Claims
- 1. A method of spinning yarn comprising the steps of:
- (a) nipping a sliver or roving so that some of the fibers within the sliver or roving have loose ends;
- (b) transporting the nipped sliver or roving in a linear direction A at a substantially constant linear speed;
- (c) feeding a core filament into the sliver or roving, after nipping, so that the core filament passes with the nipped sliver or roving in the direction A; and
- (d) while transporting the sliver or roving, and core filament, in direction A, rotating loose ends of fibers around the fiber mass, and the core filament, the ends being held substantially linearly stationary during rotation, to produce the desired yarn, with core filament.
- 2. A method as recited in claim 1 wherein the core filament comprises a full stretched textured yarn.
- 3. A method of spinning yarn comprising the steps of:
- (a) nipping a sliver or roving so that some of the fibers within the sliver or roving have loose ends;
- (b) transporting the nipped sliver or roving in a linear direction A at a substantially constant linear speed;
- (c) feeding a core filament, comprising a full stretch textured yarn, into the sliver or roving, after nipping, so that the core filament passes with the nipped sliver or roving in the direction A; then
- (d) placing the full stretched textured yarn under tension;
- (e) while the full stretched textured yarn is under tension, developing crimp in the full stretched textured yarn, so that individual fibers of the yarn are repelled into a separate wide mass of fibers; and
- (f) while transporting the sliver or roving, and core filament, in direction A, rotating loose ends of fibers around the fiber mass, and the core filament, the ends being held substantially linearly stationary during rotation, to produce the desired yarn, with core filament, to form an integrated mixture of nipped fibers of the sliver or roving, and separated continuous fibers of the core filament.
- 4. A method as recited in claim 3 wherein step (e) is practiced by dragging the full stretched textured yarn over a sharp edge of a nonconductive material, and then releasing the tension of the full stretched textured yarn.
- 5. A method as recited in claim 4 wherein step (f) is practiced utilizing a hollow shaft having at least a portion of an entire circumferential surface thereof with perforations, and mounted for rotation about an axis substantially coincident with the direction A, said step (f) being practiced by feeding the fibers and core filament into the interior of the hollow shaft at one end thereof, applying a vacuum to the exterior of the hollow shaft perforated portion to cause free ends of the fibers within the hollow shaft to be drawn toward the interior surface of the hollow shaft, and rotating the hollow shaft so that free ends will move toward the interior surface of the hollow shaft will be generally rotated therewith.
- 6. A method as recited in claim 5 wherein step (a) is practiced so that approximately 75-90% of the fibers within the sliver or roving mass are tight, forming a fiber sheath, while the remaining 25-10% have loose ends.
- 7. A method as recited in claim 4 wherein step (e) is further practiced by dragging the full stretched textured yarn over a plastic wedge.
- 8. A method as recited in claim 4 wherein step (e) is further practiced by holding the full stretched textured yarn taut between pairs of spaced rolls while it passes over the sharp edge, and then allowing release of the tension of the yarn after the downstreammost set of rolls and prior to the practice of step (c).
- 9. A method of spinning yarn comprising the steps of:
- (a) nipping a sliver or roving so that some of the fibers within the sliver or roving have loose ends;
- (b) transporting the nipped sliver or roving in a linear direction A at a substantially constant linear speed;
- (c) inserting a filament into association with the nipped sliver or roving while moving in direction A, at a point B by controlled overfeeding of the filament, the filament being fed faster than the nipped sliver or roving; and
- (d) immediately after the point B, rotating loose ends of fibers of the nipped sliver or roving, while the ends are held substantially linearly stationary during rotation, to wrap the fiber ends around other fibers and the filament to product a spun yarn having loop or Boucle effects.
- 10. A method as recited in claim 9 wherein step (d) is practiced utilizing a hollow shaft having at least a portion of an entire circumferential surface thereof with perforations, and mounted for rotation about an axis substantially coincident with the direction A, said step (d) being practiced by feeding the fibers and core filament into the interior of the hollow shaft at one end thereof, applying a vacuum to the exterior of the hollow shaft perforated portion to cause free ends of the fibers within the hollow shaft to be drawn toward the interior surface of the hollow shaft, and rotating the hollow shaft so that free ends will move toward the interior surface of the hollow shaft will be generally rotated therewith.
- 11. A method as recited in claim 10 wherein the point B is at the entrance to the hollow shaft.
- 12. A method as recited in claim 11 further utilizing feed rollers for feeding the nipped sliver or roving to the hollow shaft, and wherein step (c) is practiced so that the inserted filament does not pass through the feed rollers, but rather directly into the hollow shaft at point B.
- 13. A method as recited in claim 9 wherein step (a) is practiced so that approximately 75-90% of the fibers within the sliver or roving mass are tight, forming a fiber sheath, while the remaining approximately 25-10% have loose ends.
- 14. A method of spinning yarn comprising the steps of:
- (a) nipping a sliver or roving so that some of the fibers within the fibers or roving have loose ends;
- (b) transporting the nipped sliver or roving in a linear direction A at a substantially constant linear speed;
- (c) feeding a filament yarn into operative association with the nipped sliver or roving as it moves in the linear direction A, while applying a force substantially in direction A effective to break a significant number of the fibers of the filament yarn; and
- (d) while transporting the sliver or roving in direction A, with free ends and with broken fibers, rotating loose ends of fibers and acting upon broken fibers so that the fiber ends are wrapped around the nipped sliver or roving, and the broken fibers interact with the nipped sliver or roving, to produce a yarn having a spun-like appearance.
- 15. A method as recited in claim 14 wherein step (c) is practiced to break up to about 20 percent of the fibers of the filament yarn.
- 16. A method as recited in claim 15 wherein step (d) is practiced utilizing a hollow shaft having at least a portion of an entire circumferential surface thereof with perforations, and mounted for rotation about an axis substantially coincident with the direction A, said step (d) being practiced by feeding the fibers and core filament into the interior of the hollow shaft at one end thereof, applying a vacuum to the exterior of the hollow shaft perforated portion to cause free ends of the fibers within the hollow shaft to be drawn toward the interior surface of the hollow shaft, and rotating the hollow shaft so that free ends will move toward the interior surface of the hollow shaft and be generally rotated therewith.
- 17. A method as recited in claim 16 utilizing a first pair of rollers adjacent the inlet end of the hollow shaft, and a second pair of rollers adjacent the outlet end of the hollow shaft; and wherein step (c) is practiced by putting a predetermined draft between the first and second sets of rolls.
- 18. A method as recited in claim 1 wherein step (d) is practiced utilizing a hollow shaft having at least a portion of an entire circumferential surface thereof with perforations, and mounted for rotation about an axis substantially coincident with the direction A, said step (d) being practiced by feeding the fibers and core filament into the interior of the hollow shaft at one end thereof, applying a vacuum to the exterior of the hollow shaft perforated portion to cause free ends of the fibers within the hollow shaft to be drawn toward the interior surface of the hollow shaft, and rotating the hollow shaft so that free ends will move toward the interior surface of the hollow shaft will be generally rotated therewith.
- 19. A method as recited in claim 1 wherein step (a) is practiced so that approximately 75-90% of the fibers within the sliver or roving mass are tight, forming a fiber sheath, while the remaining approximately 25-10% have loose ends.
- 20. A method as recited in claim 14 utilizing a first set of rolls at the inlet end of the device, and a second set of rolls at the outlet end of the device; and wherein step (c) is practiced by putting a predetermined draft between the first and second sets of rolls, and wherein step (d) is practiced by rotating a hollow shaft through which the nipped sliver or roving and filament yarn pass.
- 21. A method as recited in claim 1 wherein the core filament is a multi-color filament yarn.
- 22. A method as recited in claim 9 wherein the filament is a multi-color filament yarn.
- 23. A method as recited in claim 14 wherein the filament is a multi-color filament yarn.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 386,078 filed June 7, 1982, now U.S. Pat. No. 4,507,913 issued Apr. 2, 1985.
US Referenced Citations (16)
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number |
Date |
Country |
143050 |
Oct 1971 |
CSX |
3002952 |
Aug 1980 |
DEX |
Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
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Parent |
386078 |
Jun 1982 |
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