US2233985A - Card apron - Google Patents
Card apron Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- US2233985A US2233985A US332708A US33270840A US2233985A US 2233985 A US2233985 A US 2233985A US 332708 A US332708 A US 332708A US 33270840 A US33270840 A US 33270840A US 2233985 A US2233985 A US 2233985A
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- US
- United States
- Prior art keywords
- apron
- rubber
- fabric
- aprons
- backing
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Expired - Lifetime
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-
- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D01—NATURAL OR MAN-MADE THREADS OR FIBRES; SPINNING
- D01H—SPINNING OR TWISTING
- D01H5/00—Drafting machines or arrangements ; Threading of roving into drafting machine
- D01H5/18—Drafting machines or arrangements without fallers or like pinned bars
- D01H5/58—Arrangements for traversing drafting elements
Definitions
- This invention consists in an improved rubber apron for use in the condensing mechanism of carding machines for rolling and condensing slivers or rovings preparatory to spinning them into yarn.
- These aprons comprise short endless bands running over parallel rolls and are arranged to present opposed flat stretches between which the rovings are fed. The rolls are rotated and at the same time longitudinally reciprocated, imparting both movements to the aprons so that the rovings are subjected simultaneously to a lengthwise advancing movement and to a transverse condensing rolling movement.
- the present invention supplies the successful solution of a problem which has long bafiled the industry.
- With the apron of our invention we are able to produce firmer rovings having better spinning qualities, and a heavier jack spool requiring less handling and change.
- An important feature of our invention relating particularly to the internal structure of the aprons, consists in a rubber body portion terminating at both ends of the apron in a solid fabric zone, preferably slightly reduced in thickness as compared to the body portion of the apron as a whole and supplying the apron with exceedingly tough and wear-resisting margins effective in a large measure to reinforce and protect the more delicate intermediate rubber portion of the apron and to supply firm anchorage for the buttons or guide flanges with which it is customary to equip the inner surface of such aprons to maintain them against endwise displacement on the rolls.
- the apron includes one or more plies of fabric backing coextensive with the area of the apron, a plurality of relatively narrow plies assembled to form the end or marginal zones of the apron and a rubber body portion united to and vulcanized upon the backing and the end plies of fabric.
- the body is slightly thicker than the end zones whereby such zones of the apron will have no spacing efi'ect upon the cooperating bodies of the aprons by which the'rubbing and condensing work on the rovings is carried out, and the marginal zones themselves are relieved of wearing contact in operation.
- Fig. l is a viewv in perspective showing the organization of the condensing mechanism of a carding machine
- Fig. 2 is a view in perspective of one of the aprons
- Fig. 3 is a sectional view on an enlarged scale showing the internal structure of the apron.-
- the fabric and rubber plies are built up or assembled upon a cylindrical mandrel of the proper dimensions and then vulcanized upon the mandrel or by any other suitable commercial process of vulcanization.
- two plies ill of rubberized 8 oz. to 11 oz. army duck are first spread or wrapped upon the mandrel. Then a five-ply cap or thickened marn l Z e is built unabout each end of the another.
- the plies ll preferably comprise the same material as the backing plies and are of gradulated width, that is, the innermost ply is the widest of the series and the superposed plies are stepped down in their width forming at their inner ends an outwardly and upwardlysloping composite surface.
- the outer ends of the backing plies Ill and the binding plies H are built or trimmed square and all the plies together constitute solid fabric marginal bindings or caps which may be approximately 1 to 1 in width in their outermost ply.
- the end construction is sufliciently strong to support the drive buttons, and to protectthe ends of the rubber portion of the sleeve.
- the ends are also preferably somewhat thinner in gauge so that the active rubbing is done by the rubber surfaces rather than by the ends. ends being of lesser gauge do not abrade one I
- the composition used in rubberizing the duck of the fabric plies and in binding them together is preferably oil-resistant rubber-of the .character hereinafter disclosed.
- a body l2 of oil-resistant rubber This may be calendered onto the apron upon the mandrel to a uniform depth of about V to A or any thickness which will give the rubber coated body portion of the apron at least a-slightly greaterthickness than the thickness of the solid fabric marginal binding portions thereof.
- the outer edges'of the rubber body I! are conformed to the composite sloping ,surface presented by the inner ends of the binding plies II and are beveled at heir margins to meet the inner edge of the outermost binding ply H.
- the vulcanizing operation is next carried out and then the vulcanized apron may. be removed from 7 posed.
- rollers l8 spaced apart so that the aprons present opposed flat stretches just clearing each other.
- the rolls l8 are rotated and reciprocated endwise asalready explained to impart anga'dvancing movement and a .transverse'rqlling'abd Furthermore when running idle, the
- Fig. 1 three sets of aprons are employed and the rovings are gradually condensed in their passage between the aprons and finally wound up upon a jack spooll9 which, when full, is removed and becomes the source of supply for spinning operations.
- a jack spooll9 which, when full, is removed and becomes the source of supply for spinning operations.
- the first two sets of aprons comprise an upper apron built on a 5 /2" mandrel and a longer lower apron built, for example, on a 6%" mandrel and the flxfil set of aprons are of the same longer length, that is to say, both having been built on a 6%" mandrel. Satisfactory condensing results have been achieved by rotating the rollers l8 at such a rate asto impart allnear speed of 70 to 130 ft. per minute to the aprons and reciprocating the rollers lengthwise to impart an oscillating motion of about three hundred strokes per minute which results in a maximum rub- 'bing speed .of about ft.
- rubber is used herein broadly to .include artificial or synthetic rubber and rubber-. like materials such asChloroprene products or so called Thiokoles, a typical formula of which is C2H4S4C2H4S4C2H4. These materials and others of equivalent composition are oil resistant and may be used in place of such rubber compositions as that of the foregoing formula and within the scope of our invention.
- a rubber card apron comprising atextile backing having a body portion of oil-resistant rubber composition united thereto and vulcanized thereon and bound at both margins by solid bands of textile material, said margins of the apron being thinner than the portion of the apron located therebetween but thicker than the textile backing between said margins.
- a rubber card apron comprising a fabric backing permanently united to marginal bands of multiple ply fabric of substantial thickness, and a body portion of oil-resistant rubber united to and vulcanized upon the backing and of greater thickness than the marginal fabric bands of the apron.
- a rubber card apron comprising a fabric backing permanently bonded along both margins to relatively thick laminated fabric bands increasing in thickness and presenting surfaces flaring outwardly from an intermediate portion of the backing fabric and having square marginal edges, and a bodyof oil-resistant rubber vulcanized upon the backing fabric and the flaring surfacesof the laminated marginal bands.
- a rubber card apron comprising a fabric backing having thickened marginal bands each including an outer thick zone of uniform thickness and an inwardly tapering zone, and a body of oil-resistant rubber vulcanized upon the backing fabric and the tapering zone of the two marginal bands.
- a rubber card apron comprising a fabric backing, multiple marginal bands united to the backing and including plies which gradually de-- crease in width and are stepped outwardly at 7 thickness at its edge portions toward the saidmarginal edge portions of the backing.
- a tubular rubber card apron comprising an intermediate body portion of oil-resistant rubber and marginal end portions of tough textile fabric firmly united to .the intermediate body portion, the outside surface of the intermediate body portion being at a greater elevation than the outside surfaces of the marginal end portions.
- a tubular rubber card apron comprising a textile backing reinforced at the two marginal end portions of the apron by a plurality of plies of textile fabric carried on the outer face of the backing, and a relatively thick layer of oil-resistant rubber located between the said marginal end portions and vulcanized to such portions and to the textile backing therebetween.
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- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
- Textile Engineering (AREA)
- Treatment And Processing Of Natural Fur Or Leather (AREA)
Description
March 4 941' Tr M. KNOWLAND ETAL CARD APRON Filed May 1, 1940 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 I W rws March 4, 1941. M. KNOWLANP ETAL 2,233,985
CARD APRON Filed May 1, 1940 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 KZEQWQQ Patented Mar. 4, 1941 UNITED STATES,
PATENT OFFICE CARD Thomas M. Knowland,
APRON Belmont, and Arthur G.
Application May 1, 1940, Serial No. 332,708
8 Claims.
This invention consists in an improved rubber apron for use in the condensing mechanism of carding machines for rolling and condensing slivers or rovings preparatory to spinning them into yarn. These aprons comprise short endless bands running over parallel rolls and are arranged to present opposed flat stretches between which the rovings are fed. The rolls are rotated and at the same time longitudinally reciprocated, imparting both movements to the aprons so that the rovings are subjected simultaneously to a lengthwise advancing movement and to a transverse condensing rolling movement.
For many years prior to the present invention rubbing aprons of leather have been standard equipment for condensing apparatus although many attempts have been made heretofore to provide satisfactory, rubber aprons. It has been appreciated for a long time that rubber aprons are more efficient in their condensing action than leather aprons, but heretofore no rubber apron has been available which would successfully withstand the deteriorating effect of wool grease and vegetable and other oils so often in or associated with wool and similar fibres. On this account rubber aprons heretofore used have had an objectionable tendency to swell, to lose their pliability and to break down in structure. For these reasons the benefits of rubber aprons have not been generally available to the trade prior to the invention herein disclosed. The present invention supplies the successful solution of a problem which has long bafiled the industry. We have discovered that by employ- 85 ing rubber which is of a highly oil-resistant composition and by incorporating this in a novel manner with suitable fabric elements, an apron may be produced having a life of approximately that ofa leather apron but having as much as 40 40% greater rubbing capacity than a leather apron. With the apron of our invention we are able to produce firmer rovings having better spinning qualities, and a heavier jack spool requiring less handling and change. We are also at substantially less speed than when leather aprons are employed, resulting in a great saving in mechanical wear and tear, and to maintain a more uniform friction surface throughout the life of the apron than is possible when leather aprons are used. We have found our improved rubber apron to be superior to a leather apron in respect to its flexibility and to be equally resistant to glazing and deterioration from, card stains. Further, all these advantages are secured able to operate the whole condenser mechanism without increased cost in any respect; in fact,.
it is probable that our improved rubber aprons may be installed at lower initial cost than corresponding leather aprons.
. An important feature of our invention, relating particularly to the internal structure of the aprons, consists in a rubber body portion terminating at both ends of the apron in a solid fabric zone, preferably slightly reduced in thickness as compared to the body portion of the apron as a whole and supplying the apron with exceedingly tough and wear-resisting margins effective in a large measure to reinforce and protect the more delicate intermediate rubber portion of the apron and to supply firm anchorage for the buttons or guide flanges with which it is customary to equip the inner surface of such aprons to maintain them against endwise displacement on the rolls.
As herein shown the apron includes one or more plies of fabric backing coextensive with the area of the apron, a plurality of relatively narrow plies assembled to form the end or marginal zones of the apron and a rubber body portion united to and vulcanized upon the backing and the end plies of fabric. In the preferred construction, the body is slightly thicker than the end zones whereby such zones of the apron will have no spacing efi'ect upon the cooperating bodies of the aprons by which the'rubbing and condensing work on the rovings is carried out, and the marginal zones themselves are relieved of wearing contact in operation.
These and other features of the invention will be best understood and appreciated from the following description of a preferred embodiment thereof selected for purposes of illustration and shown in .the accompanying drawings in which,
.Fig. l is a viewv in perspective showing the organization of the condensing mechanism of a carding machine,
Fig. 2 is a view in perspective of one of the aprons, and
Fig. 3 is a sectional view on an enlarged scale showing the internal structure of the apron.-
In constructing the novel apron of our invention the fabric and rubber plies are built up or assembled upon a cylindrical mandrel of the proper dimensions and then vulcanized upon the mandrel or by any other suitable commercial process of vulcanization. As suggested in Fig. 3 two plies ill of rubberized 8 oz. to 11 oz. army duck are first spread or wrapped upon the mandrel. Then a five-ply cap or thickened marn l Z e is built unabout each end of the another.
mandrel by wrapping five or six narrow plies ll ofrubberized duck about the mandrel outside the backing plies iii. The plies ll preferably comprise the same material as the backing plies and are of gradulated width, that is, the innermost ply is the widest of the series and the superposed plies are stepped down in their width forming at their inner ends an outwardly and upwardlysloping composite surface. The outer ends of the backing plies Ill and the binding plies H are built or trimmed square and all the plies together constitute solid fabric marginal bindings or caps which may be approximately 1 to 1 in width in their outermost ply. In general it may be said that the end construction is sufliciently strong to support the drive buttons, and to protectthe ends of the rubber portion of the sleeve. The ends are also preferably somewhat thinner in gauge so that the active rubbing is done by the rubber surfaces rather than by the ends. ends being of lesser gauge do not abrade one I The composition used in rubberizing the duck of the fabric plies and in binding them together is preferably oil-resistant rubber-of the .character hereinafter disclosed.
Having built up the fabric portion of the apron, we next apply to its periphery and between the fabric binding portions a body l2 of oil-resistant rubber. This may be calendered onto the apron upon the mandrel to a uniform depth of about V to A or any thickness which will give the rubber coated body portion of the apron at least a-slightly greaterthickness than the thickness of the solid fabric marginal binding portions thereof. As shown in Fig. 3, the outer edges'of the rubber body I! are conformed to the composite sloping ,surface presented by the inner ends of the binding plies II and are beveled at heir margins to meet the inner edge of the outermost binding ply H.
i As already noted' it is important in constructing the apron of our invention to employ an oilresistant rubber or rubber-like composition.
One satisfactory composition for this purpose'we" have found may be compounded from the following formula:
Having assembled and built up the fabric and rubber portions of the apron as above outlined, and reinforced the fabric by stitching if desired, the vulcanizing operation is next carried out and then the vulcanized apron may. be removed from 7 posed. rollers l8 spaced apart so that the aprons present opposed flat stretches just clearing each other. The rolls l8 are rotated and reciprocated endwise asalready explained to impart anga'dvancing movement and a .transverse'rqlling'abd Furthermore when running idle, the
'ent of the United States is:
condensing eifect to the loosely formed rovlngs from the carding mechanism.- As shown in Fig. 1 three sets of aprons are employed and the rovings are gradually condensed in their passage between the aprons and finally wound up upon a jack spooll9 which, when full, is removed and becomes the source of supply for spinning operations. In the arrangement illustrated in Fig. 1, the first two sets of aprons comprise an upper apron built on a 5 /2" mandrel and a longer lower apron built, for example, on a 6%" mandrel and the flxfil set of aprons are of the same longer length, that is to say, both having been built on a 6%" mandrel. Satisfactory condensing results have been achieved by rotating the rollers l8 at such a rate asto impart allnear speed of 70 to 130 ft. per minute to the aprons and reciprocating the rollers lengthwise to impart an oscillating motion of about three hundred strokes per minute which results in a maximum rub- 'bing speed .of about ft. per minute to the aprons. This represents a decided reduction in speed in both aspects as compared to the usual speed of condensing mechanism employing leather belts, and yet with the improved rubber belts of our construction we areable to produce a firmer roving than heretofore and at a higher rate of production. Accordingly we are able to produce'a jack spool having a greater weight ofmore dense roving in a shorter period than has ever been possible heretofore. In addition to the "formation of more perfect grooves or recesses thaniheretofore to enclose and shape the roving during its' lateral movement. Further,-our whole construction is light and flexible so that the apron is able to bend easily around the drive pulleys without tendency to break. a
It will be understood that the specific construction herein described is for illustrative purposes only and that various departures may be made from this structure within the scope of our invention, for example, in some instances a single backing ply will be found adequate iiistead of the double ply backing illustrated and the stepped construction of the fabric binding caps may be modified in shape and general appearance although it is very desirable that the rubber body portionof the apron should be at least slightly thicker-than its fabric marginal zones.
The term rubber is used herein broadly to .include artificial or synthetic rubber and rubber-. like materialssuch asChloroprene products or so called Thiokoles, a typical formula of which is C2H4S4C2H4S4C2H4. These materials and others of equivalent composition are oil resistant and may be used in place of such rubber compositions as that of the foregoing formula and within the scope of our invention.
Having thus disclosed our invention what we claim as new and desire to secure by Letters Pat-.
1. A rubber card apron comprising atextile backing having a body portion of oil-resistant rubber composition united thereto and vulcanized thereon and bound at both margins by solid bands of textile material, said margins of the apron being thinner than the portion of the apron located therebetween but thicker than the textile backing between said margins.
2. A rubber card apron comprising a fabric backing permanently united to marginal bands of multiple ply fabric of substantial thickness, and a body portion of oil-resistant rubber united to and vulcanized upon the backing and of greater thickness than the marginal fabric bands of the apron.
3. A rubber card apron comprising a fabric backing permanently bonded along both margins to relatively thick laminated fabric bands increasing in thickness and presenting surfaces flaring outwardly from an intermediate portion of the backing fabric and having square marginal edges, and a bodyof oil-resistant rubber vulcanized upon the backing fabric and the flaring surfacesof the laminated marginal bands.
4. A rubber card apron comprising a fabric backing having thickened marginal bands each including an outer thick zone of uniform thickness and an inwardly tapering zone, and a body of oil-resistant rubber vulcanized upon the backing fabric and the tapering zone of the two marginal bands. I
5. A rubber card apron comprising a fabric backing, multiple marginal bands united to the backing and including plies which gradually de-- crease in width and are stepped outwardly at 7 thickness at its edge portions toward the saidmarginal edge portions of the backing.
7. A tubular rubber card apron comprising an intermediate body portion of oil-resistant rubber and marginal end portions of tough textile fabric firmly united to .the intermediate body portion, the outside surface of the intermediate body portion being at a greater elevation than the outside surfaces of the marginal end portions.
8. A tubular rubber card apron comprising a textile backing reinforced at the two marginal end portions of the apron by a plurality of plies of textile fabric carried on the outer face of the backing, and a relatively thick layer of oil-resistant rubber located between the said marginal end portions and vulcanized to such portions and to the textile backing therebetween.
THOMAS M. KNOWLAND. ARTHUR G. RUSSELL.
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US332708A US2233985A (en) | 1940-05-01 | 1940-05-01 | Card apron |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US332708A US2233985A (en) | 1940-05-01 | 1940-05-01 | Card apron |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
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US2233985A true US2233985A (en) | 1941-03-04 |
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ID=23299504
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
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US332708A Expired - Lifetime US2233985A (en) | 1940-05-01 | 1940-05-01 | Card apron |
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Cited By (8)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2424736A (en) * | 1944-02-23 | 1947-07-29 | Gen Motors Corp | Rubber composition and method of making same |
US2488442A (en) * | 1948-03-10 | 1949-11-15 | Jr Edwin Allen Snape | Card clothing |
US2520192A (en) * | 1944-08-03 | 1950-08-29 | Dayton Rubber Company | Wool card rub apron |
US2522277A (en) * | 1949-01-08 | 1950-09-12 | Boston Woven Hose & Rubber Co | Card apron |
US2553456A (en) * | 1947-10-13 | 1951-05-15 | Dayton Rubber Company | Rub apron for use on textile machines |
US2621375A (en) * | 1946-03-07 | 1952-12-16 | Dayton Rubber Company | Rub apron |
US2630603A (en) * | 1945-04-11 | 1953-03-10 | Dayton Rubber Company | Rub apron |
US3591899A (en) * | 1969-04-28 | 1971-07-13 | Dayco Corp | Rub apron |
-
1940
- 1940-05-01 US US332708A patent/US2233985A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
Cited By (8)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2424736A (en) * | 1944-02-23 | 1947-07-29 | Gen Motors Corp | Rubber composition and method of making same |
US2520192A (en) * | 1944-08-03 | 1950-08-29 | Dayton Rubber Company | Wool card rub apron |
US2630603A (en) * | 1945-04-11 | 1953-03-10 | Dayton Rubber Company | Rub apron |
US2621375A (en) * | 1946-03-07 | 1952-12-16 | Dayton Rubber Company | Rub apron |
US2553456A (en) * | 1947-10-13 | 1951-05-15 | Dayton Rubber Company | Rub apron for use on textile machines |
US2488442A (en) * | 1948-03-10 | 1949-11-15 | Jr Edwin Allen Snape | Card clothing |
US2522277A (en) * | 1949-01-08 | 1950-09-12 | Boston Woven Hose & Rubber Co | Card apron |
US3591899A (en) * | 1969-04-28 | 1971-07-13 | Dayco Corp | Rub apron |
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