GB2027875A

GB2027875A – Looms having means for ventilation and cleaning
– Google Patents

GB2027875A – Looms having means for ventilation and cleaning
– Google Patents
Looms having means for ventilation and cleaning

Download PDF
Info

Publication number
GB2027875A

GB2027875A
GB7924787A
GB7924787A
GB2027875A
GB 2027875 A
GB2027875 A
GB 2027875A
GB 7924787 A
GB7924787 A
GB 7924787A
GB 7924787 A
GB7924787 A
GB 7924787A
GB 2027875 A
GB2027875 A
GB 2027875A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
loom
air
air supply
duct
supply duct
Prior art date
1978-07-17
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.)

Granted

Application number
GB7924787A
Other versions

GB2027875B
(en

Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)

Sulzer AG

Original Assignee
Sulzer AG
Gebrueder Sulzer AG
Priority date (The priority date 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 date listed.)
1978-07-17
Filing date
1979-07-17
Publication date
1980-02-27

1979-07-17
Application filed by Sulzer AG, Gebrueder Sulzer AG
filed
Critical
Sulzer AG

1980-02-27
Publication of GB2027875A
publication
Critical
patent/GB2027875A/en

1982-09-22
Application granted
granted
Critical

1982-09-22
Publication of GB2027875B
publication
Critical
patent/GB2027875B/en

Status
Expired
legal-status
Critical
Current

Links

Espacenet

Global Dossier

Discuss

Classifications

D—TEXTILES; PAPER

D03—WEAVING

D03J—AUXILIARY WEAVING APPARATUS; WEAVERS’ TOOLS; SHUTTLES

D03J1/00—Auxiliary apparatus combined with or associated with looms

D03J1/002—Climatic conditioning or removing lint or dust

Description

1
GB2027875A
1
SPECIFICATION
Looms having means for ventilation
5 This invention relates to looms having means for ventilation, preferably by means of conditioned air.
In Swiss patent specification 490 549, a loom is described in which the ventilation air 10 goes through a duct to near the warp yarns and then issues through exit orifices into the space below the warp sheet. Since the warp sheet and the cloth produced from the warp sheet form a kind of top closure member, the 1 5 only way for most of the entering air to leave is at the sides of the machine, e.g. through the side frames or cheeks. A separate air-conditioning facility is used to air-condition the weave room.
20 According to the present invention, a loom has a ventilation air supply duct extending parallel to the line of pick and located close to the floor in the space below the weaving plane and between the warp beam and the 25 cloth beam, the air supply duct being formed with: first exit apertures for air to be guided below the warp beam and/or the cloth beam and through into the weave room; and second exit apertures for air to be guided into the 30 interior regions of the loom. Consequently, some of the supplied air can flow through into the weave room below the warp beam and/or cloth beam. This air reaches more particularly the regions where the operative has to work 35 (the weaver’s alleys of the weave room). The remainder of the supplied air can be used to condition the warp yarns and/or to clean the loom. The air supply duct can be located near the floor where ducting can be fitted more 40 readily than elsewhere in the loom and an air supply duct immediately below the weaving plane is not required.
The invention may be carried into practice in various ways but three looms embodying 45 the invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Figure 7 is a diagrammatic cross-section of a first loom embodying the invention; and 50 Figures 2 and 3 are similar sections of two further looms embodying the invention.
In the loom shown in Fig. 1, warp threads 8 go from a warp beam 21 having a shaft 21 a and a tube 21 b over a back rest 11, 55 through healds for the formation of a weaving shed 22 to the fell 23 where a reed (not shown) beats up the weft thread which has been picked along the line of pick 24. Cloth 25 goes over a breast beam 1 2 and other 60 rollers to be taken up on a cloth beam 10 having a shaft 10a and tube 10b.
The loom frame 1 comprises a load bearing member 1 which is of hollow box-section and constitutes the main cross member, and com-65 prises an additional channel-section cross member 26, the cross members 1, 26 extending parallel to the line of pick 24. A triangular cross-section air supply duct 42 is located adjacent the floor 41 of the weave room in a 70 space below the weaving plane and between the warp beam 21 and cloth beam 10. The base of the triangular duct 42 is parallel to the floor 41. At its three vertices the triangle * is formed with air exit apertures 44, 45, 46. 75 Air issuing from the first exit apertures 44, 45 flows along the floor, as indicated by arrows
47, below the beams 21, 10 and through into the weave room 53. Air leaving the second exit apertures 46 rises in the direction
80 indicated by arrows 48, to be guided by a deflector plate 49 around the warp beam 21. Near the back rest 11 the air from the apertures 46 enters the space 51 immediately below the warp sheet 8 and the weaving 85 plane 52.
The air used to condition the premises,
whose flow is indicated by arrows 47, conditions the weave room 53 particularly in the weaver’s alleys, the place where the operative 90 is most of the time when she has to work on the loom. A baffle plate 54 is attached to the main cross member 1 to deflect the machine-conditioning air towards the warp beam 21 in the direction indicated by arrows 48. The 95 baffle plate 54 and the deflector plate 49 also separate the space 51 below the weaving plane 52 from the bottom space 55 between the warp beam 21 and cloth beam 10.
The main cross member 1 of the loom 100 shown in Fig. 2 constitutes an air supply duct and is formed in its bottom wall with first exit apertures 45 for the room-conditioning air, as indicated by arrows 47, and in one of its side walls 1 a with second air exit apertures 46 for 105 the loom-conditioning air, as indicated by arrows 48. A baffle plate 58 extends horizontally from the bottom of the cross member 1. The loom-conditioning air is guided between the plates 58, 54, as indicated by arrows 48, 110 to the warp beam 21 and upwardly across the warp beam.
The main cross member 1 of the loom shown in Fig. 3 is of rectangular cross-section and subdivided by a horizontal partition 61 115 into two parts 1 b, 1c. The part 1 c serves as an air supply duct for the room-conditioning air, as indicated by arrows 47, and for the loom-conditioning air, as indicated by arrows
48. The part 1 b serves as an extractor duct 120 for the air from the space 51 which flows as indicated by arrows 48a and enters the part 1 bthrough apertures 62.
In all three looms, the air supply duct 42, 1, 1 c serves the two purposes of supplying air 125 for conditioning to both the weave room and the loom (two-zone conditioning). The loom can be covered at the top. If required, an air duct can also be provided above the weaving plane 52. The room-conditioning air associ-1 30 ated with the arrows 47 and that proportion
2
GB2027 875A 2
of the loom-conditioning air which issues from the loom as indicated by arrows 48 can be extracted, e.g. by an additional conditioning facility located, for example, in the ceiling of 5 the weave room.
Instead of conditioned air, the air supply ducting 42, 1, 1 ccan deliver ordinary unconditioned fresh air for renewing the air in the weave room 53 and for cleaning the space 51 10 inside the loom.
In the case of the loom shown in Fig. 1, the duct 42 may be formed only with the apertures 44 or only with the apertures 45 as air exit apertures for conditioning the weave 15 room. In this event, air for conditioning the weave room reaches the room by flowing either under the warp beam 21 or under the cloth beam 10 but not both so that when a number of looms are present in a weave 20 room, each weaver’s alley receives conditioning air from only one side.

Claims (7)

1. A loom having a ventilation air supply 25 duct extending parallel to the line of pick and located close to the floor in the space below the weaving plane and between the warp beam and the cloth beam, the air supply duct being formed with: first exit apertures for air 30 to be guided below the warp beam and/or the cloth beam and through into the weave room; and second exit apertures for air to be guided into the interior regions of the loom.

2. A loom as claimed in Claim 1 in which 35 the air supply duct is of triangular cross-
section, the base of the triangle extending substantially parallel to the base of the said space, the air exit-apertures being located at the vertices of the triangle.
40

3. A loom as claimed in Claim 1 in which the air supply duct is constituted by a load bearing member of the loom frame.

4. A loom as claimed in Claim 3 in which there is attached to the exterior of the load
45 bearing member a baffle for separating the air flows issuing rspectively from the first and second exit apertures.

5. A loom as claimed in any of the preceding claims which includes an air extraction
50 duct in the region above the air supply duct.

6. A loom as claimed in Claim 5 when appendant to Claim 3 or Claim 4 in which the interior of the load bearing member is divided longitudinally into parts, one part constituting
55 the air supply duct and the other part constituting the air extraction duct.

7. A loom substantially as described herein with reference to Fig. 1 or Fig. 2 or Fig. 3 of the accompanying drawings.
Printed for Her Majesty’s Stationery Office by Burgess & Son (Abingdon) Ltd.—1980.
Published at The Patent Office, 25 Southampton Buildings,
London, WC2A 1 AY, from which copies may be obtained.

GB7924787A
1978-07-17
1979-07-17
Looms having means for ventilation and cleaning

Expired

GB2027875B
(en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number
Priority Date
Filing Date
Title

CH768678A

CH632021A5
(en)

1978-07-17
1978-07-17

WEAVING MACHINE WITH A VENTILATION DEVICE.

Publications (2)

Publication Number
Publication Date

GB2027875A
true

GB2027875A
(en)

1980-02-27

GB2027875B

GB2027875B
(en)

1982-09-22

Family
ID=4329016
Family Applications (1)

Application Number
Title
Priority Date
Filing Date

GB7924787A
Expired

GB2027875B
(en)

1978-07-17
1979-07-17
Looms having means for ventilation and cleaning

Country Status (10)

Country
Link

US
(1)

US4265278A
(en)

JP
(1)

JPS5516997A
(en)

AT
(1)

AT363048B
(en)

CH
(1)

CH632021A5
(en)

CS
(1)

CS208672B2
(en)

DE
(1)

DE2834071C2
(en)

FR
(1)

FR2431561A1
(en)

GB
(1)

GB2027875B
(en)

IT
(1)

IT1122167B
(en)

SU
(1)

SU1029831A3
(en)

Families Citing this family (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party

Publication number
Priority date
Publication date
Assignee
Title

CH661069A5
(en)

*

1983-08-30
1987-06-30
Sulzer Ag

DEVICE FOR AIR-CONDITIONING THE TEXTILE GOODS IN A WEAVING MACHINE.

BE1000446A4
(en)

*

1987-04-02
1988-12-06
Picanol Nv
Process for looms for cooling in a weefzaal.

JP2548596B2
(en)

*

1988-02-25
1996-10-30
鐘淵化学工業株式会社

Method for forming coating film with improved durability

IT1256175B
(en)

*

1992-11-04
1995-11-29

AIR BLOW CLEANING DEVICE FOR TEXTILE FRAMES

US5321942A
(en)

*

1992-11-30
1994-06-21
Pneumafil Corporation
Method and apparatus for directing conditioned air to a spinning machine

SE507785C2
(en)

*

1996-11-29
1998-07-13
Texo Ab

Method and device for air or gas-powered vessel in weaving machine

CN1273289A
(en)

*

2000-06-01
2000-11-15
成有德
Loom able to directly and automatically wet warp

CN104499169A
(en)

*

2014-12-08
2015-04-08
李雪明
Circular weaving machine with dust removal function

Family Cites Families (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party

Publication number
Priority date
Publication date
Assignee
Title

BE569584A
(en)

*

BE603323A
(en)

*

1960-05-19
1961-09-01
Leesona Corp

Cleaning method for use with a textile machine

CH473926A
(en)

*

1967-03-17
1969-06-15
Luwa Ag

Pneumatic cleaning device on a weaving machine

CH490549A
(en)

*

1969-05-30
1970-05-15
Sulzer Ag

Device for conditioning the textile material in a weaving machine

CH524702A
(en)

*

1970-06-09
1972-06-30
Sulzer Ag
Textile goods conditioner – using a loom with enclosed warp beam

US3921675A
(en)

*

1972-08-01
1975-11-25
Voest Ag
Flat weaving machine

CH584302A5
(en)

*

1974-12-10
1977-01-31
Mueller Jakob Forschungs Und F
Pneumatic cleaning device for tape-weaving machine – formed by blower pipe located below shed and a suction hood disposed above shed over pipe

1978

1978-07-17
CH
CH768678A
patent/CH632021A5/en
not_active
IP Right Cessation

1978-07-28
AT
AT0550878A
patent/AT363048B/en
not_active
IP Right Cessation

1978-08-03
DE
DE2834071A
patent/DE2834071C2/en
not_active
Expired

1979

1979-07-10
SU
SU792788601A
patent/SU1029831A3/en
active

1979-07-11
FR
FR7918019A
patent/FR2431561A1/en
active
Granted

1979-07-13
IT
IT24337/79A
patent/IT1122167B/en
active

1979-07-16
JP
JP9025679A
patent/JPS5516997A/en
active
Granted

1979-07-17
CS
CS795008A
patent/CS208672B2/en
unknown

1979-07-17
US
US06/058,244
patent/US4265278A/en
not_active
Expired – Lifetime

1979-07-17
GB
GB7924787A
patent/GB2027875B/en
not_active
Expired

Also Published As

Publication number
Publication date

IT1122167B
(en)

1986-04-23

JPS6153451B2
(en)

1986-11-18

SU1029831A3
(en)

1983-07-15

CH632021A5
(en)

1982-09-15

JPS5516997A
(en)

1980-02-06

US4265278A
(en)

1981-05-05

DE2834071A1
(en)

1980-06-12

ATA550878A
(en)

1980-11-15

FR2431561B1
(en)

1983-10-07

IT7924337D0
(en)

1979-07-13

CS208672B2
(en)

1981-09-15

FR2431561A1
(en)

1980-02-15

DE2834071C2
(en)

1982-09-30

AT363048B
(en)

1981-07-10

GB2027875B
(en)

1982-09-22

Similar Documents

Publication
Publication Date
Title

US3391528A
(en)

1968-07-09

Air handling and cleaning apparatus for machines

GB2027875A
(en)

1980-02-27

Looms having means for ventilation and cleaning

GB2027878A
(en)

1980-02-27

Looms having provision for ventilation and removal of lint and fly

US3678965A
(en)

1972-07-25

Pneumatic cleaning apparatus for textile machinery

GB2323663A
(en)

1998-09-30

Dust extraction equipment for looms

US4678012A
(en)

1987-07-07

Cleaning and yarn conditioning system for weaving machines

EP0137056B1
(en)

1986-11-26

Device for the climatisation of a weave in a loom

HU177044B
(en)

1981-06-28

Ventilating device for loom

US4265277A
(en)

1981-05-05

Weaving machine having noise attenuating means

US2625958A
(en)

1953-01-20

Loom harness

JPH0424244A
(en)

1992-01-28

Weaving of satin stripe woven fabric and the like

US2421135A
(en)

1947-05-27

Method and apparatus for conditioning warp, threads, yarns, and the like

US4903737A
(en)

1990-02-27

Producing a multi-ply fabric on a loom having auxiliary end reeds

US4221240A
(en)

1980-09-09

Apparatus and method for absorbing moisture removed from fluid-jet loom

CN214244745U
(en)

2021-09-21

Adjusting device for warp stopping frame of air jet loom

US3169248A
(en)

1965-02-09

Weft creel for looms

US4699179A
(en)

1987-10-13

Cleaning and yarn conditioning system for weaving machines

CN109208159A
(en)

2019-01-15

A kind of loom and woven fabric method without reed beating

US2232312A
(en)

1941-02-18

Toy loom

US4712587A
(en)

1987-12-15

Cleaning and yarn conditioning system for weaving machines

US2192997A
(en)

1940-03-12

Loom attachment

CN214882086U
(en)

2021-11-26

Denim beating-up mechanism for loom

US2094306A
(en)

1937-09-28

Weft inserting and beating-up mechanism of looms for weaving

JPH10108782A
(en)

1998-04-28

Rush blind

RU12570U1
(en)

2000-01-20

DEVICE FOR FORMING A TRANSLATION FABRIC

Legal Events

Date
Code
Title
Description

1982-09-22
PG
Patent granted

Download PDF in English

None