Claims
- 1. A warp knitting machine, particularly a sewing-knitting machine for the production of a sewn-knitted fabric made of fleece, preferably fiber fleece, comprising a row of side-by-side pointed slide needles, which can be locked by means of respective locking wires, thread guiding eye needles which are located opposite the slide needles, a knock-over comb, a counter hold comb for the supporting the fleece during its travel past and during the piercing of the needles and a fleece retainer bar which limits the passage space for the fleece, said bar being disposed below the slide needles, as well as opposite the knock-over comb, characterized in that the counter holding comb 12 is a rigid arrangement, non-flexible and non-yielding to the forces engendered by the slide needles piercing the fleece and extends at an angle to the slide needles 7 and itself comprising free ended non-yielding sinker shaped prongs 14 the ends 14a of which are disposed opposite the points of the slide needles, said ends 14a being disposed laterally outwardly of the inner surface 13a of the fleece retainer bar 13 and upstream in the sense of fleece travel of the fleece retainer bar 13, the fleece retainer bar being spaced downstream of the sinker shaped prongs 14.
- 2. Warp knitting machine, particularly a sewing knitting machine, for the production of a sewn-knitted fabric made of fleece, preferably fiber fleece, and reinforced by parallel rows of thread stitches, comprising a row of side-by-side pointed slide needles which can be locked by means of respective locking wires, a knock-over comb, a counter hold comb for supporting the fleece during its travel past and during the piercing of the needles and a fleece retainer bar which limits the passage space for the fleece, said bar being disposed below the slide needles, as well as opposite the knock-over comb, characterized in that the counter hold comb 12 is a rigid arrangement, non-flexible and non-yielding to the forces engendered by the slide needles piercing the fleece and extends at an angle to the slide needles 7 and itself comprising free ended non-yielding sinker shaped prongs 14, disposed opposite the points of the slide needles, and the bar 13 is spaced downstream of the sinker shaped prongs 14 and below the plane of the slide needles 7.
- 3. Warp knitting machine, according to claim 7, characterized in that the upper edge 13b of the bar 13 is spaced vertically and horizontally from the outer ends 14a of the sinker shaped prongs 14.
- 4. Warp knitting machine according to claim 2 characterized by in that the outer ends 14a of the sinker shaped prongs 14 are positioned approximately at the level of the lower edges of the slide needles.
- 5. Warp knitting machine according to claim 2, characterized in that the sinker shaped prongs 14 each have a point with a slanted edge disposed opposite and facing a respective eye-pointed needle, the sides of the prongs facing the slide needles lying in the vertical.
- 6. Warp knitting machine according to claim 2, characterized in including means for completely penetrating the fiber fleece with the slide needles 7 and the locking wires 8.
- 7. A warp knitting machine according to claim 2 wherein the counter hold comb is supported by universally adjustable means.
- 8. A warp knitting machine according to claim 2 wherein the sinker bar is supported for universal adjustment.
- 9. The warp knitting machine of claim 2, wherein said slide needles are disposed to face the "right" side of the fleece during its travel past said needles, each of which includes a hook adjacent the pointed end thereof and which draws fiber from said fleece after it has pierced the same and returns past said "right" side of the fleece, means are provided for moving the fleece stitch distances and further means are provided for withdrawing said hooks of said needles and the fibers carried therein to a distance from the "right" side of the fleece greater than a stitch distance.
- 10. A method for the production of warp knitted fabric, which fabric comprises a fleece reinforced with parallel rows of thread stitches insensitive with regard to laddering because of fibers from the fleece surrounding the thread thereof within and extending from the holes of the rows of stitches and interlaced with the stitches, the fabric being produced upon a knitting machine which comprises a row of side-by-side hooked and pointed slide needles, the hooks of which extend forwardly from the shanks thereof and which can be closed by means of respective locking wires and a knock-over comb for sliding formed stitches off the needles on the "right" side of the path of travel of the fleece, a counter hold comb for supporting the fleece during the piercing of the needles through the fleece and a fleece retainer bar downstream of the counter hold comb for limiting the passage space for the fleece on the "left" side of the path of travel of the fleece, and means for feeding thread to the hooks of the needles on the "left" side of the fleece, said method comprising passing the fleece past the needles a stitch length at a time, piercing the fleece completely with the hooks of the needles and the respective locking wires and closing said hooks with said locking wires in the vicinity of the "left" side of the fleece, during the return stroke of the needle.
- 11. The method according to claim 10, wherein said distance from the right side of the fleece is more than two times the distance of a stitch length.
- 12. The method according to claim 10, including drawing some of the fibers in the form of loops to the rearmost position of the needles, retaining the loop shaped fibers in the working plane of the slide needles during the knock-over process for the thread stitches, forwarding said needles again to pierce the fleece and further drawing thread and fibers rearwardly and repeating such piercing and fiber drawing, and thrusting off from the slide needles said loop shaped fibers after they have been situated on the shafts of the slide needles during two consecutive piercing and withdrawing operations.
- 13. The method of claim 10, in which the distance the fibers are drawn is of two consecutive stitch holes 4 of a row 2.
- 14. The method of claim 13 wherein the fibers 5 subsequently are disposed upon the shank of a slide needle 7 and, during an ensuing knock over procedure relative to previously formed stitch 3, they remain in a loop shape in the plane of the slide needles 7, and the loop is subsequently passed through by the slide needle 7 during repeated advances so as to re-appear on the shank of the slide needle 7, and then passed through loop of fibers 5, after they have been present on the shank of the slide needle 7 at least twice, is then knocked off of the slide needle 7.
Parent Case Info
This is a division of application Ser. No. 823,361 filed Aug. 10, 1977, now U.S. Pat. No. 4,158,292.
US Referenced Citations (5)
Divisions (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
823361 |
Aug 1977 |
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