Title of Invention

WEAVING MACHINE

Abstract A weaving machine (1) comprises two temples (2) whose axis is parallel to the weft threads and which are located at the lateral edges of the cloth (5) , a cylindrical cloth-deflecting bar (6) on which the cloth (5) presses around an arc of contact (±i) before winding around a haul-off roll (7) on which one or more back-up rolls (8, 9) press, in which machine the cloth- deflecting bar (6) is composed of a central cylindrical portion (6t) which connects coaxially on either side with two terminal portions (6d, 6e) next to the areas where the temples (2) are installed, the terminal portions having throughout their length a cross section which varies in shape proceeding from their ends adjacent to the central portion towards the free ends in such a way that the position, shape and/or amplitude of the said arc of contact (±i) vary, causing a variation in the tension transmitted to the corresponding areas of the cloth (5) by the haul-off roll (7), such that it varies from a minimum value (Tm) at the ends of the terminal portions adjacent to the central portion (6t) to a maximum value (TM) at their free ends. The terminal portions (6d, 6e) are separate from and connect to the central portion (6t). Fixing means are fitted to reversibly clamp the terminal portions (6d, 6e).
Full Text Weaving machine
The present invention relates to a weaving machine, and more
particularly refers to a weaving machine provided with a device
for correcting the distortion of the weft, that is a machine
able to eliminate the aberrations of perpendicularity between
the weft and warp.
As those skilled in the art know, a weaving machine comprises
among other things, besides various structural and supporting
parts, two temples consisting of rollers whose axis is parallel
to the weft threads at the lateral edges of the cloth to be
produced, and a smooth or threaded cylindrical cloth-deflecting
bar, on which the said cloth presses, as soon as it is gathered,
around an arc of contact before winding around a haul-off roll,
in contact with which are one or more back-up rolls to draw the
cloth off.
The said two temples perform the function of keeping the cloth
taut during and after insertion of the warp threads, and to this
end exert a pressure on the cloth, pressing it against a support
surface. This arrangement of the parts means that the tension
exerted on the cloth by the abovementioned haul-off roll due to
the back-up rolls has effects which, in the areas where the said
temples are installed, are very different from those which occur
in the remaining areas of the cloth, that is in the central
area.
In this area the cloth, coming under the said tension of the
haul-off roll, stretches longitudinally, that is at right angles
to the weft, to a considerably greater extent than in the areas
near the temples, where the deformation of the cloth is opposed
by the action of the temples themselves. As a consequence of
this, the lines of the weft threads are not perfectly straight,

and comprise a central section which is basically
straight and then leads into two lateral sections which
inflect towards the point on which the temples press.
This means that the lateral areas of the cloth are
practically unusable because of the non-
perpendicularity of the weft and warp with respect to
each other. Because this lack of perpendicularity
affects both lateral edges of the cloth for a length of
at least 10 cm, a total of some 20 cm of the cloth has
to be discarded, which, with current cloth sizes,
corresponds to some 15% of the width of a fabric.
The economic damage caused by this problems, which is
intrinsic to the modes of operation of a weaving
machine, will be obvious.
In the present state of the art the only operation
carried out to correct the distortions described above
is to apply differential tensions to the cloth by a
manual or other type of operation, and this operation
means unacceptable additional costs. More importantly,
with some types of cloth it is simply impossible to
perform this operation: for example in cloths on which
paints, resins or the like are spread in the course of
processing, it is impossible to correct the distortions
that occur during the actual weaving process.
However, the inventor of the present innovation
realized that, if differential tension could be applied
to the cloth downstream of the temples, with a
magnitude that varies from area to area so as to
compensate for the distortions described above, it
would be possible to restore exact perpendicularity
between the warp and the weft. This can indeed be done
by exerting less tension on the central part of the
cloth, which has already been stretched to a greater
extent, than that exerted on the lateral areas around
the temples.

Because the magnitude of this tension depends, all other
conditions being equal, on the shape and area of the arc of
contact of the cloth on the cloth-deflecting bar, the inventor
conceived the idea of varying this arc of contact in the
different areas of the cloth by appropriate shaping of the cross
section of the terminal portions of the cloth-deflecting bar,
affecting the length involved in the abovementioned distortions,
which may be estimated to be about 25 cm.
By this means it is possible, for a certain coefficient of
friction and for a predetermined tension exerted by the haul-off
roll, to "stretch" the fabric in the warp direction with a
differential effect in its different areas, being greater in the
lateral areas affected by the temples. In order to enable the
same cloth-deflecting bar to be used for cloths with different
properties of compactness, elasticity and coefficient of
friction, the inventor also, as will be explained later, makes
provision for the shaped terminal portions of the cloth-
deflecting bar to be able to be rotated with respect to the
cylindrical central part of the bar, so that, by exploiting the
special geometrical form of the cross section of the said
terminal portions, it is possible to modify the shape and/or
amplitude of the said arc of contact, as well as the direction
in which the fabric moves away from the said cloth-deflecting
bar.
The subject of the present invention therefore consists of a
weaving machine comprising at least two temples whose axis is
parallel to the weft threads and which are located at the
lateral edges of the cloth, a generally cylindrical cloth-
deflecting bar on which the cloth presses around an arc of
contact before winding around a haul-off roll on which one or

more back-up rolls press, the said cloth-deflecting bar
being composed of a central cylindrical portion which connects
coaxially on either side with two terminal portions next to the
areas where the said temples are installed, the said two
terminal portions having throughout their length a cross section
which varies in shape proceeding from their ends adjacent to the
said central portion towards their free ends in such a way that
the position, shape and/or amplitude of the said arc of contact,
when proceeding in the same direction, vary, causing a variation
in the tension transmitted to the corresponding areas of the
cloth by the haul-off roll, such that it varies from a minimum
value at the said ends of the terminal portions adjacent to the
central portion to a maximum value at their free ends,
characterized in that the said two terminal portions of the
cloth-deflecting bar are separated by the central cylindrical
portion and are connected to it coaxially in such a way that
they can rotate about the common axis, and fixing means are
fitted to reversibly clamp the terminal portions when they have
rotated through a desired angle with respect to the said central
cylindrical portion.
A more detailed description will now be given of a preferred
illustrative embodiment of the weaving machine according to the
invention, with reference also to the accompanying drawings,
which show :
in Figure 1, a diagrammatic side view of the weaving machine
of the invention;

- in Figure 2, a plan view of a cloth showing the
distortions of perpendicularity between the weft
threads and warp threads, and how they are corrected
in the machine of the invention;
- in Figure 3, a plan view of the cloth-deflecting bar
only of a weaving machine according to the invention
with a diagrammatic representation of the variation
of the magnitude of the tension exerted on the
different areas of the cloth;
- in Figures 4 and 5, two cross sections taken in
different positions along one terminal portion of the
cloth-deflecting bar, with the arrangement of the
warp threads which run around these sections and wind
with varying winding angles around the haul-off roll;
- in Figure 6, an end view of one terminal portion of
the cloth-deflecting bar of the machine of the
invention; and
- in Figure 7, a side view of the same terminal portion
as in Figure 4.
Taking Figure 1 to begin with, this shows only the
essential parts of a weaving machine 1 according to the
invention. This machine comprises, like machines of
known type, two temples 2 (in the drawing only one of
these is visible) on either side of the cloth 5, which
press the cloth 5 to keep it stretched during weaving,
against two shaped supports 10 referred to as "cloth
supports". Downstream of the abovementioned temples 2
the cloth runs around an arc of contact αi on the outer
surface of a cloth-deflecting bar 6, before winding,
through a winding angle βi around a haul-off roll 7,
against which one or more back-up rolls or
cylinders 8, 9 press.
With conventional cloth-deflecting bars, which are
cylindrical all the way along their length, the
diagram, Figure 2, shows what happens to the weft
threads 3i and warp threads 4i, as already mentioned:
because of the tension applied uniformly by the

haul-off roll 7 along the whole length of the
cloth-deflecting bar 6, the area of the cloth 5 next to
the temples 2 is held back by the pressure of the
latter on the cloth supports 10, and in these areas the
stretching of the cloth, which does occur in the
central area of the said cloth 5, is resisted. This
produces an aberration in the parallelism between the
weft threads 3i, which in the said areas next to the
temples 2 are not perpendicular to the warp threads 4i.
In the machine 1 of the invention, to avoid this
problem and its consequences as described above, the
cloth-deflecting bar 6 is composed of a central
cylindrical portion 6t (for which see Figure 3) which
connects on either side with two terminal portions 6d,
6e of length L approximately equal to 25 cm, the cross
section of which terminal portions varies throughout
their length L, from a circular shape at the ends E, D
adjacent to the central portion 6t to an asymmetrical
shape, eccentric with respect to the common axis of
rotation N-N, at the free ends A, B.
This particular sequence of the shapes of the cross
section of the terminal portions 6d, 6e of the cloth-
deflecting bar 6 has the effect of continuously
changing the shape and amplitude of the arc of contact
αi and its position (due to how far it projects from
the axis N-N) with respect to the haul-off roll 7.
This effect is shown more clearly in Figures 4 and 5:
whereas in the situation of Figure 4 the tension caused
on the cloth 5 by the haul-off roll 7 in the cross-
sectional position depicted has a minimum value Tm equal
to that of the tension applied to its central portion
6t, in the situation shown in Figure 5 this tension
reaches, at the free ends of the terminal portions 6d,
6e, a maximum value TM. The result is a gradual
compensation, cross section by cross section, of the
effects of the distortion generated in the course of

weaving by imparting to the areas of the lateral edges
of the cloth a gradual "stretching" which restores the
parallelism between the weft threads 3i and hence their
perpendicularity with respect to the warp threads 4i
through the whole length of the cloth 5. For the
distribution of tension values in the different areas
of the cloth-deflecting bar 6, see Figure 3.
Because of the fact that, depending on the type of
cloth and its elasticity and coefficient of friction,
different diagrams of tension in the warp thread
direction may be necessary, the invention provides for
forming the said two terminal portions 6d, 6e as
separate parts that can be connected on opposite sides,
coaxially, to the central portion 6t, and which can be
rotated about the common axis N-N (Figure 3) with
respect to the said central portion 6t, and then be
fixed in a desired relative position by reversible
fixing means of known type, such as for example fixing
screws 8 which, when tightened, press on the stationary
spindle on which both the terminal portions 6d, 6e and
the central portion 6t are mounted.
Due to the asymmetry of the shape of the different
cross sections of a terminal portion constructed as
described earlier, the rotation of the said terminal
portion with respect to its longitudinal axis also
brings about a variation in the shape, amplitude and
position of the said arc of contact αi at each of its
cross sections, with the result that precise
adjustments can be made by turning the terminal
portions 6d, 6e, while the machine 1 is running, until
it can be seen by eye that the distortions leading to
the aberrations of perpendicularity between the weft
threads 3i and warp threads 4i have been eliminated.
The effect of these operations on a machine 1 according
to the invention can be seen in Figure 2: the three
weft threads 3i drawn at the bottom have clearly been
returned to the correct geometrical form which they had

upstream of the temple 2 (the direction of translation
of the cloth 5 is indicated by the arrow V).
The geometry of the differing cross sections of a
terminal portion can be determined from assessments of
the type of cloth and the type of processing, and a
designer can therefore design the envelope of the
outline of the cross sections which he considers the
most appropriate. In a solution suggested by the
inventor, shown in Figures 6 and 7 for one terminal
portion 6e only, the latter has a cross section which
is circular at the end D adjacent to the central
portion 6t, which has an identical radius R, and joins
that of the free end B via an envelope of lines
generated by removal of material which reduces the
distance of a part of the outline from the said radius
R to a lower value Q, and increases the radius of
curvature of the said outline from R to infinite when
proceeding from the said end D to the free end B.
The axis of rotation (which as already explained
coincides with the axis N-N of the central portion 6t)
is also made in such a way as to pass through the
centre of the said circular cross section of the end D
adjacent to the central portion 6t, and eccentric with
respect to the cross section of the other end B, so
that the distance from one part of the outline of the
latter to the axis of rotation N-N varies continuously
from the said value R to the said lower value Q.
With a weaving machine constructed in accordance with
the present invention it is possible simply and quickly
to correct the distortions of the cloth described
above, particularly the distortion of perpendicularity
between the weft and warp, thus achieving the
inventor's initial objects.

WE CLAIM


1. Weaving machine (1) comprising at least two temples (2)
whose axis is parallel to the weft threads (3i) and which are
located at the lateral edges of the cloth (5) , a generally
cylindrical cloth-deflecting bar (6) on which the cloth (5)
presses around an arc of contact (±i) before winding around a
haul-off roll (7) on which one or more back-up rolls (8, 9)
press, the said cloth-deflecting bar (6) being composed of a
central cylindrical portion (6t) which connects coaxially on
either side with two terminal portions (6d, 6e) next to the
areas where the said temples (2) are installed, the said two
terminal portions (6d, 6e) having throughout their length (L) a
cross section which varies in shape proceeding from their ends
(E, D) adjacent to the said central portion (6t) towards their
free ends (A, B)in such a way that theposition, shape and/or
amplitude of the said arc of contact (±i)when proceeding in
the same direction, vary, causing a variation in the tension
transmitted to the corresponding areas of the cloth (5) by the
haul-off roll (7), such that it varies from a minimum value (Tm)
at the said ends of the terminal portions (C, D) adjacent to the
central portion (6t) to a maximum value (TM) at their free ends
(A, B) , characterized in that the said two terminal portions
(6d, 6e) of the cloth-deflecting bar (6) are separated by the
central cylindrical portion (6t) and are connected to it
coaxially in such a way that they can rotate about the common
axis (N-N) , and fixing means (8) are fitted to reversibly clamp
the terminal portions (6d, 6e) when they have rotated through a
desired angle with respect to the said central cylindrical
portion (6t).





2. Machine as claimed in claim 1, wherein each of the said two
terminal portions (6d, 6e) of the cloth-deflecting bar (6) has a
cross section which is circular at the end {E, D) adjacent to
the central cylindrical portion (6t), which has an identical
radius (R) , and joins that of the free end (A, B) via an
envelope of lines generated by removal of material which reduces
the distance of a part of the outline from the said radius (R)
to a lower value (Q), while increasing the radius of curvature
of the said outline from (R) to infinite, the axis of rotation
(N-N) being central with respect to the said circular cross
section of the end (D, E) adjacent to the central portion (6t),
and eccentric with respect to the cross section of the other end
(A, B), whereby the distance from one part of the outline of the
latter to the axis of rotation (N-N) varies continuously from
the said value (R) to the said lower value (Q).

A weaving machine (1) comprises two temples (2) whose axis
is parallel to the weft threads and which are located at the
lateral edges of the cloth (5) , a cylindrical cloth-deflecting
bar (6) on which the cloth (5) presses around an arc of contact
(±i) before winding around a haul-off roll (7) on which one or
more back-up rolls (8, 9) press, in which machine the cloth-
deflecting bar (6) is composed of a central cylindrical portion
(6t) which connects coaxially on either side with two terminal
portions (6d, 6e) next to the areas where the temples (2) are
installed, the terminal portions having throughout their length
a cross section which varies in shape proceeding from their ends
adjacent to the central portion towards the free ends in such a
way that the position, shape and/or amplitude of the said arc of
contact (±i) vary, causing a variation in the tension
transmitted to the corresponding areas of the cloth (5) by the
haul-off roll (7), such that it varies from a minimum value (Tm)
at the ends of the terminal portions adjacent to the central
portion (6t) to a maximum value (TM) at their free ends. The
terminal portions (6d, 6e) are separate from and connect to the
central portion (6t). Fixing means are fitted to reversibly
clamp the terminal portions (6d, 6e).

Documents:

211-KOLNP-2004-FORM 27.pdf

211-kolnp-2004-granted-abstract.pdf

211-kolnp-2004-granted-assignment.pdf

211-kolnp-2004-granted-claims.pdf

211-kolnp-2004-granted-correspondence.pdf

211-kolnp-2004-granted-description (complete).pdf

211-kolnp-2004-granted-drawings.pdf

211-kolnp-2004-granted-examination report.pdf

211-kolnp-2004-granted-form 1.pdf

211-kolnp-2004-granted-form 18.pdf

211-kolnp-2004-granted-form 3.pdf

211-kolnp-2004-granted-form 5.pdf

211-kolnp-2004-granted-gpa.pdf

211-kolnp-2004-granted-reply to examination report.pdf

211-kolnp-2004-granted-specification.pdf


Patent Number 227776
Indian Patent Application Number 211/KOLNP/2004
PG Journal Number 04/2009
Publication Date 23-Jan-2009
Grant Date 20-Jan-2009
Date of Filing 17-Feb-2004
Name of Patentee SAM ENGINEERING S.A
Applicant Address VIA FRASCA 3, 6900 LUGANO
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 SERVALLI MARIO VIA ROMA, 39, I-24026 LEFFE
PCT International Classification Number D03D 49/02
PCT International Application Number PCT/IB2002/03014
PCT International Filing date 2002-08-02
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 NA