This invention concerns a tetraxial fabric and a machine for its manufacture.
As is known, in the textile field, besides the traditional warp and weft fabrics, tetraxial fabrics are known, i.e. fabrics consisting of warp and weft yarns as well as first and second bias yarns which crisscross each other along two different diagonal directions. In such fabrics the bias yarns cross also the warp and weft yarns.
The first tetraxial fabrics developed in the art consisted of bias yarns crossing in the fabric areas included between the warp and the weft yarns.
This fabric geometry did not provide either a close bond between yarns or an optimum fabric fill coefficient.
Tetraxial fabrics are known also from the U.S. Pat. No. 5,351,722, where a tetraxial fabric is described which contains warp yarns, weft yarns as well as first and second bias yarns crisscrossing each other and both the warp and weft yarns.
In such tetraxial fabrics a first course of warp yarns is overlaid by the weft yarns and overlies the first and second bias yarns, while a second course of warp yarns, which alternates to the mentioned first yarn course, overlies the weft yarns and is overlaid by the first and second bias yarns.
Fabrics of the latter type, though overcoming the problems that arise with fabrics of the former type, are suitable for further improvements.
As a matter of fact the structure of such tetraxial fabrics is in any case asymmetrical due to the fact that the warp yarns are alternatively above or under the weft yarns, so that only the first and second bias yarns contribute substantially to the strength of the fabric.
The object of this invention is therefore to resolve the above-mentioned problems by making tetraxial fabrics characterized by a total symmetry.
A further object of this invention is to make a tetraxial fabric in which the angles of the first and second bias yarns can be controlled as desired.
A further object of this invention is to make a tetraxial fabric that can reach an optimum fill coefficient of up to 100%.
The said objects are achieved, according to this invention, by a tetraxial fabric according to claim 1, to which reference is made for the sake of brevity.
The invention concerns also a machine to manufacture a tetraxial fabric, as described in claim 5, to which reference is made for the sake of brevity.
The tetraxial fabric exhibits a number of advantages, including the possibility of being made either with a partial fabric fill coefficient or with a 100% fill coefficient.
It exhibits total symmetry because it is made with alternating warp and weft yearns, as in ordinary fabrics. Among other things, this symmetry provides a fabric where the front and back sides are alike.
Therefore the fabric of the invention has a high resistance to deformation, which makes it ideal for a number of industrial applications such as inflatable boat plies, filter fabric, tarpaulins, etc.
The machine to manufacture the tetraxial fabric allows, among other things, the weaving of a large number of yarns, where the limit is set by the thickness of each needle.
In addition, it has a single beater which intervenes after each weft drawing-in, thus limiting the room needed, and allowing fabrics containing more yarns per centimeter to be obtained.
Other important advantages of the machine of the invention are due to the fact that the presence of a single moving warp, in cooperation with the stationary warp, makes the machine simpler and with fewer elements to be synchronized; the single beater simplifies further said synchronisms, in addition the bias yarn pulling system has a simple step-by-step motion which is easy to achieve and accurate in operation.
The invention is described in detail below as a non-limitative example, with reference to the attached drawings, where:
a through 9e are schematic diagrams illustrating the main operating steps of the said machine.
The tetraxial fabric according to this invention is indicated globally with the reference numeral 10 in the attached figures.
Therefore the tetraxial fabric 10 exhibits a set of warp yarns 11 alternating to weft yarns 12, as in traditional fabrics.
The first bias yarns 13 cross the second bias yarns 14 at the crossover points of the warp yarns 11 and weft yarns 12, and in addition the first bias yarns 13 are overlaid by the second bias yarns 14.
Also in this case the first bias yarns 13′ cross the second bias yarns 14′ at the crossover points of the warp yarns 11′ and the weft yarns 12′.
The interlacing of the first and second bias yarns can be made with the desired angle.
This invention covers also a machine 50 for the manufacture of the tetraxial fabric according to this invention.
The machine 50, globally shown in
The machine 50 also comprises means for guiding the warp yarns, means for guiding the weft yarns and means for guiding the first and second bias yarns toward a fabric formation area 55.
In particular, the machine comprises a first and a second guide member for guiding the warp yarns which are mounted to face each other and where one of these members is movable and the other one is stationary.
The first and the second warp yarn guide members comprise opposite holder bars, each carrying a set of needles which are substantially parallel to one another. This allows weaving even with a large number of needles, the limit being set by the thickness of each needle.
In
The means guiding the weft yarns 65 and 66, instead, comprise two pickers of known construction and arranged side by other. The pickers move with reciprocating linear motion between a retracted and an extended position, with a motion direction perpendicular to the motion direction of the moving member for the warp yarns. Also the guides 75 and 76 for the weft yarns 65 and 66 can be seen in figure B.
Other known weft yarn guiding means can be used as an alternative.
The first and second bias yarns guiding means comprise an entrainment system 70 which carries a set of plates 71, 72, each provided with a needle 73, 74 through which either of the mentioned bias yarns is passed. The entrainment system 70 is operated by a stepper motor (not shown).
A carousel is also provided hanging from the bearing structure 51 said carousel housing a set of bobbins 52 to unwind the mentioned bias yarns; a single beater 67 is finally provided, which rotates over a certain angle thanks to the shaft 77.
With reference to
At the start of the cycle the needles carrying the moving warp yarns face one another in a position which is offset with respect to the needles that carry the stationary warp yarns so that the moving warp will not interfere either with the stationary warp or with the first and second bias yarns.
In the first operating step of the cycle the moving warp 61 moves forward through the first and second bias yarns 63, 64 and through the stationary warp yarns, followed by the drawing-in of the weft 65.
Now the moving warp returns to the start position and a first beating operation is performed by the single beater 67.
At this point the entrainment system 70 which moves the first and second bias yarns 63, 64 moves one step, so the first bias yarns 63 move sideways in one direction while the second bias yarns 64 move sideways in the opposite direction, so the first and second bias yarns 63, 64 cross each other. The movement of the bias yarns causes also the movement of the last plates at the end of the needle bed, which turn each 180 degrees, thereby reaching a new working position.
Subsequently the weft 66 is passed and a second beating operation is performed by the single beater 67.
Note that the insertion means for the weft yarns 65, 66 can be located either at the opposite side ends of the machine or both on the same side. A single feeding system can be provided to feed the weft yarns 65, 66, which feeds the weft 65 and then the weft 66.
The above-mentioned weaving cycle is then repeated as many times as required to obtain the tetraxial fabric of the invention.
Lastly, it is stressed that one of the weft yarns (66) should be inside the triangle formed by the moving warp 61, in its idling position, and by the assembly comprising the first and second bias yarns 63, 64 and by the stationary warp 62, while the other weft yarn (65) should be inside the triangle formed by the moving warp 61, in extended or working position, and the assembly consisting of the first and second bias yarns 63, 64 and by the stationary warp 62. This geometric relationship occurs both in the case of
This invention can be the object of a number of modifications or variations, all falling within the invention concept contained in the attached claims, while the technical details can be changed as required.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
MI2001A1665 | Jul 2001 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/IT02/00433 | 7/1/2002 | WO | 00 | 5/28/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO03/012184 | 2/13/2003 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4438173 | Trost | Mar 1984 | A |
5351722 | Mamiliano | Oct 1994 | A |
5375627 | Iida et al. | Dec 1994 | A |
5431193 | Mood et al. | Jul 1995 | A |
5472020 | Iida et al. | Dec 1995 | A |
5540260 | Mood | Jul 1996 | A |
5947160 | Addis et al. | Sep 1999 | A |
6071835 | Tang et al. | Jun 2000 | A |
6429157 | Kishi et al. | Aug 2002 | B1 |
20050011576 | Dini | Jan 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0 643 161 | Mar 1995 | EP |
0 263 392 | Apr 1998 | EP |
2 702 222 | Sep 1994 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20050011576 A1 | Jan 2005 | US |