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US3559860A - Textile varn handling devices - Google Patents

Textile varn handling devices Download PDF

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Publication number
US3559860A
US3559860A US739552A US3559860DA US3559860A US 3559860 A US3559860 A US 3559860A US 739552 A US739552 A US 739552A US 3559860D A US3559860D A US 3559860DA US 3559860 A US3559860 A US 3559860A
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Prior art keywords
yarn
inlet tube
air
entrained
handling device
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US739552A
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Malcolm John East
Brian Beddoe
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Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd
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Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65HHANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL, e.g. SHEETS, WEBS, CABLES
    • B65H51/00Forwarding filamentary material
    • B65H51/16Devices for entraining material by flow of liquids or gases, e.g. air-blast devices
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65HHANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL, e.g. SHEETS, WEBS, CABLES
    • B65H2701/00Handled material; Storage means
    • B65H2701/30Handled filamentary material
    • B65H2701/31Textiles threads or artificial strands of filaments

Definitions

  • a yarn handling device comprising in combination a driving air inlet tube having a first portion surrounding an entrained air and yarn inlet tube and an air and yarn outlet portion arranged to receive both driving and entrained air, said outlet portion having a cross-sectional area of similar dimensions to that of said driving air inlet tube where they abut, and said driving air inlet tube being so arranged that the driving air is accelerated along it, thereby entraining air along the said entrained air and yarn inlet tube, wherein said driving air enters said outlet portion in a direction substantially parallel to the general direction of flow of entrained air.
  • yarns in this specification we mean strands of natural or synthetic filamentary material, which strands may consists of single continuous filaments or assemblies of continuous filaments or staple fibers.
  • the known yarn-handling devices have all used a converging nozzle type of arrangement to accelerate the driving air, the arrangement being such that the driving and entrained air flows meet an an angle.
  • this type of device the position of the entrained air and yarn inlet tube in relation to the driving air inlet and the outlet tubes affects the performance of the device and it has been found that the position to obtain adequate tension at high yarn speeds does not give good entrainment and vice versa.
  • two settings of the tubes have been employed in this type of device, one setting to obtain adequate entrainment of the yarn and the second setting to maintain adequate tension on the yarn once it has been entrained.
  • the known yarn-handling devices also suffer from the disadvantage that, in order to obtain adequate tension at high yarn speeds, the driving air consumption must be high, making such yarn-handling devices inefficient to run.
  • the tubes may be of any designed cross-sectional shape but are generally circular or rectangular and the air and yarn outlet tube may be of constant cross-sectional area or may contain a diverging section.
  • the diverging section if present, should commence where the entrained air and yarn emerge from the inlet tube and the section should preferably have an included angle not greater than
  • the inner end of the entrained air and yarn inlet tube may be arranged symmetrically with respect to the driving air inlet tube and the yarn and air outlet tube but we have found that the performance of the devices may be improved by offsetting the air and yarn inlet tube with respect to the other tubes or by bending its inner end. This inner end may be plain but we have found that the performance of the devices can also be improved by providing holes passing through the walls of the tube near its inner end or by providing a castellated or a chamfered end.
  • the above design characteristic is the major feature necessary to obtain good tension and entrainment characteristics with the devices of this invention, attention should be paid to other details in the design in order to obtain devices having high efficiencies.
  • the driving air inlet tube should be so shaped as to give smooth acceleration of the driving air and the length of the yarn and air outlet tube should be chosen to give a large area of contact between air and yarn but not so long that the pressure drop along it adversely affects the tension.
  • the cross-sectional areas of the bores of the entrained air and yarn inlet tube and the driving air inlet and outlet tube should be carefully chosen with regard to the air pressure to be applied to the device and the characteristics of the yarns to be entrained.
  • FIG. 2 shows a representation of a pneumatic yarn-handling device according to the present invention having an offset entrained air and yarn inlet tube
  • FIG. 4 shows a representation of a pneumatic yarn-handling device according to the present invention having an entrained air and yarn inlet tube with holes drilled in its walls near its inner end,
  • FIG. 6 shows a representation of a pneumatic yarn-handling device according to the present invention having an entrained air and yarn inlet tube having a chamfered inner end.
  • FIGS. 2 to 6 show variations in the construction or position of the entrained air and yarn inlet tube which provide the devices of the present invention with even better tension and/or entrainment characteristics and such variations are also useful in improving the performance of other pneumatic yarn handling devices.
  • a yarn-handling device comprising a yarn inlet tube having an outlet end portion of constant external cross section for conveying yarn and entrained air; wall means defining a driving air chamber surrounding said yarn inlet tube, said chamber having a first portion of relatively large cross-sectional area TABLE II Device shown in Fig. 1 Prior art device Entrained air Driving air Driving air Entrained air Driving air consumption, consumption, static pres- Tension, consumption, consumption, s.e.f.m. s.c.i.m. sure, p.s.i. grams s.c.f.m. s.c.f.m.
  • the devices according to the present invention may also be favorably compared with prior art devices with regards to the driving air consumption.
  • the device described in US. Pat. No. 3,094,262 exerts, on 70/34 yarn, with finish, running at 9,000 ft./min., tensions of 16.5 g. 27 g. and 32.5 g. at air consumptions of 30, 40 and s.c.f.m. Extrapolating these results it could be deduced that the tension exerted with an air consumption of say 13.5 s.c.f.m. would be very low indeed and at best could not be more than about 7.5 g. At low air consumptions therefore it appears that the devices according to the present invention apart from having no necessity for adjustment of position to get good entrainment will exhibit better tension characteristics than this prior art device.
  • EXAMPLE 2 The performances of yarn handling devices similar to that shown in FIG. 1 but having entrained air and yarn inlet tubes as shown in FIGS. 4 and 6 were evaluated by measuring the tensions exerted by the devices operating at 90 psi. static 2.
  • a yarn-handling device as claimed in claim 4 in which three holes are provided in the wools of said yam inlet tube at its terminal end.
  • a yarn-handling device as claimed in claim 1 in which said entrained air and yarn inlet tube is provided with a castellated inner end.
  • a yarn-handling device as claimed in claim 1 in which said entrained yarn and yarn inlet tube is provided with a chamfered inner end.

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  • Yarns And Mechanical Finishing Of Yarns Or Ropes (AREA)

Abstract

A yarn handling device comprising in combination a driving air inlet tube having a first portion surrounding an entrained air and yarn inlet tube and an air and yarn outlet portion arranged to receive both driving and entrained air, said outlet portion having a cross-sectional area of similar dimensions to that of said driving air inlet tube where they abut, and said driving air inlet tube being so arranged that the driving air is accelerated along it, thereby entraining air along the said entrained air and yarn inlet tube, wherein said driving air enters said outlet portion in a direction substantially parallel to the general direction of flow of entrained air.

Description

Unite i I 22] I States atet lmentors Appl No Filed Patented Assignee Priority TEXTILE YARN HANDLING DEVICES 7 Claims, 6 Drawing Figs.
Int. Cl B6Sh 51/16 Field of Search 226/97;
28/] .4; 302/(lnquired) 1 1 assgeeo Primary Examiner-Allen N. Knowles Att0rne vCushman, Darby & Cushman ABSTRACT: A yarn handling device comprising in combination a driving air inlet tube having a first portion surrounding an entrained air and yarn inlet tube and an air and yarn outlet portion arranged to receive both driving and entrained air, said outlet portion having a cross-sectional area of similar dimensions to that of said driving air inlet tube where they abut, and said driving air inlet tube being so arranged that the driving air is accelerated along it, thereby entraining air along the said entrained air and yarn inlet tube, wherein said driving air enters said outlet portion in a direction substantially parallel to the general direction of flow of entrained air.
PATENTEI] FEB 2m: 3.559.860
SHEET? 0F 2 k. J F. f
a" A Home ya TEXTILE YARN HANDLING DEVICES This invention relates to improvements in pneumatic devices for handling textile yarn and in particular to devices for picking up a running length of yarn, maintaining it under tension and forwarding it to a collector.
By yarns in this specification we mean strands of natural or synthetic filamentary material, which strands may consists of single continuous filaments or assemblies of continuous filaments or staple fibers.
Yam handling devices are known in which an air jet is employed to induce a flow of fluid through a tube, the entrained fluid carrying the yarn through the tube with it and to a collector. US. Pat. No. 2,667,964 to Miller describes such a conventional yarn-handling device and in general such devices consists of a driving air inlet tube surrounding an entrained air and yarn inlet tube an air and yarn outlet tube contiguous with the driving air inlet tube receiving both the driving and the entrained air. The driving air is accelerated to a very high velocity in the driving air inlet tube creating a low-pressure zone at the inner end of the entrained air and yarn inlet tube which low-pressure area causes air and yarn to be entrained through the entrained air and yarn inlet tube. Once the yarn has been entrained it is necessary to maintain it under tension and keep it moving through the outlet tube and to a collector and the outlet tube generally contains a divergent section for this purpose. 7
The known yarn-handling devices have all used a converging nozzle type of arrangement to accelerate the driving air, the arrangement being such that the driving and entrained air flows meet an an angle. With this type of device the position of the entrained air and yarn inlet tube in relation to the driving air inlet and the outlet tubes affects the performance of the device and it has been found that the position to obtain adequate tension at high yarn speeds does not give good entrainment and vice versa. Thus two settings of the tubes have been employed in this type of device, one setting to obtain adequate entrainment of the yarn and the second setting to maintain adequate tension on the yarn once it has been entrained.
The known yarn-handling devices also suffer from the disadvantage that, in order to obtain adequate tension at high yarn speeds, the driving air consumption must be high, making such yarn-handling devices inefficient to run.
We have now discovered a yarn-handling device which will exhibit both satisfactory entrainment and tension characteristics particularly at high yarn speeds without having to alter the position of the component tubes and which has a greater efficiency than prior art devices and accordingly the invention comprises in one of its aspects a yarn-handling device comprising a driving air inlet tube surrounding an entrained air and yarn inlet tube and, contiguous with said driving air inlet tube, an air and yarn outlet tube arranged to receive both the driving and the entrained air, said outlet tube having cross-sectional area of similar dimensions to that of the driving air inlet tube where they abut and said driving air inlet tube being arranged so that the driving air is accelerated along it, entrains air along the entrained air and yarn inlet tube and enters the outlet tube in a direction substantially parallel to the general direction of flow of the entrained air.
By arranging that the driving air enters the outlet tube in a direction substantially parallel to the general direction of flow of the entrained air both good tension and entrainment are achieved at one tube setting.
The tubes may be of any designed cross-sectional shape but are generally circular or rectangular and the air and yarn outlet tube may be of constant cross-sectional area or may contain a diverging section. The diverging section, if present, should commence where the entrained air and yarn emerge from the inlet tube and the section should preferably have an included angle not greater than The inner end of the entrained air and yarn inlet tube may be arranged symmetrically with respect to the driving air inlet tube and the yarn and air outlet tube but we have found that the performance of the devices may be improved by offsetting the air and yarn inlet tube with respect to the other tubes or by bending its inner end. This inner end may be plain but we have found that the performance of the devices can also be improved by providing holes passing through the walls of the tube near its inner end or by providing a castellated or a chamfered end.
Although the above design characteristic is the major feature necessary to obtain good tension and entrainment characteristics with the devices of this invention, attention should be paid to other details in the design in order to obtain devices having high efficiencies. Thus the driving air inlet tube should be so shaped as to give smooth acceleration of the driving air and the length of the yarn and air outlet tube should be chosen to give a large area of contact between air and yarn but not so long that the pressure drop along it adversely affects the tension. The cross-sectional areas of the bores of the entrained air and yarn inlet tube and the driving air inlet and outlet tube should be carefully chosen with regard to the air pressure to be applied to the device and the characteristics of the yarns to be entrained.
The invention will now be described in more detail with reference to the accompanying drawings and following examples which are not intended to limit the scope of the invention in any way and of which drawings,
FIG. 1 shows a sectional view of a pneumatic yamhandling device according to the present invention,
FIG. 2 shows a representation of a pneumatic yarn-handling device according to the present invention having an offset entrained air and yarn inlet tube,
FIG. 3 shows a representation of a pneumatic yarn-handling device according to the present invention having a bent entrained air and yarn inlet tube,
FIG. 4 shows a representation of a pneumatic yarn-handling device according to the present invention having an entrained air and yarn inlet tube with holes drilled in its walls near its inner end,
FIG. 5 shows a representation of a pneumatic yarn-handling device according to the present invention having an entrained air and yarn inlet tube with a castellated inner end, and
FIG. 6 shows a representation of a pneumatic yarn-handling device according to the present invention having an entrained air and yarn inlet tube having a chamfered inner end.
FIG. 1 shows a device consisting essentially of a combined driving air inlet and air and yarn outlet tube 10 and an entrained air and yarn inlet tube 11. The bore of tube 10 has a section 12 of relatively large diameter and a section 13 of smaller diameter connected by a converging section 14 and the tube 11 has a constant diameter bore 15, a section of relatively large external diameter 16 and a section of smaller external diameter 17. Tube 11 is held inside tube 10 by screw seal 18 so as to provide an air chamber 19 between part of section 17 of tube 11 and part of section 12 and section 14 of the tube 10 and an annular passageway 20 between the remainder of section 17 of tube 11 and part of section 13 of tube 10. Driving air supply tube 21 fits into a bore 22 in the wall of section 12 of tube 10 and supplies chamber 19 with air under pressure.
In practice, pressurized air enters the device through air supply tube 21 and passes into air chamber 19. This driving air is accelerated in the converging section 14 of tube 10, and in the annular passageway 20 and into section 13 of tube 10. The high-speed driving air emerging from the annular passageway 20 causes air to be entrained through the entrained air and yarn inlet tube 11 and with it any yarn which is in the vicinity of the outer end of tube 11. The entrained air and yarn passes into section 13 of tube 10 and is transported through a waste pipe to a yarn reservoir (not shown).
FIGS. 2 to 6 show variations in the construction or position of the entrained air and yarn inlet tube which provide the devices of the present invention with even better tension and/or entrainment characteristics and such variations are also useful in improving the performance of other pneumatic yarn handling devices.
The following Examples illustrate the scope of the invention but are not to be taken as limitative thereof.
EXAMPLE 1 The performance of the yarn-handling device as shown in FIG. 1 was first compared with a device of the converging nozzle adjustable type having similar driving air consumption rates. The tensions exerted on 60/20 poly (hexamethylene adipamide) yarn having a finish and running at 10,000 ft./min.
by the device shown in FIG. 1 were measured at a series of 10 driving air static pressures and the entrained and driving air consumption rates were also measured. The tube position of the prior art device was adjusted at each air pressure to give a comparable entrained air consumption and the tensions exerted on 60/20 yarn running at l0,000 ft./min. and driving air consumption were measured. The results are given in table 1.
the inner end. The results are given in table 3 together with the results obtained for the device shown in HO. 1 and clearly show the improved performance obtained with the devices shown in FIGS. 4 and 6, the device of FIG. 4 giving greatly improved entrainment with slightly reduced tension and the device of FIG. 6 giving improved tension and entrainment, as compared with the device of FIG. 1.
TABLE ill Entrained air Driving air Tension, consumption, consumption, Device shown in Figuregrams s.c.f.rn. s.e.i.1n.
The tube position of the prior art device was then adjusted at each static air pressure so that it exerted, on 60/20 yarn running at 10,000 ft./min., comparable tensions to those exerted by the device shown in FIG. 1 and the entrained air consumption and driving air consumption were measured. The results are give in table 11.
We claim:
1. A yarn-handling device comprising a yarn inlet tube having an outlet end portion of constant external cross section for conveying yarn and entrained air; wall means defining a driving air chamber surrounding said yarn inlet tube, said chamber having a first portion of relatively large cross-sectional area TABLE II Device shown in Fig. 1 Prior art device Entrained air Driving air Driving air Entrained air Driving air consumption, consumption, static pres- Tension, consumption, consumption, s.e.f.m. s.c.i.m. sure, p.s.i. grams s.c.f.m. s.c.f.m.
1. 2 15. 4 90 12. 25 Unobtainable tension 1. 3 15. 0 80 10. 5 Unobtainable tension 1. 4 13. 8 70 9. 5 0. 32 9. 2 1. 6 12. 4 60 8. 0 0. 38 8. 5
The entrained air consumption can be taken as an indication of entrainment efficiency and the results of example 1 show the superiority of the devices according to the present invention shown in FlG. 1 over the prior art device in terms of both tension developed at comparable entrainment rates and entrainment when comparable tensions are exerted and also serve to illustrate the all round utility of the devices according to the present invention when used in one fixed position.
The devices according to the present invention may also be favorably compared with prior art devices with regards to the driving air consumption. Thus the device described in US. Pat. No. 3,094,262 exerts, on 70/34 yarn, with finish, running at 9,000 ft./min., tensions of 16.5 g. 27 g. and 32.5 g. at air consumptions of 30, 40 and s.c.f.m. Extrapolating these results it could be deduced that the tension exerted with an air consumption of say 13.5 s.c.f.m. would be very low indeed and at best could not be more than about 7.5 g. At low air consumptions therefore it appears that the devices according to the present invention apart from having no necessity for adjustment of position to get good entrainment will exhibit better tension characteristics than this prior art device.
EXAMPLE 2 The performances of yarn handling devices similar to that shown in FIG. 1 but having entrained air and yarn inlet tubes as shown in FIGS. 4 and 6 were evaluated by measuring the tensions exerted by the devices operating at 90 psi. static 2. A yarn-handling device as claimed in claim 1 wherein said yarn inlet tube is assymetrically arranged within said outlet passageway.
3. A yarn handling device as claimed in claim 1 wherein the said yarn inlet tube is bent at its terminal end.
4. A yarn-handling device as claimed in claim 1 wherein the said yarn inlet tube is provided with holes in its walls at its terminal end.
5. A yarn-handling device as claimed in claim 4 in which three holes are provided in the wools of said yam inlet tube at its terminal end.
6. A yarn-handling device as claimed in claim 1 in which said entrained air and yarn inlet tube is provided with a castellated inner end.
7. A yarn-handling device as claimed in claim 1 in which said entrained yarn and yarn inlet tube is provided with a chamfered inner end.

Claims (7)

1. A yarn-handling device comprising a yarn inlet tube having an outlet end portion of constant external cross section for conveying yarn and entrained air; wall means defining a driving air chamber surrounding said yarn inlet tube, said chamber having a first portion of relatively large cross-sectional area and a second coaxial portion of decreasing cross-sectional area; means defining an outlet passageway of constant cross section extending coaxially from said second chamber portion, said yarn inlet tube projecting into said passageway a short distance and terminating therein so as to define a generally annular constant cross section passageway through which driving air from said chamber flows into said outlet passageway in a direction substantially parallel to the general direction of flow of entrained air.
2. A yarn-handling device as claimed in claim 1 wherein said yarn inlet tube is assymetrically arranged within said outlet passageway.
3. A yarn handling device as claimed in claim 1 wherein the said yarn inlet tube is bent at its terminal end.
4. A yarn-handling device as claimed in claim 1 wherein the said yarn inlet tube is provided with holes in its walls at its terminal end.
5. A yarn-handling device as claimed in claim 4 in which three holes are provided in the wools of said yarn inlet tube at its terminal end.
6. A yarn-handling device as claimed in claim 1 in which said entrained air and yarn inlet tube is provided with a castellated inner end.
7. A yarn-handling device as claimed in claim 1 in which said entrained yarn and yarn inlet tube is provided with a chamfered inner end.
US739552A 1967-12-18 1968-06-24 Textile varn handling devices Expired - Lifetime US3559860A (en)

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Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3679114A (en) * 1969-07-19 1972-07-25 Akzona Inc Multi-stage injector for thread withdrawal
US3863822A (en) * 1972-05-29 1975-02-04 Rueti Ag Maschf Nozzle device for producing a fluid jet
US4099308A (en) * 1977-10-14 1978-07-11 Celanese Corporation Turbulence generating yarn feed needle
US4346504A (en) * 1980-07-11 1982-08-31 Hoechst Fibers Industries Yarn forwarding and drawing apparatus
US4858809A (en) * 1986-02-15 1989-08-22 Bayer Aktiengesellschaft Conveying of filament bundles over long conveying sections
US5433365A (en) * 1991-09-18 1995-07-18 Filteco S.P.A. Fluid nozzle device for yarn processing
US6170302B1 (en) 1998-09-30 2001-01-09 Ethicon, Inc. Method and apparatus for continuously cleaning yarn fibers
US20040042857A1 (en) * 2002-09-04 2004-03-04 Airtrim, Inc. Venturi inducer system for transferring material
US9090053B1 (en) * 2009-03-03 2015-07-28 Bruce A. Franke Air dispenser for printing press

Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3679114A (en) * 1969-07-19 1972-07-25 Akzona Inc Multi-stage injector for thread withdrawal
US3863822A (en) * 1972-05-29 1975-02-04 Rueti Ag Maschf Nozzle device for producing a fluid jet
US4099308A (en) * 1977-10-14 1978-07-11 Celanese Corporation Turbulence generating yarn feed needle
US4346504A (en) * 1980-07-11 1982-08-31 Hoechst Fibers Industries Yarn forwarding and drawing apparatus
US4858809A (en) * 1986-02-15 1989-08-22 Bayer Aktiengesellschaft Conveying of filament bundles over long conveying sections
US5433365A (en) * 1991-09-18 1995-07-18 Filteco S.P.A. Fluid nozzle device for yarn processing
US6170302B1 (en) 1998-09-30 2001-01-09 Ethicon, Inc. Method and apparatus for continuously cleaning yarn fibers
US6383229B2 (en) 1998-09-30 2002-05-07 Ethicon, Inc. Method and apparatus for continuously cleaning yarn fibers
US20040042857A1 (en) * 2002-09-04 2004-03-04 Airtrim, Inc. Venturi inducer system for transferring material
US6732897B2 (en) * 2002-09-04 2004-05-11 Airtrim, Inc. Venturi inducer system for transferring material
US9090053B1 (en) * 2009-03-03 2015-07-28 Bruce A. Franke Air dispenser for printing press

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Publication number Publication date
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