth back before the embossment is aligned with a second section of the tooth back after the embossment. Such a configuration of the tooth front and the tooth back increase the uniformity of fiber removal from the saw-tooth clothing.
It was found that it is advantageous if, from the tip of the tooth in the direction toward the root of the tooth, the embossment on the tooth front rises with respect to the first section of the tooth front at an angle of less than 15°, preferably less than 10°. In this manner, no jerky sliding of the fibers into the saw-tooth clothing takes place. In the further course of the embossment on the tooth front, it is advantageous if, from the tip of the tooth in the direction toward the root of the tooth, the embossment falls parallel to the tooth rib toward the second section of the tooth front.
The formation of the embossment of the tooth back is advantageous if, from the tip of the tooth in the direction toward the root of the tooth, the embossment rises with respect to the first section of the tooth back at an angle of less than 15°, preferably less than 10°. In the further course of the embossment on the tooth back it is advantageous if, from the tip of the tooth in the direction toward the root of the tooth, the embossment falls perpendicular to the tooth root toward the second section of the tooth back.
The saw-tooth clothing is suitable in particular for doffer rollers and worker rollers of carders, carding machines and rollers in the nonwoven sector. The saw-tooth clothing is provided on a roller in such a manner that the saw-tooth clothing is mounted in spirally windings which are adjacent to each other. The saw-tooth clothing can be implemented with a normal, interlocking or interchaining tooth rib in order to enable mounting on an ungrooved roller.
The invention is explained in more detail hereinafter by means of an exemplary embodiment and with drawings.
Likewise, the tooth back is divided by the embossment 8 into a first section 22 between the tooth tip 5 and the embossment 8, and a second section 23 between the embossment 8 and the tooth root 6. The first section 22 is arranged in alignment with the second section 23 of the tooth back. Therefore, both sections 22, 23 of the tooth back are arranged in the same plane.
The embossment 8 of the tooth back is arranged opposite to the embossment 9 of the tooth front of a following tooth. Thereby, a bottleneck 24 is formed in the tooth space 7, resulting in a baggy form of the tooth space 7. The distance B between the first section 22 of the tooth back of a tooth 2 and the first section 20 of the tooth front of a following tooth 2 is larger than the distance C between the second section 23 of the tooth back of a tooth 2 and the second section 21 of the tooth front of a following tooth 2. The width of the tooth space 7 thus decreases from the tooth tips 5 in the direction toward the tooth root 6, wherein by the embossments 8, 9 opposing each other, a continuous narrowing of the tooth space 7 is interrupted in the form of a bottleneck 24.
The form of the embossments 8, 9 is configured such that proceeding from the tooth tip 5 in the direction toward the tooth root 6, a gentle rise of the embossments 8, 9 is created. Here, from the tooth tip 5 in the direction toward the tooth root 6, the embossment 9 on the tooth front rises with respect to the first section 20 of the tooth front at an angle (a) of less than 15°. Accordingly, the embossment 8 on the tooth back rises from the tooth tip 5 in the direction toward the tooth root 6 at an angle (β) of less than 15° with respect to the first section 22 of the tooth front. After reaching the highest point of the embossment 9 on the tooth front, the embossment falls parallel to the tooth rib 10 toward the second section 21 of the tooth front. Accordingly, the embossment 8 on the tooth back falls perpendicular to the tooth rib 10 toward the second section 23 of the tooth back.
1 Saw-tooth clothing
3 Tooth front
4 Tooth back
6 Tooth root
7 Tooth space
8 Embossment on the tooth back
9 Embossment on the tooth front
11 Moving direction
20 First section of the tooth front
21 Second section of the tooth front
22 First section of the tooth back
23 Second section of the tooth back
A Distance between the tooth back and the tooth front of the following tooth
B Distance between the first section of the tooth back and the first section of the tooth front of the following tooth
C Distance between the second section of the tooth back and the second section of the tooth front of the following tooth
α Angle of inclination of the embossment on the tooth front
β Angle of inclination of the embossment on the tooth back
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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00632/11 | Apr 2011 | CH | national |