This application claims the priority of German Patent Application No. 103 33 656.7, filed on Jul. 24, 2003, the subject matter of which, in its entirety, is incorporated herein by reference.
The invention relates to a tip-headed needle which belongs to the needle group of stitch needles and is particularly adapted for use in the stitch-bonding technology for working on technical textile materials.
Technical textiles or other textile materials are frequently manufactured by stitch-bonding in which a backing or other flat textile fabric is pierced through, and subsequently a yarn to be captured by the needle is pulled through the backing. In the field of technical textile materials such backings are frequently made of carbon fibers' ceramic fibers or glass fibers, or they contain such fibers.
Conventional stitch needles are, as a rule, provided with a “ball tip”, that is, the needle tip is spherically curved with a greater or lesser radius. The tip radius depends from the application of the needles. The ball tip is intended to avoid piercing of the yarns to thus prevent the backing from being damaged.
It has been found that such known stitch needles, when used for piercing technical textiles, significantly damage the backing after a short service, and, in most cases, even cause damage at the beginning of the process. The extent of such damage increases as the operating period lengthens. Tests have shown that the cause of the damage lies in the rapid and substantial wear of the tip of the stitch needles.
Sewing needles have various tip configurations, dependent upon the purpose of such needles. Thus, apart from needles having spherical tips, needles with cone-shaped “punch tips” are known. Such a needle, which is illustrated in
The above outlined sewing needles are not adapted for use in stitch-bonding.
It is an object of the invention to improve a stitch needle for obtaining a longer life expectancy therefor.
The above object generally is achieved according to the present invention
by a needle that has an has an elongated needle body provided with an aperture for receiving a yarn, a holding portion at one end and a tip region formed as a punch tip at the opposite end. The needle body tapers in the direction of the tip region such that its two flat sides converge in an acute angle. It is feasible to provide that the acute angle has a constant magnitude throughout the entire wedge-shaped region. The tip or the tip region is thus formed as a “punch tip” which has a conical or pyramidal shape and whose opening angle is preferably greater than the earlier-noted acute angle. The opening angle may be constant or may vary along the length of the punch tip. The punch tip has no appreciable rounding radius or a rounding radius intentionally provided within manufacturing tolerances. Rather, the tip is considered as having a pointed end as concerns manufacturing accuracy. It has been found that with such a stitch needle even difficult technical textile materials which consists of, or contain, carbon fibers or mineral fibers or other abrasive materials may be processed without damaging the material to be pierced by the needle and without causing an excessive wear of the needle during the working process. It has further been found that the piercing force can be reduced up to 50% and more. In an actual embodiment the piercing force for a sharply pointed stitch needle according to the invention could be reduced from 0.9 N to 0.5 N.
It has further been found that stitch needles having a punch tip, sufficiently and permanently shift the backing laterally during pierce-through to ensure that during the return stroke of the needle, the yarn, captured by a hook-like aperture in the needle, can be pulled through the backing without generating an excessive friction with the pierced hole as the latter re-closes. As a result, damages to the yarn to be pulled through the backing during the process are avoided even if the backing contains aggressive fibers, such as carbon fibers, ceramic fibers, glass fibers or the like. Although the service life of the needle is substantially extended by providing a punch tip and thereby damages to the backing by worn needle tips are avoided, the pierced holes are, as before, opened in such a manner that during the return stroke of the stitch needle they remain open with a sufficient width to ensure a low-friction pull-through of the yarn entrained by the stitch needle. This result is achieved without any damage to the backing.
Further details of advantageous embodiments are described and defined.
It is considered to be particularly advantageous to arrange the tip of the needle body such that a line which extends parallel to the length of the needle body and which passes through the tip, intersects the unilaterally open, hook-like aperture substantially at mid depth. This arrangement brings the center of the pierced hole into alignment with the yarn to be pulled through. This applies in particular when the hook-shaped aperture lies in a needle body region whose width (the distance between the flat sides of the needle body) is substantially less at the tip-side end of the aperture than in the shank region. The shank region is situated in a zone where the flat sides of the needle body extend parallel to one another.
It is feasible to provide the punch tip with a circular cross section or, in the alternative, with a polygonal cross section. The size of the punch tip preferably corresponds to the size of the spherical tip of a conventional stitch needle; however, it is not purposefully provided with a radius within finishing tolerances. In case a rounding of the tip is present, its radius R is preferably less than one tenth of the height or width of the stitch needle in the region of the foot of the punch tip.
Further advantageous details of embodiments of the invention may be obtained from the drawing, the specification and the claims.
The drawing illustrates embodiments of the invention as well as the prior art, wherein
The particularity of the apparatus according to
The width B measured at the transitional location 33 is one third to one fourth of the width B1 in the region of an aperture 36 of the stitch needle 10. Further, the width B1 is approximately one half of the width B2 which defines the distance between the flat sides 27, 28 in the region of the shank 23.
The tip 29 is further detailed in
As noted earlier, the terminus 31 is manufactured essentially as a point, that is, without an intentional rounding.
The tip 29, formed as a conical tip, has a circular cross section as shown in
The earlier-noted aperture 36 is hook-shaped. A lead-in surface 39 which is preferably linear in side view, extends in the region of the needle head 26 from an upper needle surface 37 which is oriented parallel to a lower needle surface 38 in the region of the shank 23 and which extends parallel to the needle length. The lead-in surface 39 runs into the aperture 36 where it changes into a nose 42 by means of a rounding 41. As seen in
A line L which intersects the terminus 31 of the tip 29 and which is parallel to the length dimension of the stitch needle 10, intersects the aperture 36 approximately at mid height, that is, underneath a location where facets 46, 47 provided on the nose 42 border the flat piece 43.
The above-described stitch needle 10 operates as follows:
In the stitch-bonding process illustrated in
The particular shape and position of the tip 29 result in an only slight needle wear and further result in such an opening of the pierced hole that a pull-through of the yarn 13 with only slight yarn wear is taking place. It is to be noted that the stitch needle 10 may be a slider needle which is provided (or cooperates) with a slider. The slider serves for a purposeful, controlled opening and closing of the hook.
An stitch needle 10 is provided with a tip 29 which is shaped as a punch and has no recognizable rounding at its terminus 31. The tip 29 is preferably arranged at mid height of the hook-shaped aperture 36 which is structured for capturing the yarn 13. The particular shape of the tip 29 and its positioning minimize the wear of the stitch needle 10 and also minimize damages to the yarn 13.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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103 33 656 | Jul 2003 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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1709631 | Schmidt | Apr 1929 | A |
1983536 | Carlson | Dec 1934 | A |
3134248 | Kubelka et al. | May 1964 | A |
3253426 | Mauersberger | May 1966 | A |
3309900 | Wunsch et al. | Mar 1967 | A |
3417580 | Scholtis et al. | Dec 1968 | A |
3646780 | Wildeman | Mar 1972 | A |
3646781 | Scholtis et al. | Mar 1972 | A |
3754693 | Herr | Aug 1973 | A |
3760607 | Wildeman | Sep 1973 | A |
6206256 | Marzocchi | Mar 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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290 028 | May 1991 | DD |
40 38 936 | Jun 1991 | DE |
42 06 842 | Sep 1993 | DE |
43 44 375 | Jan 1995 | DE |
195 19 671 | Dec 1996 | DE |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050016221 A1 | Jan 2005 | US |