Cut Pile Looper and Hook Tufting Improvement
20200318273 ยท 2020-10-08
Inventors
- Jason Detty (Chattanooga, TN, US)
- Randy Stanfield (Chattanooga, TN, US)
- Michael Kilgore (Chattanooga, TN, US)
Cpc classification
D05C15/10
TEXTILES; PAPER
D05C15/22
TEXTILES; PAPER
International classification
D05C15/10
TEXTILES; PAPER
D05C15/22
TEXTILES; PAPER
Abstract
A tufting machine with a needle bar and looper system provides individual loopers which cooperate with needles of the needle bar selectively between an engage and a disengage configuration whereby when in the engage configuration at least some of the loopers hold yarn directed by the needle through the backing as the needle cycles into and out of the backing to form a first loop having a height of a distance of the looper from the backing, but when in the disengage configuration, the looper is spaced from the yarn so that any loop formed is shorter than the first loop.
Claims
1. A tufting machine comprising: at least a first row of needles mounted along a needle bar reciprocally driven relative to a backing material through which the needles penetrate during each cycle of the tufting machine; a looper apparatus having a first transverse hook bar with a plurality of individual loopers, said individual loopers operably coupled to drivers, said drivers directing the individual loopers intermediate an engage and a disengage configuration, wherein when in the engage configuration, a selected one of the individual loopers has a looper bill contacting yarn extending from a needle and forms a loop through the backing opposite the needle bar when the needle cycles into and out of the backing with the loop having a height of a distance of the looper bill from the backing, and a disengage configuration wherein the selected one of the individual loopers is displaced during the cycle of the needle into and out of the backing so the looper bill does not to contact the yarn during the cycle, and a loop, if formed has a height less than the distance of the looper from the backing, if not pulled back through the backing with the needle.
2. The tufting machine of claim 1 wherein the drivers linearly move the individual loopers intermediate the engage and disengage configurations.
3. The tufting machine of claim 1 wherein the drivers further comprise pistons operably coupled to the individual loopers.
4. The tufting machine of claim 1 wherein the individual loopers retract from the engage configuration to the disengage configuration.
5. The tufting machine of claim 1 wherein the individual loopers have hook legs which extend from one side of the needle to the other side in the engage configuration and are spaced from the needle in the disengage configuration.
6. The tufting machine of claim 5 further comprising a plurality of knives wherein a knife cuts against the looper to provide cut loops with loops formed in the engage configuration.
7. The tufting machine of claim 1 wherein for at least one pair of adjacent loopers, a first looper is in the engage configuration and the second looper is in the disengage configuration during a cycle of the needle.
8. The tufting machine of claim 1 further comprising a second transverse bar with a plurality of individual loopers oppositely disposed relative to the needles from the first transverse bar with the individual loopers of the second transverse bar directed towards the needles.
9. The tufting machine of claim 8 further comprising stacked loopers having legs extending towards the needles at at least two distances from the backing thereby selecting providing at least one of two different height loops.
10. The tufting machine of claim 8 wherein loopers of the second transverse bar have hooks.
11. The tufting machine of claim 10 wherein the loopers of the first and second transverse bars are at a common distance from the backing.
12. The tufting machine of claim 1 further comprising stacked loopers having legs extending towards the needles at at least two distances from the backing thereby selecting providing at least one of two different height loops.
13. The tufting machine of claim 12 wherein the stacked loopers extend toward and away from the needles from common directions.
14. The tufting machine of claim 1 wherein the individual loopers have a carrier along which the looper displaces between the engage and disengage configurations.
15. The tufting machine of claim 14 wherein the loopers move linearly along the carrier intermediate the engage and disengage configurations.
16. The tufting machine of claim 15 wherein the loopers are at least partially disposed internal to the carrier.
17. The tufting machine of claim 1 further comprising a permanently engaged looper located above the individual looper, whereby if the individual looper is in the disengage configuration, the yarn contacts the permanently engaged looper to form a first loop during a needle cycle, but if the individual looper is in the engage configuration, the yarn contacts the individual looper to form a second loop during the needle cycle with the second loop extending a longer distance from the backing than the first loop.
18. The tufting machine of claim 19 wherein the permanently engaged looper forms a portion of a carrier whereby the individual looper moves intermediate the engage and disengage configurations in contact therewith.
19. The tufting machine of claim 1 wherein the loopers have hooks at ends of hook legs.
20. The tufting machine of claim 1 wherein adjacent drivers are stacked elevationally away from the backing while the loopers are at a common distance from the backing.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0025] Particular features and advantages of the present invitation will become apparent from the following description when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
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[0039]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0040] Referring now to the drawings in more detail,
[0041] Backing material 18 can be fed in the direction illustrated by the arrow across the bed 20 of the tufting machine, being supported on a needle plate 22 carrying a plurality of fingers 24,26. During needle penetration, the needles 12,14 pass during penetration between respective fingers 24,26 extending from the needle plate in the direction of backing material feed. After penetration of the backing material the needles 12,14 cooperate with respective oscillating hooks 28,30 beneath the backing material which seize loops of yarn formed by the needles and hold the loops as the needles withdraw from the backing material.
[0042] The hooks 28,30 may be conventionally mounted in hook bars 32 carried by a mounting bar 34 secured to the upper end of a rocker arm 36. Oscillation of the arm 36 may be conventionally provided by clamping the lower end of the arm to a laterally extending rock shaft 38 journalled in the bed 20 of the machine. A connecting link 40 pivotably connected to the upper portion of the rocker arm 36 at one end and pivotably connected to a jack shaft rocker arm 42 clamped to a jack shaft 44 oscillated by conventional means in timed relationship with the reciprocation of the needle bar, acts to drive the rocker arm 36.
[0043] A respective knife 46,48 cooperates with each hook 28,30 to cut loops of yarn seized and retained on such hook and moving rearwardly thereof into the part of movement of the knife as the backing material advances. The knives 46,48 may be mounted in a knife block 50 secured on a rocker arm 52 clamped to an oscillating rocker shaft 54 driven in timed relationship with the reciprocation of the needle bar so as to provide a scissors-like cutting action between the knives and their respective hooks to from cut pile fabric.
[0044] Referring now to the drawings in more detail,
[0045] The looper apparatus 181 which cooperates with the needles 111 and 121 includes a transverse hook bar 201 fixed upon a transverse hook bar plate 211, which is in turn supported upon a plurality of rocker arms 22 journaled on a rock shaft, not shown, and driven by conventional means connected at link pins 231.
[0046] The hook bar 201 has a front face 241, a rear face 251 and a top surface or face 261.
[0047] Formed in the front face 241 are a plurality of uniformly spaced vertical front slots 281. The thickness of the front slots 281 is substantially the same as the thickness of the portion of the corresponding front looper 301 to be received therein.
[0048] Each of the rear loopers 341 is of a substantially uniform, relatively thin steel material and includes a body portion 391 adapted to be received in the first top slot 351 substantially snugly. A shank portion 401 depending from the body portion 391 is also snugly received within a real slot 322 and held in the rear slot 321 by means of the set screws 411. Projecting longitudinally forward from the body portion 381 is a relative short bill 421 adapted to cooperate with a rear needle 121.
[0049] In a similar manner, the body portion 431 of each looper 301 is also a uniformly thin material adapted to be received in a top slot 361. A shank portion 441 depends from the body portion 431 for reception within a front slot 281, and the shank portion 441 is held in the front slot 281 by a front set screw 451. Projecting longitudinally forward from the body portion 431 is the long bill 461 adapted to cooperate with a corresponding front needle 111 for forming a loop of yarn. The bill 461 reciprocates with each cycle of the needle 111 to form the loop.
[0050] In a preferred form of the invention, each body portion 391 and 431 form transversely aligned throat portions 471 and 481, each of which is adapted to cooperate with one of a plurality of transversely aligned conventional tufting knives 501.
[0051] It will be noted in
[0052] Thus, with each body portion 391 and 431 if each corresponding looper 341 and 301 snugly received throughout substantial portion of its length within a corresponding top slot 351 and 361, the thin loopers 341 and 361 required for the extremely narrow gauge of the needles 111 and 121 are adequately reinforced and supported for their continuous and rapid reciprocation. Vibration and wear of the thin reciprocating loopers cooperating with the receptive needles 111 and 121 are in cutting cooperation with the respective knives 501, are minimized.
[0053] It will be apparent from the drawings that the knives 501 must also be thin and of lesser thickness than the corresponding divider walls 371 between the adjacent top slots 351 and 361.
[0054] Reversing the lengths of the bills 421 and 461 and reversing the stagger of the corresponding needles also has occurred in the prior art. Thus, the front bill 461 could be the short bill and the rear bill 421 could be the long bill.
[0055] The rear extension of the body portion 431 of the front looper 301 preferably rests solidly in the bottom of the slot 361 to gauge the height setting of the looper 301. Likewise, the lower edge of the body portion 391 rests solidly in the bottom of the top slots 351 to gauge the heights of the rear looper 341.
[0056] With the cut pile looper technology disclosed above, there are certainly improvements which can be made thereto particularly as combined with other technology in the tufting art. Specifically, a cut pile looper system 100 such as shown in
[0057] What is believed to be novel about looper apparatus or system 100 of a tufting machine is not only are there a plurality of individual loopers 102,104,106,108 with corresponding hook ends 110 but the hook ends 110 and/or looper bills 126 as being separately directable by and/or operably coupled to drivers 110,112,114,116 each corresponding to separate loopers 102,104,106,108 etc. so as to be separately controllable with drivers 110,112,114 and 116. Drivers 110,112,114,116 can separately extend pistons 118,120,122,124 which may be elevationally stacked or otherwise provided so that the respective looper bill 126 possibly with a hook leg 110, can extend beyond a needle 128 so as to engage a yarn 130 in a first, or extended, configuration as shown in
[0058] What the prior art loopers lack is a disengage configuration where the cylinders 110-116, with pistons 118-124, retract horizontally therefore preventing the looper or hook 110 from engaging the yarn 130 during a stroke of the needle 128 of a first and/or other row of needles of a needle bar reciprocally driven relative to a backing 132 during each cycle of a tufting machine. In an engage configuration, the hook 110 forms a loop of yarn at the looper bill 126 or hook 110 during each cycle when in the engage configuration having a height extending from the backing 132 to the contact location along the looper bill 126. Accordingly, so instead of providing a loop that is not cut like the Nakagawa U.S. Published Application 2010/01322602, instead a no-sew event can occur where the yarn 130 is pulled or retracted by the needle 128, preferably completely back through backing 132, as the needle is pulled backwardly through the backing 132 to prepare for the next stitch. Even if a loop remains through the backing 132, such a loop would extend a shorter distance from backing 132 than if the loop were retained by the hook 110 and/or looper bill 126.
[0059] While a basic form of a no-sew embodiment as shown with reference to
[0060] Utilizing this technology, a particular color provided as a yarn 130 on a needle 128 can be picked up and cut against throat portion 134 as a cut loop or that color yarn 130 can be left in the needle 128 when it is not desired as a no-sew. Sliding needle bars, stacked needle bars or other technology, could also be employed or even the technology utilized by competitors such as CMC and others. Utilizing such a capability, there may be no back robbing as appears with other technology for some embodiments. Furthermore, the loopers only selectively appear under needles when so desired (and not under every needle in many embodiments). There can certainly be many situations in which the loopers 102-108 do not provide hooks 110 respectively under all of the needles 128, or could for still other embodiments.
[0061] Accordingly, when put into multi-color complex needle bar systems (such as often utilized in PCT/US2017/054683 and others) the ability to selectively engage, or not, a first, transverse hook and/or looper bar with a plurality of individual loopers 102-108 with a corresponding bill 126 and hook leg 110 or not, is believed to be a huge improvement over the prior art. Specifically, when making this determination the loopers with bills 126 and hook legs 110 are preferably moved at least substantially horizontally in direction 136 (which may or may not be coupled to a rotating assembly as in the more basic prior art design), but could be more automatically, pneumatically and/or electrically controlled, possibly cooperate with the DACS air cylinder technology of applicant's U.S. Pat. No. 8,215,248, incorporated herein in its entirety, which could provide the actuation means or drives 102-108 for driving the pistons 118-124. Of course, other driving systems could be utilized with other embodiments as well.
[0062] In addition to having the extendable loopers 102-108 extend from the first side 140 of the needle 128, it may also be possible to have a second set of fingers, loopers, or other gauge parts 144 from a second or other transverse bar, possibly similar to a first transverse bar supporting individual loopers 102-108 which could extend from the opposite side 142 of the needle 128 (opposite needle axis 141) so as to be able to provide different effects than just a single cut loop height product through the backing 132 possibly at a common distance from backing 132 or not.
[0063] In the extended configuration, the hook leg 110 extends to the second side 142 of the needle 128 from the first side 140 past the needle 128, or at least the needle axis 141, or sufficient to catch the yarn 130, with the needle 128 normally extending vertically along its axis. In the retracted configuration, the hook leg 110 fails to extend to the second side 142, or to the needle axis 141, in many embodiments from the first side 140 and/or is spaced by a gap therefrom without extending past the needle axis 141. When in the retracted or disengaged configuration, as the needle 128 cycles up and down in direction 143, the affected looper 102-108 with hook leg 110 misses, or does not contact the yarn 130, however, if any of the loopers 102-108 are in the extended or engaged configuration as is shown in
[0064] Direction 136 need not necessarily be perpendicular to direction 143 for all embodiments, but for many embodiments directions 136 and 143 are likely to be close to being perpendicular.
[0065] In fact, incorporating the technology as taught in recently issued U.S. Pat. No. 10,233,578, incorporated herein by reference, a much better way of providing a no sew condition and/or elevational system could be provided by providing multiple elevations of loopers represented with phantom as 146 whether cut loop loopers possibly with a knife and/or loop hooks 148 and/or other attachments so as to provide varying elevations (two are shown with a first elevation at looper(s) 148 and those at the elevation of 102) for multiple color products with horizontally directed loopers as opposed to vertically extending gauge members of that technology.
[0066] Not only can the improved cylinders of U.S. Pat. No. 8,215,258 be utilized so as to defeat spring fatigue that the U.S. Pat. No. 10,233,578 patent appears to be destined to suffer, particularly when subjected to vertical operation, but also potentially eliminate sloppy higher loops that could be created due to the spring tension not holding a specific elevation during operation, particularly since customers appear to be demanding at this time, crisp differentiation between high and low elevations of tufts at the interfaces.
[0067]
[0068] While cut pile loopers 102-108 are particularly well suited to this technology, other gauge parts 144, such as loop hook system 200 having loop hooks 202, 204, 206, 208, could be utilized as gauge parts 144 and/or instead of, and/or possibly in combination with cut pile loopers 102-108 either in the positions shown in
[0069] Furthermore, any of these components can be placed at various elevations relative to the backing 132 to achieve different levels of tuft for various needles 128, such as at a first elevation of looper 100 or at a second elevation of looper 146, it being observed from
[0070] As may be seen with reference to
[0071] The bill 226 terminates at an end 231 which does not contact needle 228 or yarn 230 in the retracted configuration shown in
[0072] Driver 216 is shown extending piston 224 and the corresponding hook 208 with bill 226 extends from the first side 240 to the second side 242 of the needle axis 241 so as engage the needle 228 and/or yarn to form a loop as would be understood by those of ordinary skill in the art as an extended configuration. Modules 270 of multiple hooks may be provided as shown or otherwise. If yarn 230 is engaged, it can contact throat 210 of hook 208, etc. A processor controls which hooks 208, etc. engage any particular needle 228 at any particular stroke so as to provide a desired pattern as would be understood by those of ordinary skill in the art.
[0073] Carrier 201 as shown in
[0074]
[0075] Furthermore, this embodiment has a retracted configuration shown in
[0076] As can be seen with reference to
[0077] As could be understood by one of ordinary skill in the art, unlike U.S. Pat. No. 10,233,578, even if there were spring fatigue or the springs tended to provide differing flex over time and/or relative to each other, with drivers such as driver 306, the loop elevations 314,316 should be crisp, and not sloppy since the drivers 306 act to move the hooks 304 (and possibly 302), although certainly 202-208 and others horizontally rather than vertically. As long as the lower surfaces, such as 322,324 are at desired locations, then the desired loops, of repeatable and consistent characteristics, particularly noticeable at interfaces, are expected to be particularly crisp and sharp.
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[0080] Although needles 402,404 are shown to be potentially separately drivable in
[0081] Utilizing the technology provided herein, extremely high-quality carpet can be provided, particularly multi-colored carpet. Furthermore, whether all the features described herein are utilized in any embodiment, or simplified, so as to provide limited pile height, eliminating back robbing and/or limited penetrations per inch and/or color selection, extremely high-quality carpet can be provided to the marketplace utilizing the technology disclosed herein.
[0082] Numerous alterations of the structure herein disclosed will suggest themselves to those skilled in the art. However, it is to be understood that the present disclosure relates to the preferred embodiment of the invention which is for purposes of illustration only and not to be construed as a limitation of the invention. All such modifications which do not depart from the spirit of the invention are intended to be included within the scope of the appended claims.