Claims
- 1. A woven all-synthetic monofilament dryer fabric for use in a paper-making machine, said fabric being constituted by a belt woven with warp and weft strands with said warp strands extending in the machine direction, there being at least two weft layers and said warp strands being crimped relative to said weft strands in a non-symmetrical pattern, said belt being interconnected at opposed ends by a woven single pintle pin seam formed by reversely turned warp strands to constitute an endless belt, said warp strands in at least re-woven end portions of said belt being flattened strands with the original crimp configuration being changed in reversely turned portions of said reversely turned warp strands.
- 2. A fabric as claimed in claim 1 wherein said fabric is constituted by at least two layers of weft strands.
- 3. A fabric as claimed in claim 1 wherein selected ones of said warp strands in said re-woven end portions form loops at end edges of said belt, said loops being interdigitated to receive a common single pintle pin therethrough to secure both ends of said belt together, others of said warp strands being re-woven back into said end portions with weft strands to form retaining loops to retain an end weft in position.
- 4. A fabric, as claimed in claim 3 wherein all of said warp strands in said re-woven end portions of said belt are flattened warp strands, a predetermined number of weft strands in end portions of said belt having been removed and woven back with said warp strands to constitute said re-woven end portions, alternate ones of said warp strands projecting beyond said woven back weft strands for forming said pintel loops and weft strand retaining loops, said warp strands between alternate warp strands forming pintle and retaining loops being foreshortened in said re-woven end portions, said reversely turned and woven back portions of said alternative warp strands being aligned with respective ones of said foreshortened warp strands, said reversely turned portions of said flattened warp strands being woven back into said end portions without regard to their pre-set crimp configuration or the crimp pattern of the fabric.
- 5. A fabric as claimed in claim 4 wherein said severed warp strands in said re-woven end portions are severed at staggered locations in a predetermined pattern along the length of said re-woven end portions, said woven back portions of said loop forming warp strands terminating in end-to-end termination points with said respective ones of said severed warp strands.
- 6. A fabric as claimed in claim 4 wherein said flattened warp strands have a substantially rectangular cross-section with the long axis of the flattened cross-section extending parallel to the plane of the fabric.
- 7. A fabric as claimed in claim 3 wherein all of said warp strands in said re-woven end portions of said belt are flattened warp strands, a predetermined number of weft strands in end portions of said belt having been removed and woven back with said warp strands to constitute said re-woven end portions, selected ones of said warp strands projecting beyond said woven back weft strands for forming said pintle loops and weft strand retaining loops, said loop forming warp strands reversely turned portions being woven back in said re-woven end portions in alignment with and in abutment with other selected foreshortened warp strands terminating within the re-woven end portions, said reversely turned portions of said flattened warp strands having been woven back into said end portions without regard to their pre-set crimp configuration or the crimp pattern of the fabric.
- 8. A fabric as claimed in claim 7 wherein said severed warp strands in said re-woven end portions are severed at staggered locations in a predetermined pattern along the length of said re-woven end portions, said woven back portions of said loop forming warp strands terminating in end-to-end termination points with said respective ones of said severed warp strands.
- 9. A fabric as claimed in claim 7 wherein said flattened warp strands have a substantially rectangular cross-section with the long axis of the flattened cross-section extending parallel to the plane of the fabric.
- 10. A fabric as claimed in claim 9 wherein said flattened warp strands are flattened in the ratio of about 2:1.
- 11. A fabric as claimed in claim 9 wherein the ratio range of the long axis to the short axis of said flattened cross-section is 1.5:1 to 3:1.
- 12. A fabric as claimed in claim 9 wherein the cross-sectional area range of said flattened warp strands is from 0.07 square mm to 0.5 square mm.
- 13. A fabric as claimed in claim 3 wherein said pintle loops are formed by pairs of adjacent warp strands and held in position by a flexible strand binding.
- 14. A fabric as claimed in claim 13 wherein said flexible strand binding is comprised by supplementary flexible strands at said opposed ends interwoven around said pintle loops, said supplementary flexible strands crossing each other between said pintle loops and extend within said retaining loops.
- 15. A fabric as claimed in claim 14 wherein said supplementary flexible strands are multifilament strands.
- 16. A method of making a plurality of pintle loops at each end of a woven synthetic monofilament dryer fabric having at least two weft layers and the warp strands are crimped relative to the weft strands in a non-symmetrical mesh pattern and in which the warp strands in at least the area of each said end are flattened, said method comprising the following steps:
- (1) removing a predetermined number of weft strands from an area at the end of the fabric and leaving a plurality of projecting warp strands each pre-crimped in the non-symmetrical configuration of the crimp pattern of the fabric,
- (2) selecting pairs of projecting warp strands to form in turn, but not in sequence, retaining loops and pintle loops,
- (3) looping and weaving back into a group of added crimped weft strands, without regard to the prior crimp configuration already existing in the warp strand, one of each selected pair of projecting warp strands; the other of each pair being woven part way into the added crimped weft strands of the group to meet the looped strand at a predetermined location within the group of added crimped weft strands thus forming retaining loops and pintle loops at a re-woven end portion of the fabric, said retaining loops being uniform in tightness and said pintle loops being uniform in size.
- 17. A method as claimed in claim 16 wherein said step (2) comprises selecting alternate pairs of adjacent warp strands to form said retaining and pintle loops, said retaining loops being uniform in tightness and said pintle loops being uniform in size.
Parent Case Info
This is a continuation application of application Ser. No. 270,341, filed June 4, 1981 which application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 214,738, filed Dec. 9, 1980, both now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (3)
Number |
Name |
Date |
Kind |
4026331 |
Lees et al. |
May 1977 |
|
4286631 |
Strandly |
Sep 1981 |
|
4290209 |
Buchanan et al. |
Sep 1981 |
|
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
47-43762 |
Nov 1972 |
JPX |
Continuations (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
270341 |
Jun 1981 |
|
Continuation in Parts (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
214738 |
Dec 1980 |
|