Spinning PDF
Spinning PDF
Spinning PDF
Ezio Carissoni
Stefanno Dotti
Franco Fleiss
Luigi Petaccia
Lucia Pieri
Foreword
I am pleased to present the fourth handbook in the series on textile machinery technology that the
ACIMIT Foundation is publishing for use in Italys institutes of textile technology.
This handbook looks at the machinery, accessories, auxiliary equipment and technologies relating to
cotton and wool spinning, a further sector in which Italy boasts companies of international prominence
and remarkable expertise.
This spinning handbook follows the ones on weaving, knitting and finishing, all of which have
now reached their second edition, the 12,000 copies printed to date bearing witness to the interest
generated by the series.
A fifth book, on chemical fibres is currently being produced to complete the series.
The need to publish these books emerged in the course of a series of meetings that ACIMIT had with
principals and teachers in the context of various initiatives designed to promote relations between the
industry and schools.
We were told that the textbooks currently in use do not reflect the continued and rapid technological
evolution the sector has seen in recent years.
With the precise aim of publishing handbooks that respond, as far as possible, to students learning
needs, the ACIMIT Foundation decided, in agreement with the schools principals, to entrust a group of
teachers from the schools themselves with the task of realising the series of books. The teachers involved
accepted this challenge enthusiastically.
Thanks therefore go, on behalf of Italys textile machinery manufacturers, to the principals and teachers
whose schools are source of valuable human resources, essential for the development of their industrial
concerns.
Since no job is ever done to perfection the first time round, we will be grateful to anyone (students,
teachers, company engineers and technicians, etc.) who sends us suggestions and corrections that might
enable us to improve this publication and increase the value of the whole enterprise.
December 2002
Acknowledgements
The ACIMIT Foundation wishes to thank the principals and teachers of the following schools,
without whose willing and energetic collaboration this book could not have been published:
ITIS Buzzi Prato
ITIS Carcano Como
textile
TABLE OF CONTENTS
COTTON SPINNING .................................................................................................. 11
Carded cotton spinning.......................................................................................................................11
Combed cotton spinning ....................................................................................................................12
Open-end spinning .............................................................................................................................13
Combing......................................................................................................................... 40
Combing machine...............................................................................................................................41
Combing stages ..................................................................................................................................43
Spinning ........................................................................................................................ 45
Roving frame......................................................................................................................................46
Ring spinning frame ..........................................................................................................................50
Open-end spinning frame ...................................................................................................................57
Winding ......................................................................................................................... 60
Retraction winding machine for bulky yarn production.....................................................................62
Waxing ........................................................................................................................... 63
Singeing ......................................................................................................................... 63
Doubling ........................................................................................................................ 64
Twisting ......................................................................................................................... 64
Reeling ........................................................................................................................... 68
Winding-off.................................................................................................................... 68
Automation of Transportation and Packing Operations .......................................... 69
WOOLLEN SPINNING ..............................................................................................74
Woollen spinning cycle .....................................................................................................................74
Preparation ................................................................................................................... 75
Introduction .......................................................................................................................................75
Bale plucking .....................................................................................................................................76
Dedusting ..........................................................................................................................................77
Opening .............................................................................................................................................77
Oiling .................................................................................................................................................78
Blending ............................................................................................................................................79
Plucking with blending apron.............................................................................................................80
Storage and carding room supplying .................................................................................................81
Automation and safety .......................................................................................................................81
Carding .......................................................................................................................... 83
Carding functions .............................................................................................................................. 83
Operation of the card ......................................................................................................................... 83
Clothings............................................................................................................................................ 85
Loader ............................................................................................................................................... 86
The carding room equipment............................................................................................................. 87
Workplace safety and technical features ........................................................................................... 90
Settings and production ..................................................................................................................... 90
Automatic quill doffing ..................................................................................................................... 91
10
COTTON SPINNING
Since the beginning of civilisation, man has learned that following the harvest of the cotton fruit
(or rather the fibre of the same name), he must separate the seed and the actual textile fibre.
Using special equipment, he can obtain yarn, a resistant and uniform product that is also thin.
Although the process is a difficult one, the most ancient findings related to cotton fabric reflect
that the textile mastery of ancient Greeks included a remarkable operative capacity and achieved
excellent levels of quality, even in the production of yarns and cotton fabrics.
stage
Opening and
cleaning
Carding
1st drawing
2nd drawing
Roving
Spinning
machine
bale plucker,
opener, blender
card
drawframe
drawframe
roving frame
ring spinning frame
entry material
raw cotton
delivery material
lap
package form
---
lap
card sliver
drawn sliver
drawn sliver
roving
card sliver
drawn sliver
drawn sliver
roving
ring-spun yarn
Post-spinning
processes
winding, doubling,
singeing, reeling,
twisting, windingoff machines
yarn
yarn
can
sliver can
roving can
roving bobbin
bobbin / spool /
cheese
various (skein,
bobbin,
package)
11
The cotton arrives at the spinning stage pressed in special bales - these come in variable sizes
and weights depending on where they come from - and it is put into storage in warehouses
immediately following controls and checks on the technical properties requested of the raw part.
The most common checks carried out on cotton on its arrival at the spinning mill include:
- determining the moisture regain (in order to define the quantity of water present in the
material and therefore the commercial weight of the batch);
- analysis and quantification of all the impurities contained in the raw material;
- measurement of the tensile strength, the count and length of the fibre;
- checking the colour;
- checking of the presence of organic substances in the fibres;
- quantification of the content of immature and dead fibres;
- determination of the stickiness, quantity of dust and elasticity of the fibre.
The conventional process of cotton spinning can be considered broken down into four
processing stages:
a) opening, blending and cleaning the fibre, carried out in order to permit the tufts to recovery
their natural softness, which is lessened when the cotton is pressed into bales; blending the
fibre must be as accurate as possible; a system of staves, batten reels and grids contribute to
eliminating most of the natural impurities contained in cotton tufts; then puckers, openers and
blenders are used;
b) disentangling, achieved by beating and carding, needed for increasing the relative
parallelisation of the fibres, obtains a clean product free from fibres that are too short;
c) doubling, consists in drawing near and processing similar products (card and drawn sliver)
from various machines, in order to improve the homogenous nature of semi-processed goods
and consequentially the yarn, permitting any eventual irregular sections to be identified and
homogenised;
d) preparation for spinning and spinning, this is actually the transformation of the semiprocessed product to yarn with the desired properties (count, twist) and it is obtained using
roving frames, followed by ring spinning frame;
e) complementary processing, supplementary operations necessary only for obtaining a certain
packaging or a particular look for the final product; these operations are: doubling, twisting,
winding, singeing, reeling and winding-off.
12
stage
Opening and
cleaning
Carding
Pre-comber drawing
Combing
Post-comber
drawing
Roving
Spinning
Post-spinning
processes
machine
bale plucker,
opener, blender
card
drawframe / lap
drawing frame
combing machine
drawframe
entry material
raw cotton
delivery material
lap
package form
---
lap
card sliver
card sliver
drawn lap
drawn lap
comb sliver
comb sliver
drawn sliver
roving frame
ring spinning frame
drawn sliver
roving
roving
Ring-spun yarn
Winding, doubling,
singeing, reeling,
twisting, windingoff machines
yarn
yarn
roving bobbin
bobbin / spool /
cheese
various (skein,
bobbin,
package)
stage
Opening and
cleaning
Carding
Drawing
Spinning
machine
bale plucker,
opener, blender
card
drawframe
open-end spinning
frame
entry material
raw cotton
delivery material
lap
Package form
---
lap
card sliver
drawn sliver
card sliver
drawn sliver
(O-E) yarn
can
drawframe can
package
13
In simple terms, it must be remembered that virgin fibres (first processing), tough, long and fine,
are employed to obtain combed yarns.
For carded yarns, virgin fibre with physically and mechanically inferior characteristics are used
than for combed yarns, in addition to a small quantity of recovered and waste fibre from the
combing cycle.
Finally, for open-end yarns, mainly very short fibres are used, both virgin as well as work waste.
In this latter case recovered from the combing cycle (combing waste, noils) or from the carding
cycle (waste, noils).
The general aspects of cotton spinning have been established, and now the stages of the
processing cycle will be described, common to each of the three working cycles looked at, and
these aspects are: opening and cleaning, carding, doubling and drawing.
14
15
16
The equalising cylinder (10) rotating in the opposite direction to the advance of the apron,
permits the passage of only those tufts held by the spikes, while returning the free tufts to the
blending chamber. Finally, the removing cylinder (11), which rotates in the same direction as
the apron but at a higher speed, removes the fibre from the spikes and unloads it in the weighing
room, carrying out an initial rough disentangling.
This weighing feeder can be fed automatically, and in this case the material is returned by an
aspiration cage (4), which deposits the material in a reserve hopper (5) at whose base there are
two delivery rollers (7) which unload the material onto the feeder apron mentioned above (3).
From the first fibre processing steps and until the carding stage, the material is transported by an
air flow, while inside the individual machines special aprons, cylinders, reels and fixed sectors
are used, covered by steel spikes of various shapes and sizes. It is in fact this symbiosis in the
use of the spikes and in the way they interact that the fibre tufts are disentangled and the fibres
parallelised.
After the fibre tufts are plucked, they encounter the aspiration cage (Figure 7) which dedusts the
tufts while taking them to the axial double flow opener; this is available both with incorporated
motorised blower (6), as well as motorised blower installed separately, depending on the mill's
needs. Through the entry mouth (1), the dusty material enters the feeding chamber (2) and is
deposited on the perforated drum (3). The difference in specific weight between the fibres and
the dust is such that the latter is separated from the raw material and a special doffer cylinder (4)
takes care of dividing the dedusted tufts, which then go on to the next machine.
18
In consideration of the function carried out by the aspiration cages, these are used in various
points of the processing line.
The roughly opened cotton - on exiting the plucker or feeder - is taken to the horizontal opener,
whose main functions consist in:
. the opening of raw cotton, in order to reduce the weight and volume of the fibre tufts and
permitting the disentangling of the individual fibres;
. cleaning of the raw cotton, by beating, with the elimination of foreign matter such as sand,
dirt, vegetal fragments, dust (the waste material during the opening stage is generally referred
to as trash).
The axial double flow opener (Figure 8),
permits a delicate but efficient opening of
the fibre tufts and at the same time dusts
them, producing up to 1,250 kg/h of opened
material.
Through two cleaner cylinders (1) and
special automatically adjustable grids (2),
the waste particles (vegetal residue, dirt,
sand), but also fibre fragments, are separated
from the fibrous tufts and delivered to the
waste unloading cylinders (3), that lead to a
central collection system that makes use of
tubes running below the floor.
19
The high speed of cylinder, together with the presence of pointed metal rods, determines a
violent impact against the grid (formed by small triangular bars) and as a consequence of the
highest specific weight of the foreign matter (as opposed to cotton) the trash separates from the
fibre, passes through the grid and is taken towards a special container located away from the
machine.
The intensity of opening is a fundamental factor above all in this stage, as it is necessary to
disentangle the tufts and eliminate foreign matter, but at the same time any damage to the very
delicate fibre must be prevented. This depends essentially on the following conditions:
1. the opener feeding system, which can be:
. free mass when the tufts driven by the
air flow come into contact with the
cylinder rods, without being retained by
feeding devices;
. in laps when the tufts, on passing from
the cleaner cylinder rules are retained by
an apron (on the right of the diagram)
and a feeder cylinder, and are delivered
in the form of laps; the lap feeder can be
either vertical or horizontal. In the first
case, the tufts escape the action of the
rods after having received just one beat;
in the second case, after the first beat, the
tuft rebounds on the grid and comes once
again into contact with the cylinder rods,
that beat it further. The vertical lap feed
provides a higher degree of opening;
Fig. 9 Horizontal lap feeding
2. the rods section, that can be flat or round: the first type have a stronger hold on the tufts and
therefore offer a higher degree of opening, but they risk defibrating the fibres even more; the
above mentioned action is increased if the rods are sharp;
3. the angular speed of the cylinder, as this determines the number of beats that the fibre is
subject to and the centrifugal force that they undergo as an effect of the rod beatings;
4. the distance between the grid and the cylinder rods: in fact with the minimum distance
between them the highest degree of opening is achieved, as the tufts hit the grid at the top
speed;
5 the distance between the small bars of the grid, which can be varied by rotating the bars on
their longitudinal axis by a lever or a wheel: reducing the distance between the bars reduces
the degree of opening and cleaning;
6. the distance between the feeder cylinders and the cylinder rods, which depend on the average
length of the cotton being processed, generally this distance must increase proportionally to
the length of the fibre, as the latter could get ruined or break under the beats from the rules;
7. the air flow: varying the air flow that accompanies the fibre during the processing cycle, the
time the cotton remains in the machine changes and therefore so does the degree of opening.
20
On exiting the horizontal opener, the tufts enter the blender (Figure 10), a machine of
fundamental importance in the cotton processing cycle, which carries out the blending of the
tufts by distributing the material inside special cells. There are between 4 and 8 cells and
production as a consequence ranges between 800 and 1,200 kg/h. Thanks to the motorised
blower (1), the fibre tufts are driven towards the feeder channel (2) and reach the distribution
channel (3) after having come into contact with a pressure transducer (5) whose task is to
control the quantity of cotton present in the blender cells and therefore command machine
feeding acting on the previous machine. The tufts are deposited in the vertical cells known as
blending cells (4); in this way the cotton forms layers made up of material from different bales
being processed. The raw cotton is uniformly compacted by the weight of the tufts themselves
and is collected by a pair of feeder rollers (6) and an opening cylinder (7), placed at the base of
each cell. The angular speed of the feeder rollers is not identical for all cells but varies with the
aim of maximising blending between fibrous tufts.
21
In order to increase the action of cotton cleaning, at the exit of the blender (where requested)
there are one or more opening points, this time with horizontal lap. There are two technical
solutions for this:
- the single-cylinder opener, which is suitable for 'roller' cottons (meaning fine and long fibre
cottons) which have been subjected to cylinder ginning, and which therefore carries out an
intensive but not aggressive action;
- the three-cylinder opener, designed on the other hand, for 'saw ginned' cottons (generally
medium-short length fibre, with a characteristic high content of vegetal impurities), that
carries out an extremely intense but still not aggressive action.
The following can be seen in the above diagram: the aspiration cage (1) of the horizontal opener
with one cylinder (2), the aspiration cage (3) of the motorised blower (4), the pressure
transducer (5) located at the entrance to the feeder hopper (8) of the card, the control unit (6),
and the hopper feeder channel (7).
As an alternative to using a conventional
motorised blower, above all in the openend spinning cycle, the use of a specific
dust
separator
(Figure
15)
is
recommended. This is an actual machine
that is inserted after the last point of
opening and before the card feeder
(Figure 16), capable of producing up to
600 kg/h of opened material free from
dust and micro-dust. The opened cotton,
driven by the motorised blower (1) is
taken through the feeder conduit (2) to a
special chamber lined with perforated
sheet metal (4), which is employed to
extract the dust (7) and the waste (8) and
it then eliminates the waste through a
removal conduit (9). The aspiration
funnel (5) gathers the dusted tufts, which Fig. 15 Cut-away view of the dust separator.
thanks to the drive from a second
motorised blower (6), again using air
pipes are taken to a card feeder hopper.
Figure 16 shows the connection between
the opener (2) and the card feeder hopper
(8), through dusting (4).
24
25
Carding
General remarks
Carding is one of the most important operations in the spinning process as it directly determines
the final features of the yarn, above all as far as the content of neps and husks are concerned.
There are many objectives of the carding process and these can be summarised as:
opening the tufts into individual fibres;
eliminating all the impurities contained in the fibre that were not eliminated in the previous
cleaning operations;
selecting the fibres on the basis of length, removing the shortest ones;
removal of neps;
parallelising and stretching of the fibre;
transformation of the lap into a sliver, therefore into a regular mass of untwisted fibre.
Fig. 18 Card
The carding operation is carried out by the card (Figure 18 and 19), a machine that in practice is
a system of rotating organs, mobile and fixed flats, covered with steel spikes that go by the name
of wiring. It is a good idea to know what the wiring and its functions are before going onto a
description of the card.
26
The sizes of the teeth vary notably and depend on how compact the material is, on the quantity
and on the fineness of the fibre. The parameters which permit one type of wiring to be
distinguished from another are:
concentration, meaning the number of teeth in a square inch of the wiring (for the various
devices of the card the concentration is different and is strictly linked to the type of fibre
used; for fine fibre, for example, wiring with a high concentration is used);
the height of the teeth, which can vary according to the wired element;
he angle between the teeth and the base in a longitudinal sense.
It is a known fact that a wired element moves in:
a positive way when it moves in the same direction as the inclination of the teeth;
a negative way when it moves in the opposite direction to the inclination of the teeth
The fibrous material is found between the two wired elements which, by moving, act on the
fibre in an alternate manner: first they trap it then they remove it.
Depending on the layout of the teeth, the direction travelled and the speed of the devices, two
conditions are possible, called:
carding position (Figure 20) which is obtained
when the teeth of the wired elements are
inclined
in an opposite direction and their movement occurs
with a certain speed and in a direction that permits a
reciprocal grasp of the fibre and then the
disentangling of the neps
and elimination of trash
and dust.
27
Card
The lap, turned slowly by the conveyor cylinders of the feeder hopper described in the previous
pages, is stretched out (Figure 22) onto the feeder table (4), at the end of which is the feeder
cylinder (1). The feeder table is made of well polished metal so the fibre is not caught and at the
end of it there is a particular spout shape to permit the tooth holding the fibre to get as near as
possible to the feeder cylinder.
28
The function of the licker-in knives is to eliminate any large impurities that the cylinder has
brought with it. They are made up of steel rods with trapezoidal section with sharp tips, inclined
in the opposite direction to the licker-in cylinder teeth, in order to force the material through a
violent impact and therefore release foreign matter and neps which usually, being heavier than
the fibre, protrude more than the wiring, and they collect the material left protruding from the
continuous plate. Immediately after the entry cylinder there is a drum (7). This consists in a
large-diameter cylinder, around 130 cm, in cast iron and generally cast in a single piece for
better solidity and to prevent deforming. After the casting, the drum is stress-relieved in an oven
or left to harden outside for some months, and then it is turned, ground and balanced. The drum
is equipped with rigid and thick wiring, it turns positively with a peripheral speed which is
almost double that of the licker-in cylinder (therefore between the two elements there is a two
times the drawing action) and it follows the same cleaning phase as it.
There is a grill beneath the drum to help eliminate the short fibre and prevent the fibres
generated by the high centrifugal force as well as air currents caused by the rotary action of the
drum from being dispersed. In order to complete its function, the grill is eccentrically
positioned, with a higher distance at the entry. The grill can be made up of small bars or in some
cases perforated sheet metal. The drum can reach a speed of 500-600 rpm. It is also possible to
verify that with the increased speed of the drum, the particles of trash in the card sliver are
reduced. Nevertheless, it has been noted during laboratory tests that this correlation has an
asymptotic trend towards a maximum value, meaning a further increase in speed, for example an
increase from 400 to 500 rpm does not lead to any significant progress in cleaning the card
sliver.
The drum speed is important also as it concerns another two parameters: the number of fibres
present in the drum and the defibration of these. As far as the first is concerned, with other
conditions on a par, the higher the increase in speed, the more the fibre density is reduced.
While for defibration, on the other hand, it increases to an extent that is more proportional to the
increase in drum speed. Above the drum there is a series of plates called mobile flats, whose
depth is equal to that of the drum.
Flats
In the past, mobile flats (Figure 23) were made up of cast iron bars, with a T-shaped section
providing a robust rib in the centre in a longitudinal direction, to prevent deformation.
Nowadays, the rib is made from an aluminium alloy, that increases resistance to deformation
and is lighter. Semi-rigid clothings are fixed at the base of the flats; these are connected to each
other by special chains (Figure 24-2) and their extremities rest on special arches fixed to the
shoulder of the machine. The distance between flats
and the drum is reduced towards the exit (on the right
looking at the diagrams in Fig 23 and 24), in order to
gradually disentangle the fibres; their motion can be
either positive or negative (depending on the solution
chosen by the manufacturer) but it is, however, a very
slow process depending on the intensity of carding
desired; if the speed is increased, the quantity of
waste rises too.
Fig. 23 Detail of the flats
29
The level of the needles on the flats is not parallel to that of the drum, but it forms an angle of
around 1.5 degrees, as the fibres would be gripped almost exclusively by the front rows of flats,
resulting in a reduction of the carding surface and rapid wear on the needles. Therefore, the
inclined positioning of each flat permits uniform working by all the needles and a gradual hold
on the fibres that are raised by the centrifugal action between one flat and another.
30
From what has been described, the passage of the fibre from the drum to the doffer cannot take
place. It is, on the other hand, possible for the following reasons:
the teeth in the doffer cylinder are always clean and therefore the passage of the fibre from
the drum to the doffer can easily take place;
the closeness between the drum teeth and the doffer permit the latter to get a grasp on the
fibres;
the centrifugal force, generated by the high speed of the drum and the air current, tends to
remove the fibres from the drum teeth, taking them towards the surface of the doffer;
the longer length of the doffer teeth compared to the drum teeth means that fibres are gripped
by the first;
two organs in a carding position in relation to each other operate a reciprocal exchange of
fibre.
During the passage of fibre from the drum to the doffer cylinder, various fibres curl and behave
like short fibres. These curls can be at the tail end if the fibre is folded in a direction opposite to
the movement of the material, or at the tip if the opposite is true. This defect will be eliminated
later, by drawing and eventually by combing. Analysis of laboratory trials show that mainly tail
curls emerge from the card.
The web that forms on the doffer is removed in a continuous manner, by wired extractor
cylinders which, rotating in an opposite direction to the doffer cylinder, are able to pluck the
fibres and condense them in a web.
The latter is picked up, passed through a pair of smooth steel cylinders and through two flat
belts, and accompanied into a conveyor funnel, which condenses the web turning it into a sliver.
The sliver is pulled by a pair of cylinders. The lower ones are steel and have longitudinal
furrows, while the upper ones are covered with rubber and are maintained pressed against the
lower ones. With this pair of cylinders, the drawing operation takes place, increasing the
parallelisation of fibres. The fibres are drawn no more than two times in this area. On delivery
from the drawing unit, there is a system to control the presence of the sliver, and this system will
stop the machine immediately if no sliver is detected.
The next sliver passes through another funnel and is distributed in a can by a special device
called a coiler, composed of a pair of rollers (necessary for pulling and moving the material
forward), of a condensation funnel carried by a plate equipped with a rotary motor (to distribute
the sliver in the can in overlapping coils). Inside the can there is an aluminium or plastic plate,
supported by a spring which serves to maintain the distance between the distribution plate and
the sliver delivery point constant, in order to reduce the occurrence of false drafts in the section
of sliver between its delivery from the coiler and the bottom of the can. In fact, as the material is
deposited on the plate, the spring is compressed. While the sliver is unwinding from the card,
the spring carries out the same function described, but in the opposite way, thus supporting the
sliver upwards.
32
a speed variator controlling the movement of the autoleveller, that carries out the variation of
the machine draft on the basis of the section of material controlled.
Depending on the position of the measuring and levelling devices, there are closed loop
autolevellers when the measuring device is placed before the autoleveller or on open loop
autoleveller when the contrary occurs.
DRAWING UNIT
With the diffusion of open-end spinning frames, these fibres are now worked with the new
technology that in just a few years has completely replaced conventional carded spinning.
The work stages of the cotton scraps have therefore become:
- unravelling of the hardest materials (knitted scraps, cut selvedges, flying fibres)
- beating of waste
- blending with virgin materials
- carding with a system dedicated to cotton fibres with the need to parallelise and open the
fibres that are much shorter and opened to a much lesser degree with the lowest amount of
waste possible.
- doubling and drawing (cotton drawframe). Essential for obtaining finer counts, this is
inevitable in the case of coarser counts through the application of an autoleveller on the card
and direct passage to the spinning frame.
- open-end spinning frame, fed directly by the card or the drawframe depending on the finished
product.
The cards for regenerated cotton and for very dirty cotton must open and clean what cannot be
opened in the preparation stage and must lead to the lowest percentage possible of waste, this
type of fibre being extremely difficult to recycle a second time.
As can be seen from the diagram attached (Figure 27), these cards are equipped with a preopening unit made up of a pre-carding cylinder (diameter 700 mm) with a series of fixed flats
with ordinary clothing. It is the task of this cylinder to pre-card the fibres.
34
A single waste knife for coarse material is applied on entry to the licker-in cylinder.
Flats fixed on the drum both on the entry as well as delivery make parallelisation of the fibres
distributed on the drum easier and as a consequence permit them to be cleaned and opened.
Once the material is carded, it is condensed on the combing machine and it is conveyed by two
transversal belts (indispensable for this type of working) that transport the web coming out of
the web doffer in a funnel.
For carding operations immediately preceding the open-end spinning stage, on each card a sliver
autoleveller is applied which, acting on the delivery speed of the sliver, and eventually on the
material entry speed, means the variations in count on the sliver can be reduced.
In working materials involving passage through the drawframe (not possible with very short
fibres or ones that are difficult to draw in a uniform manner) the evenness of the sliver fed to the
spinning frame comes from both doubling the slivers from different cards as well as the
autoleveller of the drawframe itself.
The passage through one drawframe (when possible) also permits the doubling of slivers from
different cards and guarantees on the final sliver a perfect homogeneity not possible in the case
of a direct passage.
On the basis of these considerations, open-end spinning of regenerated fibre permits a yarn to be
obtained that reaches a maximum count of Ne 5 in the case of direct spinning after carding and
yarns up to a count of Ne 20 in the case of passage through the drawframe.
When working with very dirty cottons and cotton waste, the card (having the structure that has
been indicated) is equipped with additional aspiration points (under the licker-in cylinder and
the main drum) so that it can remove as many impurities as possible from the material.
35
Fig. 28 Drawframe
Drawframe
The cans that contain the sliver are placed along the drawframe feeder rack, usually including
eight pairs of cylinders (each pair is above the space occupied by a can): the lower cylinder is
commanded positively, while the upper one rests on the lower one in order to ensure movement
of the relative sliver that runs between the two.
36
Supported by the feeder rack, the slivers are pulled by the drawframe entry cylinders, which
they join guided to lay beside each other on a well polished table. The system described notably
reduces the so-called false drafts, which the slivers can be subject to. The false drafts occur
when material of little consistency, such as the sliver or roving, is lengthened and is subject to
excessive friction or unusual tension during the passage from one machine to another (but also
on the same machine). The occurrence of false drafts depends therefore on the distance between
the delivery or unwinding point and the material pull point, as well as on the smoothness or
fluidity of the support and guiding parts.
Another important action taken to avoid false drafts, as mentioned above, is the use of cans with
spring plates, using which it is possible to maintain a minimal and constant distance between the
point the sliver unwinds and the pull cylinders.
Drawing aggregate
The drawing aggregate is composed of a series of lower cylinders called draft cylinders, below
a series of upper cylinders with rubber sleeves called pressure cylinders.
The draft cylinders consist of single-piece steel bars or bars made up of perfect fitting sections;
they must be perfectly cylindrical and have longitudinal grooves, so that the fibres can be
grasped in the tangent point with the pressure cylinders and later come away easily, without
getting tangled up.
The grooves can be either of two types: parallel or helical.
The draft cylinders have various support points in order to prevent them from or limit their
bending and they glide on rolling bearings on the supports. It is important that the right diameter
is chosen, as when the diameter is increased, the following occurs:
1) the lower cylinders travel at a slower angular speed and consequently there are fewer
vibrations and less wear on the bearings;
2) the gripping arch of the cylinders is increased, permitting better control of the fibres;
3) the pressure of the upper cylinders is reduced and therefore there is a lesser load on the draft
cylinders providing for a longer life of the covering, less wear on the bearings and a lower
energy consumption.
The pressure cylinders are also made in steel and are covered with rubber sleeve; they have
support pivots at their ends that fit into the special guides, establishing the position of the
cylinders and providing the connection with the relative loading devices. The rubber sleeve
must:
- provide excellent grip on the fibres, but at the same time it must offer a long life;
- resist the abrasion effect produced by the fibre and the draft cylinder;
- be elastic to the point of being able to recovery its original form after having been crushed on
the draft cylinder;
- be non-adhesive in order to repel substances such as enzymes, wax, and sugar which tend to
remain on the surface of the cylinder, interfering with the normal working process;
On the cylinder pivots, a certain load is applied, which permits a harder or less hard crush
against the corresponding draft cylinders. The so-called load is exerted by air or spring pressure
devices.
The pressure conferred can be subdivided into absolute or relative.
37
The former is obtained when maximum pressure is exerted on all the fibres that are between the
cylinders, so the fibres assume the peripheral speed of the relative draft cylinder. The second is
actuated when a simple control is carried out on the fibres being drawn, so that they can glide
between the pair of cylinders without breaking, they are guided and accompanied and therefore
do not float.
The uniformity of the drawn sliver also depends on the gauge between cylinders, meaning the
distance between two adjacent cylinders on a drawframe. An incorrect gauge leads to a great
quantity of floating fibres and therefore irregular sections. The gauge will depend on some
factors such as: fibre length, the quantity of fibre to draw, the entity of the draft in the relative
area (called partial draft), the degree of pressure from the cylinders in question, and the degree
of parallelisation of the fibres. Generally the gauge increases as these values do.
As far as floating fibres are concerned, it is important to emphasise how the draft value
essentially depends on the number of fibres present in the fibrous mass to be drawn.
In a draft zone, the fibres can be found in three positions:
- held by the pair of entry cylinders and then advanced slowly;
- held by the pair of delivery cylinders and then made to travel faster;
- loose, meaning fibres that are in the central part of the draft zone which shorter than others
and not parallel, these are not held by either pair of cylinders.
If the loose fibres follow those held, problems will be avoided as they will then be gripped by
the pair of delivery cylinders and then drawn accordingly. If the loose fibres follow those held
by the pair of delivery cylinders, the fibres will float, meaning that the fibres will travel through
the draft zone at a higher speed than the speed required for a normal draft, taking them further
forward than where they should be. Therefore, with their irregular and periodical movement,
these loose fibres give rise to what are known as draft waves.
Floating fibres cause lengths of sliver with variations of section that can be fine (referred to also
as cuts) or coarse. The number of these defects is proportional to the number of floating fibres
and the frequency of the waves.
The drafting set mounted on the drawframe can be divided into two categories:
- systems composed of three pressure and four draft cylinders;
- systems composed of four pressure cylinders on five draft cylinders, with an intermediate
draft cylinder with a smaller diameter than the others and with pressure bar.
38
Pressure bar systems (Figure 29), used essentially when working with blends made up of fibres
of different lengths, have a 3 pressure and draft cylinder unit and a cylindrical bar that does not
roll called the pressure bar, located between the first and second pressure cylinder and connected
directly to the latter by small arms at the ends. Therefore, it is located above the fibre band and it
presses down while the fibre is travelling through the delivery area (area where maximum draft
pressure is applied), forcing the fibres to adhere to one another. In this way the fibres are
checked and well distributed during the draft, creating even slivers even at high speeds.
6 Monitoring sensor
7 Web condenser
8 Delivery rollers
9 Pre-drawing
10 Main draft
Like on the card, there are also autolevellers on the drawframes (Figure 30), whose job it is to
correct the draft in function of variations in the fibrous mass, to maintain the section of sliver as
even as possible and therefore reduce the frequency of breaking threads in spinning and in
successive operations.
On the drawframe, the variations in sliver mass are detected by a measurement device (3)
composed of scanning cylinders, and they are compensated for by a variable draft driven by a
digital processor and a speed variator which drives some draft cylinders.
It is possible to obtain the following values on the drawframes:
- total machine draft, this can vary from around 6 to 9 times and usually affects the delivery
area, where a partial draft of between 4 and 7 times is completed;
- partial entry draft, this can vary from around 1.2 to 1.8 times and affects the entry area
between the last and next to last cylinder;
- the tension draft for slivers entering the pull cylinders and the entry cylinders of the drafting
unit oscillate between 0.9 and 1;
- the web tension draft, between the delivery cylinders of the drafting unit and the pressure
rollers, can vary between 0.9 and 1.
39
Combing
40
Combing machine
The combing machine is composed of eight combing heads which produce slivers which, later,
are doubled four on four by a drawing aggregate of four on top of five cylinders to make two
slivers which are taken to the collection cans. Each combing head is composed of feeder rollers
which hold the web and rotate it perfectly, without varying the structure. The rollers rotate
slowly with continuous drive and bring the web forward to a combing unit made up of special
nippers (Figure 32) which must hold the fibres during the combing stage and take them to the
device which gathers the tufts.
41
The combing element takes the name of circular comb (Figure 33). It is without a doubt the
most important device on the machine, it is composed of a circular sector covered with needles
covering around a quarter of its circumference and the density of its needles differ from the first
lines to the last. The circular comb turns quickly in a positive direction and the needles,
penetrating the tuft of fibre to comb, remove the fibres that are not clasped by the nippers, and
parallelise the others. The circular comb completes around 200-250 rpm. To eliminate the fibres
caught, a cylindrical brush penetrates the needles on the circular comb removing all the waste
and an air current removes it, taking it towards the collection bins before the next combing stage
begins.
The fibrous material comes out of the drawing off cylinders in the form of a web, and this passes
between one pair of cylinders, whose task is to provide the necessary consistency, to then pass
into a condensation funnel and the small rollers which transform the web into a sliver. The latter
is dragged on a very smooth table to prevent any friction, it turns ninety degrees and is taken
next to the slivers coming out of the other heads of the combing machine.
At the end of the table the slivers enter a drafting unit, very similar to the one on the drawframe,
and are doubled and drawn to obtain the combed sliver, which is then taken by the rollers and
the distribution plate to the collection can.
Combing stages
The devices on the combing machine are well synchronised with each other and a combing
cycle is completed in the time it takes the circular comb to complete one turn. This cycle is
divided into three stages:
1) combing of the tuft
2) backward motion of the previous tuft
3) condensing of the tufts.
43
Fig. 39 Condensation
44
Spinning
Following the drawframe stage, the slivers undergo the final passages towards being
transformed into yarn, which are the following:
Roving frame
Ring spinning
45
Roving frame
The task of this machine is to transform the sliver coming from the drawframe into roving.
It is present in the carded ring spinning cycle and in the combed ring spinning cycle, in the first
case it is found following the post-carding drawframe (one or two drawing steps), while in the
second case after the post-combing drawframe.
Overall drawing can also reach values of 20, but generally the process is carried out with lower
values for better final results.
The twist is given by the rotation of the flyer located on the spindles, in fact the exit roving
coming from the draft cylinders enters in the higher hole of the flyer, passing through the hollow
arm and then winding on the bobbin.
The twist value is given by the following equation:
Revolutions of the spindle (flyer)
No. twists = -----------------------------------------Exit length 1st cylinder
roving
flyer
bobbin
Fig. 42 Flyer and bobbin
The number of revolutions of the spindle can reach up to a maximum value of 1500 rpm. The
twist rate given by the roving has a value of between 10 100 T/m (0.25 T/inch).
It should be noted that the twist value to give the roving, this being an intermediate product, has
a fundamental practical importance for the next processing stage.
The minimal value limit must guarantee even working of the roving during feeding to the
spinning frame, while the maximum value must not impede the draft action of the fibre gliding
to the spinning frame.
The thread is wound by the action of the bobbin rotating at a higher speed than the flyer
(spindle), in order that on every turn the bobbin makes in addition to the spindle, a coil of roving
is wound on the bobbin. The length of coil is shorter for the first layers and longer for the last.
To keep the length of the wound roving and the number of spindle revolutions constant in the
unit of time, it is necessary for the bobbin to gradually reduce its rotation speed as layers are
formed over layers, and this must be inversely proportional to the winding diameter for all the
successive layers of roving added to the bobbin.
The distribution of the roving along the bobbin is given, on the other hand, by the upward and
downward movement of the carriage; because of the frustrum shape of the bobbin on each layer
wound the distribution height is reduced, but the winding diameter increases with a
consequential increase in the coil length of the roving wound and the time taken to wind the
coil.
47
Even the translation speed of the carriage must be reduced in order to maintain the same pitch of
the winding helix for all layers.
In conclusion, bearing in mind the fact that the feed to the roving from the draft cylinders is
always constant, at each layer there is a progressive reduction in the number of revolutions the
bobbin makes and the translation speed of the carriage is diminished, which reduces its travel at
every layer.
These variations occurred in conventional machines through speed variators (eg pairs of cones)
for the carriage translation speed and the variator plus a differential for the bobbin rotation
speed.
In modern roving frames, the commands for the various functions carried out are given by
various motors (see Figure 43) independently coordinated by a central machine control system,
permitting better functioning and a reduction of energy consumption and noise level.
Draft system
motor
Blower
Calculating output
An example of calculating machine output:
Count delivered Ne 1, twist 47.24 T/m, spindle speed 1200 rpm, No. of spindles 96.
Theoretical linear production = 1200/47.24 x 96 x 60 = 146,316.68 m/h.
Pondered theoretical production = 146,316.68 x 0.59/1 = 86,326.84 g/h
Real production with performance equal to 92%: 86,326.84 x 0.92 = 79,420.69 g/h.
49
Ultimate spinning
This term describes final operation needed to obtain yarn.
In cotton spinning, the following machines are used:
- cycle of carded cotton: ring spinning frame, open-end spinning frame
- cycle of combed cotton: ring spinning frame
The draw is made with a 3 on 3 system with double-apron drafting system with pressure
generated by a weighing arm system. The drafting unit is in an inclined position compared to the
ground in order for the twisting to be started the moment the fibre leaves the first draft cylinder
where twisting is avoided to prevent the yarn from breaking.
The drafting unit system is capable of working fibres of up to 60 mm (carded and combed
cotton, blends and chemical fibres) with draw values of between 10 and 80.
The roving is first subject to a preliminary draft with values of between 1.5 and 2 and
successively a main draft in the apron area until the desired count is achieved.
The spinning counts are between Ne 5 and Ne 150 (118 4 Tex).
51
In the section A B, condensation occurs, helped also by the opening in the aspiration tube
which is at an angle compared to the direction the fibre is moving in order to give the bundle of
fibres the desired twisting on their axis, an important factor in working short fibres.
Condensation occurs until the final exit point and this reduces the spinning triangle to a
minimum.
52
A modern ring spinning frame adopts two separate commands using brushless motors for the
draft cylinders. With this system, the draw parameters necessary for changing the count are set
on the command panel without requiring any equipment to be changed.
The yarn, on delivery from the draft cylinders, passes through a yarn guide and then through a
traveller, and then it is wound on the tube fitted on the spindle.
The effective twist is that given by the number of rotations made by the traveller, whose rotation
is caused by a dragging action and which is subject to variations in speed depending on the
winding diameter, varying during the formation of each individual layer of yarn on the bobbin
due to the effect of the vertical movement of the rail. These differences in twist are in part
compensated for in the axial rewinding of the yarn, because as the diameter of the bobbin varies
coils are added or removed with a criteria opposed to what previously happened in function of
the different speed of the traveller.
In practice, the twist is conventionally taken from this formula:
Number of spindle revolutions
No. twists = ------------------------------------Exit length 1st cylinder
The direction of twist S (left) or Z (right) depends on the direction of spindle rotation.
The number of twists is measured in twists per metre (T/m); for cotton yarns, the T/inch is also
used as a measurement.
yarn guide
rail
tube
traveller
ring
spindle
where:
T/inch = Ke Ne
where:
Ktex
T/m =
Tex
where:
The twist coefficients are determined practically in relation to the characteristics of the cotton
being used and the type of yarn, depending on the use for which it is destined.
The traveller, traditionally in steel, is the most delicate part of the machine, as it is not able to
support high speeds. When the spindle travels at high speeds, friction is created that could cause
the traveller to heat up and get damaged.
Therefore, as the traveller speed determines the revolutions of the spindle and the diameter of
the ring, for fast spindle speeds the diameter of the ring must be contained and as a consequence,
so must the bobbin.
For example, a spinning frame can have ring diameters that vary between 36 and 54 mm with
spindle gauge of 70 75 mm and a tube height of between 180 and 260 mm.
There are three fundamental shapes of the travellers, called C or M or elliptical
54
Elliptical
Oval
Fig. 51 Travellers
The C type ring guarantees space for the passage to thread, but it presents a high barycentre
(b), the M type has a low barycentre to guarantee the passage of the yarn, the elliptical type
ring has a low barycentre, but offers less space for the passage of the thread.
The latter is preferred because it has the lowest centre of gravity in the point of contact with the
ring, establishing a position of equilibrium so that the contact with the ring is determined in a
single point of the internal flange, making friction minimal to guarantee passage of the yarn.
Combining the type C with the elliptical one, a type of traveller known as oval is formed
which maintains the advantages of the elliptical traveller but provides a larger space for the yarn
to pass. The section of yarn that goes from the traveller to the fixed thread guide in its rapid
motor driven motion around the ring is subject to a combined action of centrifugal force and air
resistance, so it swells forming a particular curve called balloon. An excessive balloon effect
leads to a maximum size, larger than which the balloon becomes plaited causing the thread to
break.
In addition, the rail travel (an equal width on each layer) is progressively moved upwards by a
particular device, the extent of the movement must depend on the yarn count. For coarse yarn
the upward movement of the rail must be more rapid as it winds a shorter length of yarn on a par
with the weight of the bobbin, and the opposite happens for a finer yarn.
The length of yarn wound on each rise and descent travel of the rail is called run-out.
The weight of the bobbin can vary from around 50 to 100 grams.
In order to maintain a clean yarn, the spinning frames used nowadays are equipped with systems
capable of removing dust and fibre residue that can form during processing. If the yarn should
break, a particular aspirator tube collects the fibre as it leaves the draft range. There are special
cleaning systems for the draft cylinders, while a travelling cleaning system made up of flexible
tubes mounted on suspended tracks takes care of general machine cleaning.
One manufacturer has designed and made a system called Wondercleaner made up of a
travelling cleaner and reserve yarn cleaner. The cleaner at the base of the spindles is hooked to a
travelling blower between the two doffers only when it is needed to be used. This cleaner cuts
the coils of yarn wound around the base of the spindle and the blower sucks them up rather than
leaving them fall to the ground. With this system, efficient for every count, the actual cutting
yarn blades are removed and a cleaner room results.
Open-end spinning
This is normally used in cotton carded spinning. The frame is fed with slivers from the
drawframes which transform the yarn directly into packages, eliminating the passage on the
roving frame and, in many cases, further packaging operations.
The figure below represents an example of rotor (or open-end) spinning frame.
57
The main function of the spinning unit is as follows. The sliver from the drawframe is
introduced by a feeder cylinder and is subject to the action of an opener with saw-toothed wiring
which rotates at a speed of between 6000 and 9000 rpm, separating the sliver into single fibres,
then the fibres are sent to the rotor through a vacuum channel. The rotor, whose diameter is
between 32.5 and 54 mm, rotates at a very high speed over 100,000 rpm, and compacts the
fibres partly thanks to its special shape, twisting the fibres at the same time.
The processing data of an open-end frame for cotton are normally as follows:
- sliver count Ne 0,10 Ne 0,27 ( Tex 5900 Tex 2180)
- yarn count Ne 5 Ne 40 (Tex 120 Tex 15)
- draft range 16 250
- twists 300 1500 T/m.
The yarn formed in this way then passes to the winding unit which makes the packages, that are
either cylindrical or conical. The cylindrical packages can have a diameter of 300 x 152 mm and
the conical ones a diameter of 270 x 152 mm.
The winding speed can reach up to 200 m/min.
58
Modern rotor spinning frames, due to some technical improvements such as more efficient
cleaning, thanks to pneumatic evacuation of impurities in the channel, the self-aspirating rotor
system, the particular design of the rotor transport channel, the adoption of separators with
particular profiles that determine a better distribution of fibres in the groove of the rotor, are able
to produce yarns of a better quality and more similar to those made on ring spinning frames.
The following figures show a macroscopic view of the structure of the two types of yarn, the
first produced on a modern rotor spinning frame (100% cotton Ne 30), the second on a
conventional machine (100% cotton Ne 30).
It can be seen that the first yarn presents better evenness and less hairiness. As a consequence,
the improved parallelisation of the fibres and more regular final structure will give the yarn
better elongation resistance, and therefore generally offer more sophisticated performances.
Winding
Winding is the creation of large yarn packages that can be easily unwound. This makes using the
yarn on subsequent machines both easier and more economical.
In order to form packages of the right weight for subsequent processing stages, the winding
machine can be fed by ring-spun yarn bobbins, by packages originating from open-end spinning
machines, or by cylindrical/conical packages derived from previous processing stages.
Packages can thus be subdivided according to their shape:
a cylindrical
b conical, with tapers ranging from 5 57 to 9 15
c cones with tapers of up to 4 20
The yarn unwound from the package passes through yarn tensioning and control systems, and
with the help of a grooved cylinder, is wound evenly around the package; the yarn enters the
recess in the cylinder, thus the rotary movement of the cylinder corresponds to the translation
of the yarn.
Winding machines currently have independent heads with individually adjustable motors.
A modern winding machine can process yarns ranging from a count of Ne 2 to finer ones, at a
winding speed of 400 to 2000 m/min.
Winding is more than just transferring yarn from one package to another. Further functions of
winding are to check the yarn and to eliminate any faults found. This is done by a process called
clearing, i.e., by passing the yarn through an electronic device, known as a yarn clearer, which
assesses it according to set parameters (fault section and length). If these set values are exceeded
the yarn is cut and spliced a splice being deemed preferable to a fault. Splicing is done using
the air-splicing system or the Twinsplicer system, which, reconstructing the yarn mechanically,
also checks the untwisting, tail draft, tail condensation and twisting, thereby improving the
result of the operation. A join created in this way is less visible, consistent, stronger and
repeatable. There exists an innovative combined water- and air-driven splicing system that is
particularly suited to compact cotton yarns.
The machine is equipped with a special device to avoid the winding defect known as ribboning.
This problem is caused by irregular package formation following the deposition of too many
coils in certain points. Basically, the package-holding arm is made to effect an oscillating
movement both in the vertical (A) and in the horizontal (B) planes (see Figure 58). These two
movements can be combined in various ways so as to respond to all processing requirements.
Friction
Counterweighing
61
62
Waxing
Waxing serves to lubricate the yarn, reducing to a minimum its coefficient of friction with the
parts with which it comes into contact.
This operation is normally carried out on yarns destined to be processed on knitwear machines,
on which smooth running of yarns is essential.
Waxing is carried out on the winding machine, which is equipped with a postive-drive
adjustable waxing system that guarantees constant waxing of the yarn; there is also control
device that stops the machine should the wax run out.
Singeing
Singeing is an operation carried out in order to eliminate yarn hairiness. The singeing system
consists of a package-to-package winder and a gas burner.
The yarn is passed through the flame, which singes the protruding fibres that cause the hairiness.
It runs at a rate of 400 to 1000 m/min.
The machine must, in order to obtain even singeing, maintain a constant yarn speed and an even
flame.
The singeing system, in addition to normal machine control devices, also has a fly fibre
evacuation system and a flame temperature control system.
Since this operation reduces the weight of the yarn, even by as much as 5-6 %, the yarn count
will also be modified, and this must be borne in mind when designing the yarn.
63
Doubling
The purpose of this operation is to unite two or more ends on a package prior to twisting. The
doubling machine, like the winding machine, is fed by packages of yarn, generally pre-cleared,
which are positioned in its lower section. Unlike the winding machine, the doubling machine
must have yarn tensioning devices that can guarantee even tension of all the yarn ends, as this is
essential for successful twisting.
The packages produced can be cylindrical or conical, and the winding speed can exceed 1000
m/min.
Twisting
The purpose of this operation is to unite, by twisting, two or more doubled yarn ends, in order to
obtain a stronger yarn. It is a two-stage process: first doubling and then twisting. Some modern
machines carry out these two operations contemporaneously.
In the past, twisting was carried out using ring twisting machines, which are similar to ring
spinning frames, except that they are fed by packages of doubled yarn and via a feeding cylinder
that consists of a metal shaft with pressure cylinders to keep winding speeds constant.
Nowadays, two-for-one twisters are used, thus called because the yarn undergoes two twists for
each turn of the spindle.
64
65
2nd twist
SPINDLE AXIS
SPINDLE AXIS
SPINDLE AXIS
1st twist
Full twist
If required, waxing can also be carried out, and in some machines, in order to reduce the effect
of friction on the yarns, oil is applied through a device located on the spindle head and
comprising a tank and a bush that, by capillary action, allows the oil to rise, reaching the yarn
contact zone. This operation is carried out before the first twisting stage and using an adjustment
nut the quantity of oil can be regulated, bringing different parts of the yarn surface into contact
with the distribution bush.
As already mentioned, one kind of two-for-one twisting machine can effect doubling and
twisting contemporaneously.
As shown in Figure 64 below, which illustrates this machine, there are two packages on the
spindle from which, following separate paths, the two threads are unwound. These are
subsequently twisted together.
67
Reeling
Reeling is a skein preparation operation (generally the preparation of skeins prior to dyeing).
The reeling machine is fed by yarn packages and winds the yarn onto a reel, thereby forming the
skein. Winding can be carried out either modifying the yarn crossing angle or by adjusting the
skein width up 400 mm. The diameter of the reel is normally 54 and it has a speed of 400 rpm.
Skeins can sometimes reach 5 kg in weight.
Winding-off
There is one particular type of winding machine that is called a winding-off machine. It is fed by
skeins that have just come from the dyeing process and it produces packages.
The winding-off head is basically the same as that of a normal winding machine, while a special
system is required to unwind the yarn from the skeins, positioned on the reels, making sure that,
when tangles cause yarn tension, the yarn does not break.
This system is a tensioning device through which the yarn passes; if it is too taut, the process
speed is reduced to facilitate winding-off, then normal speed is restored. In the event of
considerable tension, the device stops the winding-off head and the machine operator undoes the
tangle.
The traditional unwinding machine has a non-controlled reel feeding system and can therefore
work at speeds of up to only 300 m/min.; the latest machine models, on the other hand, use
controlled reel systems with independent electronically controlled motors and built-in brakes
that allow the head to be stopped quickly, preventing the yarn from breaking. These machines
work at rates of around 600 m/min.
68
These systems are based on the concept of monitoring the progress of production as a whole, so
as to be able to manage doffing occurring contemporaneously on different machines and to
optimise sequences without penalising single performances.
Regardless of how many rotors each of the machines in the production line has, automatic
unloading of this kind of spinning machine involves the delivery, in the direction of the packing
areas, of whole trains of packages.
In the second case, while still bearing in mind the need for real-time monitoring of the progress
of production, the surveillance systems in operation, regardless how many heads each of the
machines present in the production line has, allow the management of single packages or
sections of trains.
In both situations, the groups of packages being delivered, not necessarily being multiples of the
final packing module, may need to be sorted by article (yarn count) and stored temporarily, prior
to packing (Figure 66).
70
If the final packing module is a box, then the packing area will have a number of collection
conveyors as many conveyors as there are layer separators for the temporary storage of the
number of packages needed to form a group of boxes.
In certain situations, it is still possible to compensate for the number of packages actually
leaving the spinning machine and to make up directly, with the number of packages needed (a
multiple of the final packing module to be made up), the pallet or series of boxes required. This
is done, thanks to in-line vertical rotary stores, either by storing excess packages or by adding to
the existing packages.
The packing units (palletisers or boxing machines) are PC-controlled machines that can handle
packages singly or in groups according to the production capacity required of whole system.
These machines, entirely automatically, make up the pallets (through the placing of layer upon
layer) or fill the boxes with layers of packages.
In palletisation cycles, the pallets that are being made up are conveyed inside the machine by
service shuttle or, alternatively, it is sometimes the palletiser itself that moves to the operating
area; in the case of boxing cycles, on the other hand, the boxes move independently, on service
rollers into the boxing station.
Palletisers are Cartesian robots driven by brushless electric motors. They are equipped with
pneumatic single or multiple spindles that pick up the packages, already centred and oriented as
necessary, directly from the tube and deliver them, according to the required geometry, in the
layer that is being made up (Figure 67).
These robots also insert separators, and handle empty and full pallets.
71
Bagging and boxing machines, on the other hand, pack single packages ready to be dispatched
in boxes; a sheet of polyethylene wrapping is first conveyed to a wrapping unit, where it is
employed to form a tube. It is then sealed in several points to form a bag..
For the subsequent boxing stage, it is possible, through the combined feeding of two motorised
conveyors, to assemble a layer of packages arranged ready for boxing
72
The robot then carries out rapidly a pre-programmed cycle, depositing the 4 packages on as
many transportation disks (on the disk line).
73
WOOLLEN SPINNING
PREPARATION
Stage 2
CARDING
Stage 3
SPINNING
In spinning, the classic drawing, twisting and winding operations can be carried out both by
continuous ring spinning machines and by discontinuous selfacting machines.
It is also possible to use spinning-twisting machines to produce fancy yarns in a single
operation.
74
Preparation
Introduction
Crucial in order to obtain a homogeneous, strong and even yarn is optimal blending of its
component fibres. If this applies when processing lots of a single material, then efficient
blending becomes even more important in the woollen spinning cycle, in which the fibres
adherence to the fundamental parameters determining spinnability can vary considerably.
Blends generally present the following characteristics:
a very high number of components (even in excess of 10), present in highly variable
proportions (sometimes even very small percentages, below 5%)
fibres presenting highly dissimilar characteristics, particularly as regards their length
(there are situations in which 25 mm waste are blended with synthetic fibres over 80 mm
in length)
widely varying colours, sometimes not constant from the start to the end of a single lot
presence of foreign matters and impurities, sometimes originating from packing, or, more
often, attributable to the origin of the material, (for example in the case of regenerated
fibres, waste, processing waste)
the need to use high-performance additives, to promote fibre cohesion and to facilitate
their sliding over one another, as well as their processability on machines.
A blending and preparation system may or may not be based on the number of components in
the blend, and it is this which determines the type of spinning process to be carried out on the
raw stock.
75
The fibres are collected, through a contemporaneous stratification process, which guarantees the
production of blends that immediately present the composition required of the end product.
In the subsequent stages, the material is opened, oiled and, if requested, stored.
Clearly, a process of this kind, simple and inexpensive, is preferable for the production of lots
that do not vary much, given that there is a limit to the number of components that can be
handled by the system, which is not required to perform thorough blending. Instant preparation
is often preferred by producers of nonwovens, precisely because it is best suited to materials that
are relatively standardised, as regards both colour and composition.
Bale plucking
The bale plucker is the first machine in the cycle, as it carries out a preliminary plucking and
partial blending of the fibres. The bales, which are compressed when they reach the spinning
mill, are first removed from their protective wrapping and then placed on the conveyor that
feeds the bale plucker, which separates the fibres, returning them to their open-tuft state and
thereby ensuring even feeding of all the subsequent machines. Furthermore, depending on the
operating width (this generally ranges from 2 m to 5 m), the machine can be loaded with
parallel rows of bales; alternation of the various components will result in a preliminary
blending, which will be improved and rendered even more thorough in the subsequent stages.
The working of this machine (see earlier Figure 69) is based on a principle of opening, obtained
through a vertical apron made up of wooden steel-spiked staves.
The table hooks the fibres and, blending them, raises them upwards to a point where a cylinder
knocks off any excess material. An unloading cylinder, located behind the blending apron, frees
the fibres from the spikes of the apron, and sends them to the hopper.
76
Dedusting
From the bale plucker the fibres are pneumatically conveyed to the blowroom, which opens the
tufts and removes all types of dust and impurities.
The material is fed, via an entry hopper, into the blowroom, in which there operates a cylindrical
drum with a diameter of around 600 mm. (the drum can sometimes be cone-shaped). Its surface
is covered with blunt steel spikes (Figure 70).
These spikes are arranged helically to favour, together with the suction effect, the progress of
the material. The rotation of the cylinder has two effects: the material is opened thanks to the
action of the spikes on the fibrous mass (this opening is often increased by also lining with
spikes the inside of the carter with which the moving fibres inevitably come into contact) and
dedusting thanks to the cylinder repeatedly and violently striking against an underlying grid.
Fig. 70 Blowroom
The whole machine is subject to suction and the dust is collected in special filters; the material,
on the other hand, undergoing contemporaneously, the rotary action of the cylinder and suction
along the operating width, effects a helical movement around the drum and exits from the side
opposite to that on which it entered. It is then transferred by the delivery hopper into the
transportation conduit.
Opening
This stage is usually carried out by an opening willow in the case of shorter fibres and by a
willow in the case of longer ones.
In the opening willow the fibres, evenly and constantly fed to the conveyor, are drawn inside the
machine by two licker-in cylinders, which have grooved surfaces to help them to retain the
material. From this cylinder nip area the fibrous mass is violently taken up by a drum that
rotates rapidly in a clockwise direction. This drum is covered with wooden staves that have
sharp steel spikes (Figure 71).
77
Oiling
Oiling of the fibre blend is fundamentally important, because it increases the coefficient of
friction between the fibres (which is particularly low in the case of short fibres). This favours the
cohesion of the card web and of the rovings; it also help to reduce the coefficient of friction
between the material and the machines metallic clothings. The oiling emulsion is generally
made up of oiling agent, emulsifier, softener, anti-static agent, condensing agent, additives and
water. Naturally, the proportions in which these products are present in the emulsion varies
considerably according to the type of material to be processed and its requirements. The
emulsion usually accounts for at least 5-6% of the total weight of the blend, while its upper limit
is impossible to establish, as it depends too much on the type of fibre being processed.
78
The emulsion is prepared in a steel tank. From here, it is pumped to the oiling chamber, which
distributes it continuously onto the fibres (Figure 73).
Blending
After oiling the fibre is sent to the blending rooms, where, traditionally, the material is laid
down horizontally and carefully broken down into many thin layers, in such a way as to
optimise blending with the subsequent vertical plucking. Mobile conveyor belts are often used
in place of traditional pneumatic transportation of the fibres. Indeed, for the blending of
heterogeneous fibres, the box filling system with blowing of the material has an undesired
separating effect that is attributable to the different dynamic behaviour of the fibres, in turn
determined by their volume. More modern systems effect mechanical stratification, without the
application of air, thereby making it possible to apply the emulsion during the loading of the
box, while the fibres are being deposited in layers (Figure 74).
79
Fig. 75 Cell with channel filling and mobile blending apron emptying
In the fixed blending apron picking system (Figure 76), the cells have a moving base that
transports the fibre to the blending apron, located on the room entry side, while on the other
side, a retaining wall advances to prevent material from slipping backwards.
80
81
1 Bale plucker
2 Condenser
3 Vibrating wall
4 Fibre opening
5 Exchanger
6 Blending chamber
7 Deposition device
82
Carding
Carding functions
Carding fulfils a series of precise objectives, serving:
to open the blend fibres fully and definitively
to arrange (as far as their length allows) the fibres parallel with one another
to remove impurities
to blend the raw material further
to reduce the blend to a web of fibres and to divide it up into rovings of the required
count, suitable for feeding to the spinning machines.
Carding plays a crucial role in all spinning cycles, and its role is never more central than in the
woollen spinning cycle, in which it incorporates different functions, all essential in order to
obtain the level of quality required of the product.
Basically, passing the material over the card undoes tangles of fibres and therefore makes it
possible to remove all kinds of impurity. This is achieved thanks to the action of the spikes
covering the surfaces of cylinders that rotate around parallel axes.
The equipment also fulfils another function, which is both delicate and fundamental: it has to
guarantee the accuracy and evenness of the web count and subsequently of the roving count.
Indeed, the definitive spinning machines that operate within the woollen spinning cycle can
impart only a very low draft, which means that there is practically no possibility, at this stage, of
intervening to correct the yarn count.
The carding room equipment thus performs the same operations already carried out in the
preparation stage, this time more thoroughly, supplying the divider with rovings of the right
count.
84
Clothings
There are two types of clothing for cards: the
sawtoothlike wire and the flexible clothing. Flexible
clothings (Figure 80) have needles embedded in a
base strip, made up of layers of felt or flexible
material.
Knee
Foot
Fig. 82 Curved needle.
Loader
The equipment is fed by a loader, which has to deliver a precise amount of fibre blend in a given
unit of time to guarantee accurate and continuous production of the required count. This
necessity is the result of the continuity of production, which does not allow, while the machine
is running, intervention to control or possibly correct the material count. The loader (Figure 83)
takes material from the volumetric hopper, which is supplied by the storage boxes, and puts it
into the pre-carding unit of the first machine.
86
The most widespread type of loader is the weighing loader, which guarantees weighing
constancy over time. The fibre blend is conveyed upwards from the lower part of the feeding
chamber by an apron covered with spikes (blending apron). The fibres that have become
attached reach the top of the roller and fall into the hopper, while any left over are knocked off
into the feeding chamber by a lattice. The fibres are made to fall onto the conveyor at regular
intervals through the opening in the hopper, which has two filling speeds: a rather high initial
filling speed, to keep production up, and a slower speed, for precision completion of loading;
once the required weight has been reached, a diaphragm prevents fibres already falling from
landing on the conveyor.
In the most recent models, this high-precision weighing loader is mounted on the loading cells
and the weighing operation is computerised. The computer:
- sets and checks the weight of the material fed to the weighing unit, intervening automatically
to make adjustments
- controls the unloading of the material onto the feeding conveyor, in synchronisation with the
speed of the equipment
- automatically regulates weighing cycles
- automatically triggers, according to the quantity of material being fed, the second running
speed of the blending apron.
Finisher card
This card, again entirely provided with needles clothings, is generally made up of a drum
preceded by a fly cylinder with a pair of worker-stripper cylinders, and it serves to obtain a
sliver that is as highly processed as possible.
The purpose of the divider (Figure 86) is to split the sliver produced by the condenser into a
certain number of rovings this number varies according to the working width and count
required and (by means of the rubbing sleeves) and to give these a rounded form, a prelude to
the cylindrical appearance of the yarn; finally it serves to wind them onto beams that will
subsequently feed the spinning machines.
Fig. 86 Divider
Division of the sliver is obtained thanks to a series of leather aprons which, crossing over one
another, effect a proper cutting action. Conceptually, this operation is the equivalent of drawing,
and indeed the result is the same as that of a drawing of the web, numerically equivalent to the
total number of divisions applied:
S divider = N of rovings
In the woollen spinning process, the roving delivered by the divider, proceeds directly to the
spinning machine, without the possibility of undergoing any further adjustment. This is unlike
the considerable scope for adjustment presented by the worsted wool cycle, in which the length
of the fibre allows repeated doubling operations and drawing on the drawframe. This is the
reason why woollen yarn is characterised by rather high structural unevenness. This unevenness
is the result of the upstream characteristics of the fibres and manifests itself in the roving stage,
without there being any scope for corrective intervention in the subsequent passage to the
spinning machine.
Composition of the carding room equipment
Due to the number of operations carried out and their crucial importance, the carding room
equipment is a complex and imposing installation. Its role, basically, is to produce extremely
regular rovings at the highest speeds compatible with the process.
The criterion which determines how many cards are used is above all the type of material being
processed, in other words, the fineness of the fibre and the openness of the blend: characteristics
that in turn determine the fibre count that can be achieved.
89
Indeed the equipment, like the whole spinning process generally, is quite rigidly specialised for
the production of fine, medium and coarse counts, whose spinnability is influenced by the
density of the clothings and by their number, by the number of carding points (the more of these
there are the finer the count), by the number of rovings produced by the divider, and by the
speed of the various cylinders. The number of machines and drums used depends on the extent
of carding and blending that is necessary.
The automatic two-card system is suitable for processing coarse counts or high-quality yarns for
knitted or woven goods, while the three-card system is mainly employed to process new or
regenerated materials.
Adjustment of draft is important in order to obtain the required roving count, given that the draft
imparted by the spinning machine in the woollen cycle has quite narrow limits. The mechanical
draft can be calculated as follows
S = Vp / Va
in which Vp represents the speed of the comber roller and Va that of the feeders of the last
machine.
Production, on the other hand, can be adjusted by increasing or reducing the speed of the
comber roller in relation to that of the large drum, in other words by adjusting the condensation
of the fibres for the formation of the web. The speed of the comber roller is thus limited by the
evenness of the web, which must be uniform and not present thin places or tears
The divider output is expressed as:
P = Vp x T web
in which
T web = N rovings /roving Nm
Ring Spinning
Working principle
The beam with the rovings rests on the feeding cylinder, which, being grooved, makes it rotate
through friction. The draft range is made up of a set of feeding cylinders and a set of drawing
cylinders whose anti-static rubber-covered cylinders exert adjustable pressure. The yarn runs
through the nip point of the two drawing cylinders with a to-and-fro motion to prevent sleeve
surface wear.
The draft range, which is located on an inclined surface to allow the twists to ascend as far as
the nip point of the two feeding cylinders, is followed by the yarn guide, which serves to keep
the yarn perfectly aligned with the spindle axis, facilitating its winding onto the spinfinger
(Figure 89). The spinfinger is essentially an extension, of varying shapes and sizes, of the end of
the spindle.
The aim, in any case, is totally or partially to eliminate the spinning balloon, thereby reducing
the yarn tension, and improving its strength, elasticity, evenness and obviously production rate
(given the optimal exploitation of the traveller speed that derives from this).
92
The yarn receives twists as it is pulled by a traveller that revolves on a ring around the spindle.
Indeed, before being wound onto the spool, which revolves as one with the spindle, the yarn
hooks up the traveller, which, being pulled, shares the spindles rotary motion.
To effect winding, the traveller, which runs on a steel ring concentric with the spindle, is thus
made to revolve around the spindle, effecting slightly fewer rotations per minute than the
spindle itself, thus imparting one twist to the yarn per revolution of the same in the given unit of
time. The twists per metre imparted can thus be expressed as
T/m = n c / V
in which n c indicates traveller revolutions and V the speed with which the yarn is wound onto
the spool, which is also the same as the delivery speed from the drafting range.
The winding of the yarn, and the contemporaneous twisting of the same, delays the traveller in
relation to the spindle, therefore the coils of yarn wound onto the bobbin correspond to the
traveller delay.
The following relationship is thus established
n f = n c + na
in which n f represents the spindle revolutions and n a the coils.
93
Spinfinger
The spinfinger serves to retain the yarn, which is wound around it forming coils, thereby
countering the centrifugal force that is the main cause of balloon formation.
This problem, typical of ring spinning machines since it derives from their very working
principle, is very evident in the case of woollen and semi-worsted ring spinning frames, due to
the coarseness of the yarn and the large size of the spool and ring. It is known that the factors
negatively affecting yarn tension are essentially related to the size of the balloon, to the square
of the rotation speed and to the various sources of friction: yarn-air, traveller-air, traveller-ring.
The coils wound around the spinfinger form a sort of reserve that supplies material when yarn
tension is higher (winding of the kernel and on the smaller diameters of the frustrum) and
gathers it in again when the tension drops. This allows it to cope with periodic changes in
winding tension, eliminating the balloon totally (this is the solution adopted in the case of coarse
yarns) or partially (the solution preferred for medium-fine and fine yarns).
The main difference between the two types is the path followed by the yarn, which, having
formed a few coils around the spinfinger, runs around the tube to reach the spool formation level
(this is in the case of total elimination of the balloon), while in the case of partial balloon
elimination it is detached from the tube, forming a smaller balloon.
94
Clearly, therefore, to avoid the risk of fibres getting caught and breaking, the tube has to be well
finished. The adoption of the spinfinger has allowed an increase in the tube length, with
consequent benefits in terms of productivity.
Furthermore, the spinfinger allows the twists to be more evenly distributed, reaching as far as
the delivery cylinders at the end of the draft range: sometimes, friction with the thread guide
causes local elimination of twists and thus a considerable weakening of the yarn and increased
risk of yarn breaks.
It is worth noting that modern, electronically-controlled machines use continuous spindle-speed
variation during the formation of the bobbin (kernel, build-up and end), as well as during the
coil deposition and winding/binding, in order to keep the yarn tension constant.
Ring
The rings are positioned on the ring rail, which has a channel that is connected with the central
automatic-dosing lubrication system. The rings usually have a diameter of 75-95 mm in the case
of fine yarns, 110-140 mm in that of coarse yarns and up to a maximum of 300 mm for very
coarse yarns. Naturally, the spindle rotations are inversely proportional to the diameter of the
ring, in accordance with the following:
V c = x a x n c
Where
V c = peripheral speed of the traveller
a = ring diameter
n c = number of traveller revolutions
The speed of the traveller is theoretically restricted to around 40 m/s (but this can be much lower
if problems connected with the working principle are exacerbated by problems relating to the
strength of the yarn, which is highly variable and depends on the type of fibres). Thus all wool
spinning machines are characterised by a speed that is, on average, lower than that of worsted
wool spinning machines. In particular, the table below refers not only to the classic set of rings
with diameters ranging from 75 mm to 140 mm, but also to those reserved for particularly
coarse yarns, with diameters of up to 300 mm.
95
GAUGE
(mm)
RING
(mm)
H TUBE
(mm)
COUNT
Nm
SPINDLE
(rpm-1)
106
75 80
350 400
8 30
10.000
120
90 95
400 450
6 16
8.500
145
110
450 500
4 12
7.000
165
127
500 600
28
6.000
180
140
600
15
5.500
240
200
700 800
0,5 4
3.800
300
300
700 - 800
0,5 - 3
3.000
FINE
YARNS
COARSE
YARNS
EXTRA
COARSE
YARNS
96
97
1st Stage
During feeding, the beams onto which the rovings are wound are made to rotate by the grooved
cylinders on which they rest, in such a way as to unwind the material, which then passes through
a pair of cylinders to create a nip point and to be fed to the spinning machine.
In this stage the spindles start to turn slowly, while the feeding table on the rails, starts to
distance itself from the spindles, moving at a speed greater than that of the roving unwinding.
This results in progressive drafting, while the spindles increase their speed of rotation, imparting
pre-twists. The spindles are positioned slightly lower than the feeding frame and show an
approximately 15 degree inclination towards it, thus the coils of yarn that become twisted
around the end of the spindle tend to slip off it, becoming transformed into twisted coils on the
yarn. Each twist is thus produced by a spindle rotation and constitutes a failed winding (Figure
96)
Analysing this phenomenon in greater depth, it can be hypothesised that the pre-twists serve to
slow down the movement of the fibres, extending the initial straightening and alignment stage,
and are probably helped in this by the vibrations induced in the roving by the rotation of the
spindles and the consequent escaping of the coils off the spindle tips. Spindle rotation increases
progressively as the feeding table becomes more distant, according to a curve adjustable
according to the requirements of the yarn: at the end of this motion, the roving is drawn,
pretwisted and even.
2nd Stage
At the end of the drafting stage, the feeding frame remains still and the spindles rotate at
maximum speed, imparting the twists that, added to the pre-twists already conferred, reach the
definitive value to be given to the yarn. The twists are, in the same way as the pre-twists,
distributed along the length of roving thus far processed although now the process is
considerably speeded up to reduce as far as possible the duration of this stage, which is nonproductive.
The twists lead to a shortening of the yarn, which can be compensated for in two ways: by
returning the feeding carriage, or by overfeeding the roving.
At the end of twisting, a few coils of yarn remain wound around the end of the spindle,
preventing the subsequent winding of the yarn onto the cop. These can be unwound by making
the spindles rotate briefly in the opposite direction. The release of these coils reduces the
tautness of the length of yarn produced, and this tautness thus has to be restored. This is where
faller sickle comes in, to guide the winding, and the counter faller sickle, to maintain adequate
tension during winding.
3rd Stage
The faller and counter faller sickles are two devices that can be likened to thin metal rods that
form part of the spindle carriage and run across the entire front of the same: when the carriage
starts its return, the faller sickle lowers rapidly as far as the maximum cop diameter, effecting
the binding coils needed to render the cop compact; they then ascend returning as far as the
minimum diameter, to effect the winding coils, which are overall about 4 or 5 times longer than
the previous ones (Figure 97).
100
While the faller and counter faller sickles control, respectively, the yarn distribution motion and
its tension throughout winding, it is also necessary to vary the speed of rotation of the spindles
in accordance with the laws regulating the formation of the cops conical layers. Once the
carriage has returned and the winding is finished, the faller sickles have fulfilled their function
and return to their starting position, allowing coils of yarn once more to wind around the end of
the spindle, at the start of a new working cycle.
Winding is the machines productive stage, during which the yarn is wound onto the cop thanks
to the rotation of the spindles and the contemporaneous return of the carriage.
On the other hand, it is also a very delicate stage that must ensure the formation of a compact
and adequate-size cop, that will guarantee optimal unwinding during subsequent processes
(winding, warping...)
Automation
In the electronically-controlled selfacting machine, the driving and control of feeding, drafting,
twisting and bobbin formation is managed by a microprocessor that permits optimal regulation
of the spinning parameters, in relation to the characteristics of the raw material, as well as the
formation of a controlled-tension cop.
The spinning machine can be equipped with a quill and cop change automation system.
The cycle is made up of the following stages:
- doffing of the cops followed by their transportation and deposition in containers situated
alongside the machine. The cop-doffing unit descends from its rest position above the
machine and proceeds to slide the cops off the spindles, simply snapping the yarn, carrying
out binding and underwinding.
- placement, on the spindles, of empty tubes picked from a container alongside the machine, w
here they are oriented appropriately and positioned on a rack.
- quill change with unloading of the empty beams at the side of the machine. This stage is
preceded by the pre-arrangement of the quills, with manual positioning of the new rovings in
gripping devices (these are all part of the operators routine tasks and do not, therefore,
negatively affect performance). The empty quills are moved away from the feeding table and
replaced by the full ones, prepared earlier.
- splicing of the roving by superimposition of the old over the new roving.
Technical features
-
102
Fancy Yarns
General remarks
A fancy yarn is characterised by special effects (knots, slubs) that alter its section, rendering it
irregular, in accordance with a pre-established pattern, and sometimes incorporating colour
effects.
These products are widely used in the hand knitting and knitting sectors, which exploit to the
full the fanciness of these yarns, but they are also used to a considerable extent in weaving too,
particularly in womens clothing.
Fanciness in a yarn can be obtained using different processes, creating infinite scope for effects,
often combined, which can be added to other designs that are now regarded as classics.
The woollen spinning cycle, due to the way it is structured and even more due to the
characteristics of the raw materials used, allows special fancy effects to be obtained within the
spinning cycle
A special, computerised device, programmed according to the size and frequency of the slubs,
intervenes pneumatically on the fly cylinder, increasing both its descent on the drum and,
therefore, its extraction of fibres from the clothings.
On the spinning machine, meanwhile, it is possible to produce doubled yarns, obtained by
feeding two or more rovings into the machines draft range: the resulting yarn is bulky with few
twists.
Another interesting opportunity is offered by the friction spinning machine, which, normally
employed to produce yarns for technical uses (automotive industry, protective clothing,
filters) and for the furnishing sector (covers, carpets), can also be employed to produce fancy
yarns.
104
These are perforated and exert a suction effect on the fibres, which become twisted due to the
friction effect and the torque imparted by the two cylinders, which have the same direction of
rotation. The yarn is formed from the inside outwards by superimposition of the individual
fibres, which, ultimately, become twisted round one another and strongly bound together. The
yarn leaves the nip area of the two cylinders, parallel with their axis of rotation, and is then
wound onto cylindrical packages at a rate of around 250-300 m/min.
The friction spinning method, while creating cohesion of the material only with a rather high
number of fibres in the cross section (yarn count ranging from 3 to 10 Nm), is not as influenced
by the characteristics of the fibre as all the other types of spinning. It allows the processing of
natural or man-made fibres with counts ranging from 3 to 15 dtex and lengths of 5-100 mm:
compared with traditional spinning machines, these machines clearly benefit from using
heterogeneous, even regenerated, materials.
Furthermore, the possibility of using different types of filament as the core means that the yarn
is quite strong. In order to obtain particular fancy effects, the spinning machine can be fed with
slivers of different colours and materials. Within the maximum admissible loading limits (30
ktex), it is possible to feed various slivers (for example 5 6-ktex slivers), whose fibres will be
arranged coaxially, creating a layered effect. Yarns can thus be constructed with the shortest and
weakest fibres in the middle and the longer and the more valuable fibres at the outside or with
whatever colour effect you like.
An experiment is currently being carried out to verify the possibility of using slivers originating
both from cotton cards and from sets of carding cylinders with sliver delivery without the
divider and from the worsted wool cycle.
In the second operation the binder yarn twists around the semi-processed yarn with a lower twist
and in the opposite direction to the previous stage. This results in a partial loosening of the
effect, resulting in a soft yarn.
Hollow spindle twisting machine
In this machine the hollow spindle with the binder yarn is positioned between two pairs of
cylinders, while a hook, below the spindle and rotating in the same direction, twists the core
and effect yarn (Figure 102).
106
Given the intermediate position of the spindle it is located between the pair of feeding
cylinders and the pair of delivery cylinders the twists imparted during this first stage are in the
opposite direction between the first and second length of the two yarns.
The binder yarn runs inside the hollow spindle, parallel with the semi-processed core-effect
yarn, as far as the twist hook, which makes it twist round the other two yarns, stabilising the
product.
If the twist hook is driven as one with the spindle, and thus accomplishes the same number of
rotations, the twists imparted to the core and effect yarn will number the same as the final
binding twists. To prevent an excessively high number of twists making it necessary to stabilise
the yarn with a steaming process, a separate hook twist drive has been developed that can rotate
at a higher speed than the hollow spindle. The yarn is wound onto a package.
Spinningtwisting machine
The twisting of a fancy yarn can also be accomplished using a machine that combines the two
processes, ring and hollow spindle.
In this case the first operation is carried out by the hollow spindle, preceded by the core and
effect yarn feeding group. Below the hollow spindle, which holds the binding yarn, is located
the ring spindle, which winds the yarn directly and the twists are loosened as an effect of the
relative speed between the first and the second stages. Indeed, the ring spindle cannot rotate as
fast as the hollow spindle and while this results in a softer yarn, the rate of production will
inevitably be lower, given that the bobbin will also have to undergo a subsequent winding stage.
When the machine is fed with yarns rather than rovings, it becomes an out-and-out twisting
machine (Figure 103).
109
110
Pre-opening
The bale opener (Figure 107) includes the To two-section horizontal conveyor on which the
greasy wool bales are loaded; the bales pass from one sector to the following one and are turned
upside down and are partially divided into big tufts of wool.
The To conveyor conveys the fibre mass very slowly towards the Ti slant apron; it is
covered with large-diameter spikes which are bent in the direction of the feeding material, and
the apron moves faster.
The wool, supported by the spikes of the Ti slant apron, is brought upwards; the bigger tufts
of material are driven back or their dimension is reduced thanks to the action of the spikes of a
leveller or overflow roll (R) which rotates anticlockwise. The position of the R cylinder can
be automatically adjusted to calibrate the opening and the evenness of the fibre mass.
The S cleaning roll rotates clockwise and its spikes knock back (on the horizontal conveyor)
the lumps of wool left between the spikes of the leveller roll, which is therefore always kept
clean and efficient.
The combined action of the leveller and the cleaner, besides adjusting the quantity of
material, opens the greasy wool with adjustable intensity and prepares it for efficient beating.
After the leveller, the wool slips
off the spikes of the slant apron
(which are now bent downwards)
helped by the spikes of the Sc
beater roller, which turns
clockwise a lot faster than the
Ti roller.
A small quantity of waste is also
separated from wool at the
picking points.
111
Blending
The wool batch is usually made of many lots of different origin; a partial opening of the material
allows the blending of multi-origin greasy wool, making up a wool batch of the desired
composition.
The composition of the batch is determined inside special blending rooms, containing min.
100 bales; the blending rooms are filled from above, in horizontal layers, with wool coming
from the bale opener or from the automatic feeder. The blending rooms are unloaded by picking
the material in vertical layers, with carriages or picker cylinders, which ensures a minimum
degree of evenness for the blend fibre mass.
112
113
Weight check
Since the liquor ratio of scouring vats must be constant, the weight of the material must be
checked accurately before passing to the scouring operation.
Opening degree
Once the greasy wool has been opened and cleaned, it is necessary to find a correct proportion
between the waste removed and the fibres lost during the successive scouring stage.
For example, an inadequate opening process with inefficient removal of broken fibres,
fragments and brittle fibres from the inside the wool lumps, will generate a great quantity of dust
in the carding room, where these materials are separated from fibres. A satisfactory degree of
opening is reached only when wool is perfectly suitable for passing to the carding process, i.e.
when the only fibres breaking are those that will certainly break during the carding process.
Scouring
During the scouring stage, an appropriate stirring of the liquor is particularly important to allow
an efficient removal of the dirt even if the stirring may lead to fibre entanglements and felting.
The main purpose of scouring is the removal of wax, suint and waste contained in the greasy
wool; scouring should be carried out in such a way to prevent wool felting and the consequent
breaking of fibres, to avoid the reduction of the fibre length, and to avoid an increase in the
waste quantity during carding, drawing and combing operations.
114
The optimisation of the huge quantities of water necessary for scouring the greasy wool is
obtained through the application of the principle that the bath can carry out a detergency action
until the degree of dirt contained in the scouring liquor is lower than the degree of dirt
contained in the material to be scoured.
The scouring of the greasy wool is carried out in 4 5 successive scouring vats (b1.1 b1.5 in
Figure 104) where correct circulation of the scouring liquor is maintained; thanks to this
method, water consumption can be optimised in relation to the scoured/greasy wool yield (the
water consumption ranges from 6 8 litres of water per kg of greasy wool with yields exceeding
70%, to 12 15 litres per kg for yields below 50%)
Scouring vats
Greasy wool is scoured inside special vats with the following features:
the bottom of the first two scouring vats (b1.1 and b1.2 in Figure 106) has the shape of two
truncated pyramids with rectangular base turned upside down and placed side by side.
(Figure 114.). At the bottom of the vats there are two worm conveyors that take the sludge to
the centre of the scouring vat, inside draining pits. At the bottom of these draining pits there
is valve which constantly discharges sludge and solid contaminants without removing too
much water. The rotary speed of the worm conveyor is variable and can be adjusted
according to the type of wool and to the quantity of dirt to be removed;
the lower part of the other three scouring vats (b1.3, b1.4 and b1.5 in Figure 106) has the
shape of two pyramids turned upside down and placed side by side, with rectangular base
(Figure 115); at the bottom of each scouring vat there is an open-flow drain valve with
automatic timer control (for example 5 seconds every 4 minutes);
Fig. 114 - Longitudinal section of the second scouring vat in the scouring range
115
Fig. 115 - Longitudinal section of the third scouring vat in the scouring range
in the first part of each unit there is a diving drum (the first cylinder on the left in Figures 114
and 115) which dips the wool into the scouring liquor and prevents it from floating on the
liquor;
in the upper section of each unit there is a mobile apron, with diving teeth and blades,
featuring a reciprocating motion, and taking the material into and out of the liquor while
feeding it through the process vat (Figures 114 and 115);
in the final part of each scouring vat there is a small high-speed apron, taking the material
into and out of the liquor, which allows a regular feeding of the squeezing press (the pair of
cylinders shown on the right of Figures 114 and 115);
in the middle of the scouring vats there is a perforated grid (the dotted line in Figures 114 and
115) separating the upper part of the vat (where the wool is scoured) from the lower side
(where the sludge accumulates) to prevent dirt particles from being recirculated by the
mobile apron;
at the end of each scouring vat there is a squeezing press including a pair of cylinders (the
lower cylinder is chromium-plated while the upper one is coated with a square rope made of
nylon or rubber to grant the proper hardness) which exerts a pressure on the wool equal to
15,000 daN (b3 in Figure 106). The squeezing of the fibre mass, passing from one unit to
the other, improves the elimination of dirt, prevents the contamination of the downstream
liquor section and facilitates the soaking of the fibres when they plunge into it;
on one side of each unit there is a
settling tank for recovering the liquor
from the overflow box of the scouring
vat and the liquor squeezed by the
press (Figure 116); each vessel is also
equipped with an overflow box. A
pump for recirculating the settled and
pre-filtered liquor connects the vat to
the initial section of the corresponding
scouring vat and to another vat
(described below).
Fig. 116 Partial side view and front view of the
settling trough of a scouring vat.
116
117
From the second scouring stage, the greasy substances are recovered by heating the bath to
approx. 90 C to break the emulsion of grease and detergent, and by subsequent centrifugation.
The clarified product (lanolin, primarily cholesterol esters of superior fatty acids) is used as a
base for emollients in cosmetics and for medical
purposes by the pharmaceutical industry.
In the fourth and fifth scouring stage, the temperature
decreases, respectively to 55 C and 45 C to prevent
fibre felting. Thoroughly scoured fibres are unprotected
and can felt at higher bath temperatures. The higher the
temperature of the water in the last vat, the faster and
the more cost-efficient is the subsequent drying
operation.
Figure 118 shows the liquor exchange between the
scouring vats:
the first vat receives the scouring liquor, suitably
cooled down, from the fourth and fifth vats and
drains it off through the overflow which eliminates
the excess liquor from the settling trough; the liquor Fig. 117 Absorption and swelling
coming from the settling trough is partly recycled
of the dirt.
and sent to the scouring vat,
the second vat receives the liquor from the third vat which drains and recycles the water like
the other vat; the liquor from this vat is heated and sent to a centrifuge. The liquor from the
centrifuge has lost its non-soluble fat (lanolin), separated by centrifugation,
Lanolin
recovery
118
the fourth vat receives the liquor from the fifth vat or fresh water (or both), and drains and
recycles it like the previous vat; the liquor taken from the settling trough flows into the first
vat,
the fifth vat receives fresh liquor which is drained and recycled like the previous vat; the
liquor of this vat flows into the first vat.
After the scouring process, the residual grease must not exceed 1%.
Some scouring groups have two settling troughs (Figure 119) placed at the sides of each
scouring vat; these settling troughs have the same capacity as the scouring vat. A recirculation
pump recycling the settled and roughly filtered liquor connects alternatively these troughs with
the initial section of the corresponding scouring vat.
During the production cycle, when one vat is being prepared and is therefore by-passed, the
other one receives the squeezing liquor from the presser and sends it again into the scouring vat
after a rough filtration; when the dirt contained in this vat reaches the maximum acceptable
level, the vat is by-passed and the second vat starts working.
When the liquor is recycled through the second vat, the first one is drained off, rinsed and filled
with fresh liquor; this system therefore allows a non-stop scouring process also during liquor
changes.
Drying
Purpose of drying
On exiting the scouring range, the wool is wet (moisture content approx. 55% 60%) and must
be dried so that:
the lumps can take their natural swollen aspect (with fibres moderately attached or entangled)
and pass through the carding process without breaking,
the elimination of vegetal substances during the carding process can be facilitated since an
excessive degree of moisture would make them softer and similar to the other fibres,
optimal oiling could be obtained, by allowing the oil to spread uniformly over all the fibres.
119
The residual quantity of water contained in the material on exiting the dryer is generally 12 15
% of the wool weight. The higher is the content of vegetal matters, the lower must be the
quantity of water contained; for clean, fine and extra-fine wool, the water contained can reach
the maximum value to ensure higher flexibility of the fibres during the carding process.
Belt-type dryer
The mostly used dryers are the belt dryers where water evaporates through the circulation of hot
air, by suction or compression, forced perpendicularly through a fibre layer arranged on a
horizontal conveyor belt.
The water content that can be evaporated inside these dryers is about 10 15 kg per square
meter per hour with an energy consumption of 250 kJ per kg.
The belt dryer (Figure 120) has an insulated metal compartment; inside the compartment a nonstop conveyor belt carries the material. The conveyor belt features perforated sheet metals for
the passage of the hot forced air.
Damp air exhaust
Loading
Unloading
Fig. 121 Plan of the belt dryer: the arrows indicate the air inlet areas.
T stands for temperature controller.
120
Inside the compartment, arranged on the sides, there are two metal walls making up the ducts for
air recirculation and two air filters (Figure 122, 1); the ventilation fan is positioned on top of
the machine and the heating sets are arranged on the two sides of the aerothermal chamber to
ensure the optimal balancing of the air circuit (Figure 122, 2).
Fig. 122 Aerothermal chamber: cross section (1), longitudinal section (2)
The recirculated air is filtered by a suction fan, heated through the heating sets and uniformly
distributed on the material to be dried; the airflow from above prevents the formation of
preferential paths.
With this operating method the hot air is homogeneously blown on the whole surface of the
conveyor belt, taken symmetrically on the bottom and recirculated through two side tunnels; the
slight vacuum on the surface of the conveyor belt ensures the stability of fibres on the belt
despite the intense ventilation.
The air speed can be adjusted in order to allow easy passage of the lumps arranged on the
conveyor belt.
To avoid saturation of the chamber air, some air is evacuated through the exhaust pipe while the
suction air fed to the fan is sent onto the heating sets to reach the temperature level set on the
temperature controller.
Thanks to the modular design of the dryer, the dimensions must be proportional to the required
production capacity: each single module is 3,250 mm long while the conveyor belt is 1,300,
1,600, 2,000, 2,500 and 3,000 mm wide.
121
The introduction of the weighing belt and checking the quantity of greasy wool fed into
scouring range has generated a significant reduction of variability in the moisture content of the
fibre mass leaving the dryer (for example, the CV% has passed from 10 to 23 % to a CV ranging
between 2 5 %; Figure 124)
122
Control devices
Metal probes, placed on the delivery side of the drying unit,
are used for controlling the dried wool moisture content
(which must be uniform and predetermined); these probes
measure the electrical capacity or resistance fluctuations,
which vary according to the quantity of water contained in
the fibres. It is however worth remembering that these
measures are generally affected by the level of cleanness of
the wool and by the possible presence of soluble salts.
The control device shown in Figure 125 (Moisture meter)
calculates and determines the average moisture content in the
material by means of four electrodes, each one carrying out
600 measurements per second, which determines the
electrical resistance of the material when the current drops
through the element. The measurement is carried out with a
+/- 1% accuracy even when moisture values are very low
(approaching zero).
A controller (Figure 126) can be added to the previous control device; the controller generates a
signal that is used for checking one of the parameters affecting the process: the energy to be
supplied to the dryer (through steam or gas valves) or the quantity of material fed (through the
feeding speed).
Dryer
124
Closed
Open
Oiling
At the exit of the opener-beater, fibres can condense and consolidate attracted by the scales now
freed from the yolk; they can attract or reject each other depending on the electrostatic charges
generated on their surface due to the friction between them or with other bodies.
To be rid of these problems, and therefore to facilitate the subsequent processes, the wool
leaving the opener-beater undergoes the so-called oiling process, which lubricates the fibres
by spraying on them an oily emulsion soluble in cold water.
The oiling device includes a number of nozzles, arranged next to each other along the whole
operating width; each nozzle sprays a jet of emulsion on the dried wool that is proportional to
the thickness of the fibre layer as indicated by a tracer.
The oil can be a blend of derivatives of natural fatty acids and polyoxyethylenates (anionic and
compatible with anionic and non-ionic products) which, besides featuring a high fibre/fibre and
fibre/metal lubricating power, can be easily eliminated with cold water.
The oil can be used alone or combined with another liquid featuring anti-static characteristics; in
this case, the emulsion could be the following:
20 25 % oil,
10 15 % anti-static product,
70 60 % water
to be sprayed on the wool (2 3 % of the weight of the material to be oiled).
Carding
General remarks
Through the carding process, the washed, dried and oiled tufts of wool made of random and
entangled fibres finally become a card sliver where fibres are straightened and aligned along
the longitudinal axis of the sliver.
This operation is carried out with a card, a machine which processes the fibres by means of a
series of cylinders and rollers whose surface is covered with needles, i.e. the card clothing.
The interaction between the material and the needles of two opposite cylinders, rotating in
opposite directions and at different speeds, takes place mainly according to the following
scheme:
125
1. tufts are separated so that some fibres remain on the needles of one cylinder and some on the
needles of the opposite one. The stretching of the tufts generates a reduction of their section
and establishes the conditions for a certain quantity of fibres to be distributed on a greater
surface; when this operation is carried out repeatedly, the fibres separate from one another;
2. fibres are transferred from the needles of one cylinder to the needles of the opposite one.
The formation of the card sliver is carried out through the following steps: first of all the fibre
mass is disentangled (opened) so that each fibre can separate from the others. After that, the
fibres are arranged (condensed) in the form of a thin continuous web, which is then transformed
into a sliver. During these operations the material is selected and cleaned, i.e. very short fibres
as well as foreign particles are eliminated from the fibre mass, which is then also partially
blended.
The above mentioned processes must be carried out taking care that the fibre length is left
unaltered.
a) inclined needle
126
two needles (AC and BD) catch a lump of fibre by their respective C and D tips (Figure
134) and exert their action along the CD direction; the force exerted on the fibres by the tips
generates a stretching effect; furthermore these fibres exert an Af force on the needles,
which at any instant is equal or contrary to the previous one, thus also subjecting the fibres to
flexural stress.
S1, S2, S3 and S4: stripper roller, covered with needles inclined in the direction of
the rotation. The stripper rollers pass material from the worker cylinders onto the drum. They
partially blend the material.
I: intermediate roller, covered with needles inclined in the direction of rotation. The
intermediate roller transfers the fibres onto the drum.
X: the comber roller, covered with needles that can be more or less inclined in the rotation
direction. The comber roller moves slowly and, besides carrying out a further carding action,
takes up the material coming from the drum and condensed on the roller clothing.
A card can include many carding units. Since a task of
the carding process is to form the card sliver, the
ultimate carding unit being the one used for forming
the web (which becomes the sliver after a
condensation process), it is equipped with (Figure
133b):
P: comber roller, covered with needles inclined
in the direction opposite to the rotation direction.
The comber roller allows the formation of a web of
fibres (besides being also a carding element),
p: oscillating doffer comb, which detaches the
web of fibres from the P comber roller.
Fig. 133b Ultimate carding unit
In some cases (Figure 133c), the ultimate carding unit can also include (between the last carding
point and the comber roller):
V: fly roller, covered with long and flexible needles, inclined in the direction opposite to
the direction of rotation. The fly roller raises the fibres to the top of the needles of the T
drum.
Operation of the ultimate carding unit
The interaction of the material with the needles
(Figure 134)
of the T drum and of the L1, ., L4 worker
cylinders allows the carding, i.e. allows the
opening of tufts down to single fibres and, as much
as possible, the straightening and parallelisation of
the fibres,
of a worker cylinder and the corresponding fly
roller allows the fibres to be transferred from the
worker cylinder to the fly roller,
128
The tuft is subjected to a stress force which overcomes the friction between the fibres and
develops a reciprocal sliding of the fibres, as a result opening the tufts, which therefore
disentangle and divide into smaller tufts; some of them pass onto the needles of the worker
cylinder while others follow the motion of the drum.
During the opening of the tufts, the fibres are stretched and partially parallelised.
The repetition of these actions generates gradually smaller tufts until each single fibre is
completely separated from the others (Figure 134). The action described above constitutes the
carding process.
After a certain time, the clothing of the drum and of the worker cylinder are filled with fibres
and must be cleaned.
B) Worker plus stripper action
Thanks to the interaction between the needles of the worker cylinder and the needles of the
drum, the tufts on the needles of the worker cylinder are subject to the action of the rigid needles
of the stripper roller.
The worker cylinder and the stripper roller turn in
the opposite direction so that, in the zone where
they interact with the material, their needles move
in the opposite direction; the speed of the stripper
roller is far higher than the speed of the needles of
the worker cylinder, VS > VL.
Consequently, needle 2 of the worker cylinder
and needle 3 of the stripper roller (Figure 136)
move in opposite directions and the speed of
needle 3 is much higher than the speed of needle
2, V3 > V2. The speed of needle 3 with
respect to needle 2 is therefore equal to the sum
Fig. 136 Fibre transfer
of the two speeds: (V2 + V3).
The needles of the worker cylinder are inclined opposite to rotation direction while the needles
of the stripper roller are inclined in the direction of rotation.
Thanks to the higher speed of the needles of the stripper roller and to their position converging
towards the worker cylinder, the clothing of the stripper roller picks up the fibres from the
clothing of the worker cylinder; in this way, the needles of the stripper roller strip the clothing
of the worker cylinder.
Since the needles of the worker cylinder and of the stripper roller do not move along a linear
path but along a circular one, the long tufts undergo an additional carding action since they are
picked up by the needles of the stripper roller while they are still retained by the ones of the
worker cylinder; therefore, the transfer of the fibres on the needles of the stripper roller is
accompanied by a slight stretching and partial parallelisation
C) Stripper plus drum action
The tufts picked up by the stripper roller are fed to the drum.
The drum and the stripper roller rotate in opposite directions. As a result, in the zone where they
interact with the material, the needles rotate in the same direction; furthermore, the speed of
needles of the drum is higher than the speed of the needles of the stripper roller, VT > VS.
Consequently, needle 1 of the drum and needle 3 of the stripper roller rotate in the same
direction (Figure 137) and the speed of needle 1 is higher than the speed of needle 3, V1 >
V3.
130
131
comb
web
Figure 139 shows the faster drum (on the right), whose needles are inclined in the direction of
rotation, conveying the fibres arranged on the tips of its needles, without seizing them
completely. These fibres are transferred onto the clothing (on the left) of the slower comber
roller, whose needles are inclined in direction opposite to rotation, thus forming a web of fibres.
Tandem card
General remarks
The washed, beaten and oiled wool is sent to special carding rooms through a pneumatic system.
It remains there for the time necessary to allow a proper distribution of the oiling substance into
the fibres and also to meet the specific production schedule.
The efficiency of the carding operation strictly depends on the washing operation mode; in fact:
- a high moisture content of the material can generate undesired fibre winding on the clothing
of the cylinders (fibre bands) with possible formation of hardly recoverable fibre
entanglements (neps),
- an excessive residual quantity of grease dirties the clothing causing a consequent bad
running,
- an excessive removal of grease increases the tendency of the fibres to take up static charges
to such an extent that they cannot be neutralised completely by the anti-static agents added to
the oiling substance.
Composition
The so-called tandem card, which features 2 carding units, is used for fine or average-quality
wool carding (up to 22 micron), whose vegetal substance content can even exceed 12%; the
carding machine is completed by several devices to feed and open the material and by another
carding unit, known as pre-carding unit, preceding the other two carding units and several
deburring cylinders (Figure 142).
The additional 6 carding points on the pre-carding unit drum, are used for a preliminary
disentangling of the wool lumps to improve the efficiency of the subsequent carding step and
limit the wear of the clothing of the other carding units.
The deburring cylinders extract the substances of vegetal origin (burrs), i.e. the residues of
wild thistles.
The card sequentially and simultaneously
reduces the dimension of the tufts fed into the card,
isolates and straightens the fibres of each single lump in the material feeding direction,
separates the fibres from adhering vegetal substances,
overlaps the fibres to form a web of even thickness,
transforms the web into carded sliver.
133
Fig. 142 Tandem card with pre-carding unit and deburring cylinders
Card operation
In order to analyse the card operating principle thoroughly, a numerical value will be attributed
to the tip speeds of the different cylinders; these values, referring to single specific cases, are
therefore indicative and must be considered reference data only.
A) Formation of the web
The web is prepared by an
automatic feeder which arranges,
on an endless conveyor belt, a
steady quantity of material per
length unit, which is fundamental
for a homogeneous distribution
of fibres on the carding devices.
Figure 143 shows a (balanced)
gravimetric feeder, suitable for
processing longer fibres since the
material is unloaded by means of
special rakes avoiding potential
winding problems.
The small material mass of
constant weight, which is
unloaded from the balance and
dropped onto the endless
conveyor belt, is then spread on
the belt by means of a
compacting table (in some
cases it is also possible to use a
cylinder) allowing the formation
of a web of consistent thickness.
B) Web feeding
The endless conveyor belt, F, pushes the web constantly to the feeder cylinders A, which
turn at the same speed (VF = 1.2 m/min) and take it to the opener roller R (Figure 144).
134
The A feeder rollers, covered with steel needles fixed on bronze rings or with a sawtooth
wiring, with teeth inclined in the direction opposite to rotation, act as a gripping device and
ensure a regular and controlled feeding of the card. They also act as a retaining device allowing
the opener cylinder R to divide the material into smaller tufts without breaking the fibres.
C) Tuft opening
The inclination of the needles of A cylinders allows web retention while the rigid needles of
the opener cylinder R, inclined in the rotation direction and turning at a speed higher than the
A needles (VR = 11.8 m/min), penetrate the web and pick up the tufts; as a consequence of
the stretching, the front free ends of the fibres (making up head of the tufts), straighten and
become parallel (Figure 144).
As soon as the tuft is released from
needles A, it is dragged forward by
the R opener cylinder. The head of
the tuft is made up by the fibres having
an end deeply inserted in the R
needles while the remaining part
(body or tail of the tuft) includes
fibres, more or less entangled, floating
on the R needles.
Figure 145 shows the solution adopted
with the (previously illustrated) tandem
card, to feed and divide the web. Worth
noticing is that in the triangular space
distance between the feeder cylinders
and the opener, the uncontrolled
fibres can be picked up by the needles
of the opener (also irregularly) in
bunches or blocks.
The fibres on L and R are transferred onto the T intermediate roller, covered with rigid
needles inclined in the direction of rotation and revolving at the speed VI = 27 m/min, which
transfers the fibres on the T.A. pre-carding drum.
The R.T. collector-conveyor is a cylindrical brush, rotating at the speed VRT = 33 m/min,
which recover the fibres dropped by the T intermediate roller that would be otherwise lost.
Figure 146 shows a solution adopted
in the past to feed and open the web;
the R opener roller, is followed by
an I intermediate roller, as described
above. The three pairs of feeder roller
(the intermediate one is not covered
with needles but has longitudinal
grooves) ensure an excellent evenness
of the material fed since they do not
allow the R opener roller to pick up
the fibres irregularly, i.e. in bunches
or blocks; in fact, the second pair of
cylinders, featuring a speed about 10
Fig. 146 Feeding and opening of the web
times higher than the speed of the
(alternative solution)
previous pair of rollers, performs a
remarkable drawing action on the fibre mass, which starts being opened straight away. The third
pair of cylinders, similar to the first one, whose speed is about the two thirds of the second one,
compact the web making it more even, and reduce the possibility that the opener roller picks up
the fibres irregularly.
Whatever the solution adopted, the breaking of the web into tufts is carried out irregularly and at
random; the result depends on the VR/VA ratio and on the thickness of the web on F.
D) Wool deburring
A partial deburring (elimination of the vegetal substances contaminating the fibres) can also be
carried out inside the opener as well as the removal of other foreign matters contained in the
fibre mass that could damage the clothing of card rollers; this operation can be carried out with a
deburring roller provided with E tabs and the contiguous B collector (Figure 145).
The E deburring unit includes a roller covered with longitudinal blades (or radial tabs)
rotating in a direction opposite to the R opener roller at such a speed that there is the passage
of a tab per every 2 mm of revolution covered by the opener (1500 2000 rpm).
Every time a tuft contaminated with vegetal impurities or other foreign matters reaches the web
surface and passes near the longitudinal blades of the deburring roller (deburring point), it is
repeatedly beaten by the blades. The particles stripped are taken to the B collector and
conveyed outside the card by means of small blades driven by a belt running along the roller
(across the machine) while fibres remain hooked on the needles and are therefore dragged
further by the opener roller.
However, the elimination of vegetal substances through the deburrer on the opener roller (and of
the comber rollers of the carding units) is not thorough enough; for this reason the card includes
other rollers specially designed to eliminate burrs.
136
The most common solution is the use of rollers with Morel clothing. These rollers perform a
powerful action on vegetal substances on sufficiently opened tufts, where fibres are not
excessively entangled. Therefore, when using Morel clothings, the elimination of the burrs must
be carried out after the tufts have been opened by pre-carding drum and/or a carding unit.
A first deburring step (Figure 147) is
carried out with the R1 roller with
Morel clothing, (VR1 = 165 m/min)
and with the E1 roller with radial
tabs placed between the pre-carding
unit and the first drum of the tandem
card.
The needles of the R1 roller have
a trapezoidal shape and are arranged
Fig. 147 - Double deburring with Morel clothings
so that a gap of about 0.8 1.0 mm is created between two adjacent needle rows; while the main
part of the fibres pass between this space, bigger vegetal substances (whose height exceeds the
gap width) do not pass over the rollers and float above them and above the needles.
The I1 cylindrical brush, (a detail in Figure 147), which rotates at the speed VI1 = 99 m/min,
transfers the fibres from the T.A. roller (VTA = 49 m/min) to the R1 roller while the E1
finned roller strips the burrs from the web and takes them to the B1 collector.
From the R1 roller, the fibres are transferred to the needles of a
second R2 Morel roller, (VR2 = 329 m/min), with adjacent
E2 deburring roller, by means of another I2 cylindrical brush
(VI2 = 272 m/min) and finally are transferred onto the needles of
the first drum, by means of an I3 conveyor roller (VI3 = 456
m/min) covered with curved needles (flexible) inclined in the
direction of rotation.
A last deburring operation can be carried out following the same
method as before, between the first and the second drum (Figure
Fig. 148 - Clothing of the 149), by means of the R3 Morel roller, (VR3 = 240 m/min) ,
the E3 deburring roller with its B3 collector, the I4
cylindrical brush
cylindrical brush, (VI4 = 158 m/min) and the I5 conveyor roller
(VI5 = 312 m/min), covered with curved (flexible) needles,
inclined in the direction of rotation.
E) Carding
As previously said, the interaction of
the material with the needles of the
drum, of the worker cylinders and of
the stripper rollers included in a
carding unit, determines the separation
and the drawing of the fibres.
This operation, which starts in the carding points of the pre-carding drum and finishes in the last
carding point of second drum (Figure 150 a, b, c), is carried out with the same methods
illustrated for the carding unit.
The main role of the card is to subject the wool on the drum to the carding action of a certain
number of worker cylinders; the other actions carried out by the machine are less important and
mainly concern the loading and unloading of the material from the drum.
6 immediately before the separation, the fibre ends of the part of tuft picked up by the
clothing of the drum are powerfully and very quickly stretched through the needles of the
worker cylinder. The fibres seized by the needles of the worker cylinder, turning at a lower
speed, are subject to the action of the needles of the drum.
Considering all this, it is possible to say that the wool fibres picked up by the worker cylinder
are carded more thoroughly than those retained by the drum.
Due to the drawing carried out by the drum, the fibres protrude from the needles of the worker
cylinder, and are transferred on the clothing of the stripper roller, and additionally straightened
before reaching the contact area of the two rollers.
In order to understand the function of the stripper roller, it is sufficient to see how the card
would operate without it. The fibres, conveyed by the worker cylinder, are picked up by the
drum before the contact area, thus the carding action would be anticipated, leading to fibre
entanglement. The function of the stripper roller is therefore bring the fibres back onto the drum
so that they can be subjected to the action of the worker cylinder without entangling.
E1) Analysis of drum-worker-stripper interactions
The clothings of drum, worker cylinders and stripper rollers of the three carding units (precarding, first and second units) can be:
- rigid,
- the stripper rollers of the pre-carding unit can be cylindrical brushes,
- the worker cylinders of the second drum can be covered with curved needles (flexible)
- etc.
For every solution adopted and apart from the carding unit considered, the tuft picked up by the
T drum is conveyed to the first carding point, near the first L1 worker cylinder (Figure
151).
The carding points are the nip points on the paths of the tips of the needles of the worker
cylinders and of the drum; the distance between the needles can be adjusted and ranges (in the
forward direction) from some millimetres in the pre-carding unit to some tenths of a millimetre
in the second drum, resulting in a gradual and regular carding.
The head of the tuft is deeply introduced among the needles of the T drum and, therefore, goes
beyond the line of the carding points without being subject to the action of the needles of the
worker cylinder while the body of the tufts, which protrudes from the needles of the drum, is
retained by the needles of L1. As a result, the body of the tuft is seized by the needles of the
two clothings and the faster speed of the T drum with respect to the L1 worker cylinder,
makes it penetrate more and more deeply into the drum needles; the stretching exerted on the
tuft disentangles and straightens the fibres in the direction of rotation of the T drum thus
making them parallel and carding them.
From position c to position c of the needles of the worker cylinder, the fibres of the body
of the needle are disentangled and the ones whose end is introduced among the needles of the
drum are unwound and straightened (Figure 150 shows the sawtooth wires of the worker
cylinder sketched with a curved shape to better evidence the position of the c points).
139
140
VL = 6 m/min
VL = 25.6 m/min
VL = 25.6 m/min
VS = 14 m/min
VS = 143 m/min
VS = 149 m/min
Carded fibres
Combed
fibres
At the second drum, the carded fibres fed by T2 hit the needles of the P2 comber roller and
pass onto its needles where, thanks to the speed difference, they gather and form web (Figure
153). Since the rotation of the cylinders is a non-stop rotation, the stacking and the overlapping
of the fibres on P2, i.e. the web formation, is carried out on a regular and non-stop base.
In order to allow the comber roller to regularly extract the fibres on the drum, the previous
carding actions must have completely stretched and arranged the fibres as
shown in position f between the needles of the drum (Figure 154); each
fibre must be therefore positioned in the space between two adjacent rows
of needles so that the extraction from the clothing can be carried out
without tear or break.
In fact, due to the high relative speed between T and P and also to the
considerable size of the last one, as soon as the head of a fibre is retained by
the P needles, the fibres turn upside down (Figure 155) positioned across
many rows of T needles, as shown in position f1 (Figure 154) i.e. the
still hooked fibre cannot unwind rapidly and smoothly and is subject to a
powerful stretching action which may break the fibre.
141
The easier the release of the needles of the fly roller from the fibres, the smoother and better
levelled their surface.
The complete effect of the action of the fly roller is therefore to drive the fibres on the backside
of the preceding needles of the drum, and raise them to the needle tips.
The ratio between the speed of the fly roller and the speed of the drum must be accurately
adjusted since if the speed of the fly roller is:
slightly higher than the speed of the drum, its action could be insufficient to drive the
fibres on the backside of the needles in front of it and, therefore, to raise them properly,
too high with respect to the speed of the drum, the needles of the fly roller could drag the
fibres and knock them out of the drum.
E4) Final remarks
The effectiveness of the comber roller action mainly depends on the accuracy of the fly roller
action as well as on the grinding and on the inclination of its needles.
During the rotation, the last comber roller delivers the fibre web formed on its clothing to the
action of the doffer comb which carries out a quick oscillatory movement, approx 2,000 2,500
oscillations per min (generally they do not exceed 3,200 strokes/min) some centimetres wide.
The teeth of the comb slightly touch the needles of the comber roller and remove the web
formed on their tips. During the downward motion, the doffer comb with its fine teeth, drags the
fibres downwards and far from the needles of the comber roller; this is possible since the friction
with the fibres inserted in its teeth is sufficient to remove the part still inserted in the clothing of
the comber roller.
During the raising motion, the fibres are left behind thanks to the gravity and to their adherence
to the fibres making up the web; in the meantime, the comber roller moves away and therefore,
during the following downward oscillation, the comb performs its action on another area of the
surface.
A pair of reversing rollers, with the same speed of the last comber roller (or slightly higher),
forces the web through a condensing funnel producing a sliver.
The most common operating widths available for tandem cards are 2,500, 3,000 and 3,500 mm;
the production varies according to the count of the fibres making up the sliver and to the
operating width, and ranges between 100 1000 kg/h.
143
65 75 %
22 26 C
In post-carding lap drawing frames the fibre web leaving each single card, after condensing in
the funnel assembled before the reversing roller, is deviated by 90 by means of special guides;
the fibre web is then conveyed onto a conveyor belt and arranged perpendicularly to the
direction of the material flow, on which it overlaps the slivers coming from the other cards and
is finally sent off to the drawing frame.
The use of the lap drawing frame offers a great advantage: an excellent reduction in the quantity
of curls possibly forming on the tips of the fibres during the carding process; in fact, after the
interaction between the drum and the comber roller of the card, many fibres making up the card
sliver feature a curl end, or tail (along the direction of the forward movement of the sliver);
the curl appears when the fibres conveyed by the drum are picked up and wound around the
needles of the clothing of the comber roller and are thus transferred onto them.
This advantage is counterbalanced by a drawback: the running speed of the cards must be
adjusted to a slower speed since all the slivers feeding the lap drawing frame must run at the
same speed.
In order to ensure a uniform count of the sliver leaving the drawframe, at the exit of the cards,
nearby the formation zone of the card sliver, there is a sensor signalling to the drawframe the
presence of the corresponding sliver; when one of them is not present, due to a sliver break or
card stop, the drawframe does not stop, but automatically changes the drawing values so as to
keep the count of the sliver unchanged.
It is possible to reduce the production stops
caused by the standby time of the cards, due to
machine malfunctioning or maintenance of the
drawframe by using two drawframes in the
following way (Figure 159):
the carded sliver, coming for example from 5
cards, is conveyed in groups of 2 and 3 to
the
two A and B drawframes
respectively,
should the A drawframe stop, the two
slivers fed are sent to the B drawframe,
which automatically changes the draw value,
Fig. 159 Double after-card drawing unit
should the B drawframe stop, the
conveyor belt, on which are arranged three slivers, reverts the direction of its motion and
sends the slivers to the A drawframe, which changes the draw value.
Composition
A lap drawing frame (Figure 160) includes the
following components:
1. a conveyor belt with a bending device for
each card (Figure 161),
2. a double belt inclined conveyor, which
brings the card sliver to the height of the
drawing head,
Fig. 160 After-card lap drawing frame
145
The toothed plates are assembled on rollers with the teeth inclined in the direction opposite to
the rotation and therefore in the direction opposite to the flow of the material which must be
drawn.
Combing
General remarks
The carded sliver coming from the card or from the lap drawing frame undergoes the combing
process in order to:
eliminate short fibres,
parallelise fibres,
eliminate vegetal substances still contained in the fibre mass
146
Autoleveller
DRAWFRAMES
COMBING MACHINES
DRAWFRAMES
Autoleveller
feeding ratio.
148
A) Composition
An intersecting drawframe includes the following components:
a feed rack which arranges the slivers taken from the cans on a flat horizontal conveyor and
sends them to the feeding cylinders of the drawing unit,
a drawing unit including:
a) two grooved feeding cylinders acting as fibre nipper,
b) a double set of intersecting combs (needle range) with the centre line positioned on the
operating surface on the contact areas between the feed and the drafting cylinders. The
combs are driven so that the higher needle range is separated from the lower one, on the
feed side, to facilitate the entry of the material into the control device. The combs
intersecting at the exit force the fibres through the needles with a consequent stretching
and parallelisation action during the drawing,
c) drawing cylinders, usually including 1 cylinder coated with rubber on 2 grooved
cylinders,
a device collecting the sliver in a can or reel. The drawframe used for carrying out the third
drawing step collects the sliver on 1 or 2 reels per head (to limit the space needed to feed the
combing machines, which require from 20 to 24 doublings each): the collection device
imparts a false twist to the sliver in order to wind it with a suitable tension for proper winding
onto a reel.
B) Screw-type drafting head (Figure 169)
Inside the screw-type drawframes the tabs
of the combs engage in the threads of big
worm screws (screws, Figure 170) whose
rotation allows the forward motion of the
combs on a horizontal plane, one comb
behind the other, towards the drafting
cylinders.
Every comb reaching the end of the stroke
near the drawing cylinder, is lowered (if it
belongs to the lower draft range) or raised (if
it belongs to the higher draft range) driven
by two rotating cams (Figure 170), fixed at
the ends of the screws, which engage it into
Fig. 169 - Screw-type drafting head
the threads of the two return screws. The
rotation of the return screws is such that the
comb is driven back to the beginning of the needle range, where it is repositioned in the working
area by two other cams, arranged at the ends of the return screws, which push it in the opposite
direction.
The return screws usually have a pitch greater than
the other screws so that, with the same number of
revolutions, each comb can carry out the backstroke
more rapidly; in this case, every second, the number
of returning combs is lower than the working
combs.
During the whole cycle, the combs are kept parallel to each other and to the needles
perpendicular to the direction of the material flow.
The efficiency of the fibre control is so high that, still today, the screw-type drawframe is
considered a sort of benchmark for the other control systems; one of the limits of this machine is
the low output capacity due to the impossibility the combs reaching high speeds due to the
complicated motions and mechanical stresses.
To calculate the speed of the combs the following applies:
Vap (m/min) = Np/min * Dp (m)
where:
Vap = speed of the combs (m/min),
Np/min = number of combs passing through a certain point in a minute
Dp = distance (pitch) between one comb and the following one (m);
considering that near the screws, the combs are hit by the cams, the result is:
comb nips
pitch (mm) of the screws
--------------- x ---------------------------------------min
number of starts of screws
Vap = -------------------------------------------------------------- (m/min)
1,000
The screw pitch is equal to 18 mm (occasionally 22 mm) and the thread has two starts; the
screws feature maximum 1,000 revolutions per minute and considering that the cams hit the two
combs at each revolution of the screw, the maximum number of comb nips per minute will be
2,000 (one nip every 0.03 seconds).
The maximum speed of the combs of the screw-type drawframes is 18 m/min (22 m/min with a
22 mm pitch), which is also the maximum peripheral speed of the feeding rollers.
C) Drafting head with rotating flanges (Figure 171)
In the drawframes equipped with rotating flanges, the motion of the combs is generated, for both
needle ranges (lower and higher), by
the rotation of two flanges provided
with radial grooves which drive the
combs by their end tabs; therefore, the
combs follow the path of these grooves
on two pairs of fixed side shoulders.
In this case, the non-stop horizontal
displacement and the pulse vertical
motion of the combs on the screw-type
drafting head are replaced by a uniform
rotation thanks to which the mechanical
stresses of the involved devices are
reduced to the bare minimum.
152
F) Final considerations
In picture 165, the signs near the machines indicate how the material leaves the machine: V11
stands for a sliver collected in a can, B11 stands for a sliver wound on a reel; B22 indicates
that the two slivers are wound into two distinct reels.
The flow of the sliver leaving the unit is totally controlled to avoid possible false drawing.
The entry/exit side of the slivers into/from the drawframe may be also integrate oiling devices:
the oiling devices at the exit side feature a nozzle drowned into the sliver while the oiling
devices at the entry side feature a spraying compartment, between the feeding rack and the
drafting head, where the slivers are overlapped before entering the machine.
Combing
General remarks
Through the combing process, the card sliver is stripped from residual foreign matter as well as
from fibres shorter than a pre-set length. During this operation all the fibres are straightened and
parallelised with respect to the longitudinal axis of the sliver, that at the end of the process is
therefore called combed sliver.
The high degree of parallelism of the fibres and the reduction in the number of short fibres in the
combed sliver remarkably reduce the bulkiness and the hairiness of the sliver, and increase the
evenness of the yarn during the following processes.
The combing wool waste, called noils, is blended with other materials and used in the carded
spinning cycle; the combing waste of inferior quality is instead destined for the felt industry.
Hand combing
To thoroughly understand how combing machines carry out the combing process, it is worth
mentioning how wool was manually combed in the past. This process included three main
operations and precisely:
1. introduction of the fibre tuft in the comb;
2. combing of the head of the fibre tuft;
3. extraction and combing of the tail of the fibre tuft
1) Introduction of the fibre tuft in the comb
(Figure 178). The p comb was fixed to a wall
with the needles tips directed upwards; the
comber took a tuft of fibres and inserted it on the
comb so that the fibre tails protruded from the
side of the comb in front of the wall.
153
Mechanical combing
Three components were used in manual combing: the hand and two combs. The hand acts as a
gripping means while the combs process the head and the tail of the tuft.
Mechanical combing is carried using linear combing machines which reproduce the actions of
hand combing; the comb is still the combing means while the hand of the combing roller is
replaced by different gripping means.
Linear combing machines work first the head and then the tail of the fibre tufts and include:
a nipper, retaining the tuft,
a circular comb, acting on the tuft head,
154
155
The s1 and s2 cylinders are powerfully pressed one against the other to grant a perfect
nipping of the tuft; furthermore, during the approaching oscillation of the circular comb, they
rotate in the direction opposite to the material flow direction to draw back the previously
combed tuft; this motion is necessary to overlap the tuft to the already combed one and ensure a
good evenness of the combed sliver.
Once the tails of the tuft have been combed, the T nipper closes in order to retain the newly
fed tuft, the A gill, which has moved completely forward, returns along the V section with
the a3 needle table raised, the R linear comb raises, the S extraction cylinders prepare to
rotate (to draw back the material) and move (to approach P) and the circular comb, which has
almost completed one revolution, approaches the tuft protruding from T with its first needle
row (Figure 181, below right).
The tufts of combed fibres arranged on the s3 sleeve, with the head overlapping the tail of the
preceding tuft, form a thin web which, condensed into a sliver, is finally conveyed to a
collection can.
A) Operating principle
Figure 183 shows the positions of the main components of a double-motion linear combing
machine during the two combing steps:
- 1st step; combing of the head of the tuft, carried out by the circular comb while the oscillation
between the feed system and the extraction rollers is synchronised;
- 2nd step; extraction and combing of the head of the tuft, carried out by the extraction rollers
and by the linear comb while the material is fed for the following operating cycle.
The combing machine works as follows:
a) while the extraction cylinders are at their maximum distance from the nipper (Figure 183,
top), the sorting section of the circular comb starts working on the material protruding from the
closed nipper which oscillates towards the extraction rollers, together with the attached feeding
gill (head combing); during the action of the two last needle rows of the circular comb (finishing
sector) while the nipper continues its motion, the extraction rollers start their oscillating
approach to the nipper which simultaneously opens,
b) once the oscillation of the nipper and of the extraction rollers has come to an end, when the
distance between them is equal to the gauge (Figure 183, below), the end of the fibres (tuft head)
positions on the sleeve of the extraction device, above the end section of the previous tuft, and is
captured by the extraction rollers; simultaneously, the linear comb oscillating together with the
nipper lowers and its needles penetrate the
material. At this point the nipper opens and
two motions are started:
Combing the tuft head
1) the extraction rollers rotate forward and
withdraw from the nipper so to extract
the fibres forcing them through the
needles of the linear comb
(tail
combing),
2) the feeding gill moves forward in
synchronism with the extraction rollers
and feeds the material for the following
cycle.
Towards the end of the rotation of the
extraction rollers, the nipper starts the
return stroke thus determining a further
extraction of the tuft favouring the
separation of longer fibres.
At the end of the two abovementioned
motions (after combing the tail), during the
backward oscillation, the nipper closes in
the same opening position and takes a new
tuft, starting a new cycle after the end of
the oscillation.
157
While these motions are carried out, the extraction cylinders rotate in opposite direction and
draw back a part of the combed tuft, which is made to adhere onto the sleeve thanks to a vacuum
action; in this way, the head of the following combed tuft is positioned above the tail of the
previous one granting an excellent bonding of the web as well as its uninterrupted consistency.
B) Feeding system
Before passing through the plates of the feeding gill, the lap goes through the pre-feeding
system including a grooved cylinder with an upper roller coated with rubber to ensure the
correct grip of the fibres also for sustaining greater loads.
The plates, through which the lap slides, converge towards the exit so that (by stepping towards
the nipper) the material fed is compressed and progressively condensed.
The evenness of the material thickness, along the whole operating width of the linear comb,
ensures a regular control of the fibres on the whole cross section of the lap, during the combing
of the tuft tail with a consequent regular degree of parallelisation and cleanness of the material.
C) Nipper
The nipper, together with the feeding gill, carries out one oscillating motion towards the
extraction cylinders to create a more favourable condition for processing the material.
The advantage of the forward motion of the nipper, in the direction of the circular comb, lies in
the fact that it is carried out towards the end of the combing of the tuft head i.e. during the action
of the last needle rows of the circular comb, which feature a higher needle density, and
determine a combing speed (given by the peripheral speed of the circular comb minus the
forward speed of the nipper) that is lower than the speed of the circular comb, with a consequent
reduction of the whiplash of its needles on the fibres during the penetration stroke; as a result,
the fibres are less subject to stress and strain.
In other words, we could say that the forward motion of the nipper accompanying the rotation of
the last rows of needles of the circular comb determines an increase in the combing time giving
a longer and more regular combing of the head of the tuft (as if the area of the circular comb
covered with needles was greater, thus entailing a reduced break of the fibres and a better
cleaning). The finer the count of the fibres to be combed, the more important this is.
To prevent fibres from escaping the nipper
during the tuft head combing, the upper jaw
of the nipper is equipped with two toothshaped tips in the fibre retaining area
(Figure 184); the front one forces the tuft
downward, towards the circular comb, and
presses the fibres together with the rear bar
on the head of the lower jaw. Furthermore
the tension undergone by the fibres during
the circular comb action favours their
insertion between the nipper jaws, with a
consequent improvement of the nipper grip,
which prevents (also in case of big batches)
the tearing of fibres by the circular comb,
especially the finest ones.
158
The pressure exerted on the whole length of the nipper must be uniform and its intensity must
avoid a shearing effect on the fibres (for example 8-9 daN/cm)
To obtain good cleaning of the fibres, the distance between the nipper and the needles of the
circular comb must be the shortest possible (usually, 0.5 1.0 mm)
To prevent the fibres of the tuft head from escaping the needles of the circular comb, a small
brush is fixed on the upper gripper of the nipper to force the tuft downwards (Figure 183).
D) Linear comb
The linear comb must lower one instant before the extraction rollers start their rotation; in case
of delay, i.e. if the extraction has already started, the combing of the rear side of the tuft will be
inadequate.
A nipper blade under the tuft head prevents the head from lowering during the downward stroke
of the linear comb, due to the action of the very thick needles. During the circular comb action,
the nipper blade is positioned just a little backward at the end of its operating area and steps
forward to keep the head of the tuft raised, at the height of the nip point of the extraction rollers
(Figure 183).
The linear comb is cleaned at every operating cycle by a special brush provided with two bristle
rows to enlarge the operating surface.
E) Extractor
The extraction rollers carry out an oscillation towards the nipper in synchronism with the
oscillation of the nipper.
The extraction rollers feature a helical groove, which allows a gradual grip of the tuft and a
reduction of the pressure between them; this groove, besides preventing dangerous bending,
grants a longer life of the sleeve on which the combed web is arranged.
To reduce the sleeve wearing, it is possible to adjust the operating time and the intensity of the
pressure between the extraction rollers (the pressure should be maximum during the tuft
extraction and minimum during the return of the rollers).
The pressure exerted on the extraction rollers is 1,600 N; due to the effect of the fibres wedging
into the helical teeth, the force exerted on them during the extraction stage is equal to 2,200 N
(during the backlash it is approximately of 600 N).
During the rotation of the extraction rollers determining the withdrawal of the combed tuft, an
air suction opening retains the tuft tail to prepare the overlapping of the previous tuft with the
next one. The vacuum must keep the tail of the tuft adherent but it should not be excessively
high so as not to also attract noils.
F) Formation and collection of the combed sliver
On the sleeve of the extraction device, the outgoing fibre web is controlled by means of special
blowers and collected into a vat for condensing; the sliver obtained is conveyed to the crimping
device or to the double conveyor belt and sent to the coiler.
The double conveyor belt is generally used when operating on fine wools while the crimping
device is used for improving the compactness of the fibres.
.
159
The crimping device includes two compacting rollers, a crimping compartment and a collection
siphon. Inside the crimping compartment, featuring an adjustable 50-60 mm width, the material
is compressed and the fibres are forced to take the preset waving, which increases the
compactness.
The siphon acts as a receiver between the crimping device and the coiler and grants a non-stop
collection of the sliver.
G) Noil discharging device
A circular brush removes the material accumulated among the needles of the circular comb and
transfers it to the collection cylinder, coated with a card clothing, from which it is removed by
means of an oscillating comb.
A vacuum device acts in the front area of the circular
comb, with an opening placed between the circular
comb and the circular brush, while a second opening
allows vacuum dedusting in the rear side of the
circular comb when it does not hold the tail of the
tufts.
The dust is conveyed to a filtration box while the
noils are collected into a special container on the
same side of the collection area of the combed sliver
(Figure 184).
H) Feed and collection systems
The volume of material entering and leaving the
combing machine should be enough to grant
maximum autonomy to the machine; this is why the
reels and the cans should be big enough to reduce the
loading and unloading times to a minimum.
Fig. 184 Noil collection
The feed racks of the reels allow maximum 24 doublings, and feature four pairs of longitudinal
rollers arranged on two levels (two on each level) to unwind the reels (Figure 185).
Each pair of rollers is equipped with separate control to set a different rotation speed, which
ensures a regular and complete unwinding of the reels with different diameters.
Also the can racks (2 slivers per can) allow max. 24 doublings (Table A).
160
TABLE A
Characteristics
doublings (cans or reels )
loading capacity
g/m
throughput speed
nips/min
Characteristics
24
gill feeding
mm
4 10
mm
0,2 2.0
200
mm
28/25
mm
440
sleeve size
mm
540x580x3,5
mm
460
nipper oscillation
mm
38
gauge
mm
28 36
mm
54
500 600
B) Feeder
The adjacent and overlapped wool slivers
forming a compact lap with uniform
thickness, are pushed forward by means of
a pre-feeding device including 3 rollers,
one pressure roller and two feeding rollers,
rotating uniformly, which ensure a steady
control of the material (Figure 186).
The V-shaped gill grants a regular
condensation of the lap and ensures a
uniform feed (Figure 189).
During the feeding step (Figure 188), the
a3 needle table is lowered so that the
fibre lap moves together with the A gill
towards the nipper; when A starts the
backstroke, a3 raises and separates from
the fibre mass which, held by the closed
nipper, stands still while the two a1 and
a2 plates slide on it. Once A has come
back, the a3 table lowers and the lap is
ready for the next tuft feeding.
C) Nipper
The nipper is in a fixed position, perfectly
aligned with the circular comb and keeps a
steady combing angle for any gauge value;
this grants a good impact evenness of the
circular comb with respect to the tuft.
To avoid possible floating of the fibres on
the circular comb, the nipper is equipped
with a special brush which sinks into the
tuft.
Nipper 1 has a lower 1a jaw; the
material is squeezed on the tip of the lower
jaw by means of the upper 1b jaw. The
distance between the tip of the 1b jaw
Fig. 188 - Combing of the tail of the tuft
and the needles of the 2 circular comb is
adjustable.
After being fed, the lap protrudes beyond the nipper by a distance equal to the gauge
(represented by the distance between the nip point of the nipper and the nip point of the
extraction cylinders, Figure 188)
With the same feed (load), the quantity of noils generated by the combing machine change
according to the number of slivers forming the lap; to be precise, it can increase (decrease) in an
inversely proportional manner with respect to the number of slivers fed.
162
163
E) Linear comb
The 3 linear comb oscillates only vertically with no other horizontal motion since it is not
attached to the nipper nor to the feed gill; for this reason it is imperative that the 3 linear comb
starts working at the end of the feed gill forward motion, just one instant before the extraction
rollers start moving and combing the head of the tuft to be processed.
A special brush featuring a continuous forward and backward motion cleans the linear comb
(Figure 186).
The needles of the linear comb act as a filter for the material which, therefore, releases short
fibres and impurities which separate from the material also because they (caught and drawn by
the extraction cylinders) slip off the lap and powerfully adhere to other fibres on which the
impurities and the short fibres are left.
The 8 nipper blade ensures regular combing of the tail of the tuft; it is positioned very near to
the row of needles of the linear comb (Figure 188) to prevent the fibres from lowering during
the downward motion and escaping the action of the needles.
The nipper blade also drives the tuft end to the nip line of the extraction cylinders.
F) Extractor
The extractor (Figure 188) includes a 4 lower grooved roller which moves the 6 sleeve on
which the 5 upper grooved roller exerts a certain pressure (extraction rollers); the already
processed tufts (making up the combed web) are laid evenly on the sleeve. The 7 roller
features a smooth surface and by exerting a certain pressure, it arranges the fibres and
discharges the static electricity acquired by friction during the process.
The extraction rollers have two different rotation modes:
1.
one rotation is direct and contributes to the stretching and to the removal of the tuft from
the lap,
2. the other one is opposite to the direct one and drives back the tuft, to eliminate the free space
between the combed tufts, whose ends overlap, like roof slates.
While the nipper opens, the extractor oscillates and takes the extraction cylinders near the left
end of the gauge.
The inverse rotation of the extraction cylinders slightly withdraw the combed tuft; in fact, the
oscillation of the extractor creates some free space between the tuft and the combed tuft and it is
consequentially impossible to collect the web; the inverse rotation of the extraction cylinders
determines the overlapping of the ends of the combed tufts and the formation of a continuous
web.
G) Formation and collection of the combed sliver
An adjustable-compression crimping device granting the right consistency and tensile strength
facilitates the next processes (Figure 191): two rollers feed the compression room and the fibre
rolling can be adjusted by means of the pressure table of the crimping device; a detecting system
controls the level of the receiving tank and stops the machine in case of break of the outcoming
sliver.
Figure 192 shows the linear combing machine equipped with fixed nipper and can feed-system
(two slivers per can). Table B contains the main technical data.
164
TABLE B
Characteristics
Doublings (cans or reels)
Characteristics
no
24
gill feed
mm
4 10
mm
400
feed-nipper distance
mm
280
throughput speed
nips/min
260
mm
28/25
mm
460
mm
195
mm
264
mm
200
gauge
mm
90
1 of 2 pre-feed (diam.)
mm
66
nipper-gill-blade
fixed
Post-combing
The slivers emerging from the linear combing machines are made of tufts whose fibres are tied
to the fibres of the tufts nearby only by means of the friction existing between their overlapping
ends; for this reason, these slivers:
are poorly compacted (despite the crimping device of the combing machines),
the section is highly irregular, due to the manner they are worked by the combing machines
To find a solution to these problems, the sliver coming from the combing machines must
undergo two doubling and drawing steps inside two intersecting drawing frames called can
emptier drawframe and finisher drawframe; the latter is generally equipped with an
autoleveller.
The finisher drawframe includes a device to collect the combed sliver, the tops, in reels or
bumps (the content of a can, vertically squeezed and reduced to the dimensions of a reel).
It is possible to carry out the automatic change of cans with the formation and the
parallelisation of the bumps (Figure 193): the cans are changed by means of a rotary platform
which takes a full can and replaces it with an empty one, transferring the full can from the
working position to the press to form and the bind the bump. The cans can also be changed
using a conveyor serving several machines (Figure 194). The conveyor removes the full can,
positions the empty one without stopping the operating cycle, and takes the full cans to a single
press, which presses and binds the bumps.
165
Table C shows all the technical data of the drawframes with the different drawing heads
TABLE C
Characteristics
Feed rack
Incoming load max
Heads per machine
Automatic delivery: cans or reels
Slivers per can
Slivers per reel
Combs per head
Width with needles
Length with needles
Needles intersecting in the operating range
Needles protruding from the combs
Drawing rollers pressure roller
Free drawing range (feed roll. first comb)
Free drawing range (last comb drawing roller)
Feed ratio
Max. throughput speed with can exit
Without autoleveller
With autoleveller
Max throughput speed of reel exit
single
double
Drawing
Max outgoing load
Pitch between the operating combs
Head feeding rollers
Feed pressure roller
166
positions
g/m
no
n
n
n
n
mm
mm
mm
mm
mm
mm
mm
m/min
m/min
m/min
m/min
m/min
m/min
m/min
Chain
12
1
12
12
1
88
200 270
200
11,6 13,6
32/66-80
30 50
100
30/62,5-75
35 110
27 42
80
500 (350)
500
450
400
3,24 12,00
g/m
mm
mm
mm
Rotating Flanges
12
200 300
1
12
12
1
52 + 52
275
130
8
66
80
Screws
12
1
1-2
1-2
1
82 o 66
200
185
18,5 o 16,5
30/66-80
24/27 85
18 o 22
230
230
400
350
3,84 12,16
30 50
4,20 11,50
9 o 11
30/62,5
75
TABLE D shows the values of the main adjusting parameters of the combing cycle units. A +/5% max tolerance for the combed sliver count (top) is allowed.
TABLE D
Unit
Te
g/m
Ce
g/m
Card
Tu
g/m
Vu
m/min
N of
Exit
Elem.
Pt
kg/h
N of
Units
Pp
kg/h
20
1 step
20
160
5,0
32
450
864
75
648
2 step
32
192
6,0
32
450
864
75
648
3 step
32
4x2
128x2
6,4
20
385
924
70
647
Combing machine
20
24
480
30
260*
45**
90
14
567
Can emptier
30
180
6,0
30
450
810
70
567
Comb. Finisher
30
150
6,0
25
275
413
70
578
* nips/min
** Theoretical reference production with 9 % of noils
167
This process, which is very expensive and carried out only on materials to be used for highquality products, features four different stages (Figure 195) and precisely:
1. blending
2. preparation to recombing
3. recombing
4. post-recombing
BLENDER
DRAWFRAME
COMBING MACHINES
DRAWFRAMES
Autoleveller
Sliver blending
The combed sliver packed in reels or bumps is subjected to the blending process, which prepares
an homogeneous mixture by eliminating the differences of the characteristics unavoidably
existing between different batches of similar materials (and, in some cases, also in the same
batch).
When blending fibres made of different materials, the operation is often repeated many times to
obtain a sliver with homogeneously distributed components; the same happens when blending
combed slivers dyed with two or more colours to obtain the mlange effect.
168
169
C) Oiling device
There are three spray-oiling points: one is near the feed of the two defelting heads and the third
one is between the two webs on the delivery conveyor (Figure 197); in this last oiling point the
oil quantity spread on the material ranges between 1% and 4% of the weight.
The way the oil is spread on the material is crucial since any drip from the spraying nozzle must
imperatively be avoided to prevent sliver areas possibly generating thick places.
Preparation to recombing
Before subjecting the slivers coming out of the blender to the combing action of the combing
machines further doubling and drawing operations are carried out to improve the fibre blending
as well as the evenness of the slivers and reduce their count to the most suitable value for
feeding the combing machine.
The drawframe used is the chain or rotating flanges intersecting drawframe equipped with a
two-sliver exit per each can (usually, this is called reducing drawframe).
Recombing
The recombing operation entails a further combing step, which is similar to the one carried out
after carding. The operation in this case is less powerful than the previous one and determines a
reduced formation of noils (which, anyway, depends on the gauge).
The recombing process is necessary when the transfer and package (in reels or bumps) as well
as the action of the dyeing liquor of the tops has damaged or felted the material; in this case the
fibrous diagram needs to be regularized to avoid irregularities or difficulties during the spinning
stage.
Post-recombing
The sliver comes out of the combing machines with tail on head overlapped tufts, i.e.
characterized by great section irregularity.
To avoid this inconvenience two doubling and drawing operations are carried out through
intersecting chain or rotating flanges drawframes, called can-emptier and recombing
finisher respectively.
The finishing drawframe is often provided with autoleveller to grant the evenness of the sliver
count also when the draw or the feed load changes within a certain time.
Table E shows the main adjusting parameters of the machines of the recombing cycle.
170
TABLE E
Pt
kg/h
N of
Units
Pp
kg/h
350
N of
Exit
Elem.
1
630
60
378
15
280
504
75
378
30
260*
48**
94
361
30
290
522
70
365
25
350*
525
70
368
Unit
Te
g/m
Ce
g/m
Tu
g/m
Vu
m/min
Blender
25
24
600
20
30
Reducer
30
180
12
Combing machine
15
24
360
Can emptier
30
180
Recomb. Finisher
30
150
* nips/min
** Theoretical reference production with 9 % of noils
Electronic autoleveller
This system is used for achieving an automatic adjustment with two different criteria of speed
variation:
feed rate variation, for all autolevelling standard applications
variation of the delivery speed when the machine requires steady feed rate like in case of
linkage with other machines with the same throughput speed (for example, in the after-card
drawframe combined with a set of cards).
The first system, previously analysed, is most frequently used in this process stage. Its operation
is schematised in Figure 199: a mechanic feeler detects the thickness of the material fed, the
variations are transformed into electric signals and sent to a control unit which, with a suitable
delay corresponding to the passage of the material from the feeler to the drawframe, determines
the variation of the feed rate and therefore of the draft.
The electronic autoleveller does not set
definite limits to the possibility of
adjustment but in relation to the correct
detection and to the speed limit of the
intersecting comb head, the suitable
adjusting range applicable varies between
25% and + 25%.
It is also possible to store the maximum
and minimum drawing limits beyond
which the machine no longer complies
with
the
technological
operating
conditions allowed for each material.
Spinning
General remarks
The spinning process includes all the operations necessary to transform the combed sliver
(tops), blended and/or recombed, into a yarn of the desired count and twist.
Spinning includes the following processing stages:
1. preparation for spinning,
2. spinning.
The preparation for spinning stage can be divided into two different cycles:
low preparation,
high preparation.
The machines used for carrying out the low preparation progressively reduce the sliver count
and improve the evenness through a series of doubling and drawing operations.
This process includes 4 drawing steps on drawframes (which can be reduced to three for yarns
Nm 40).
Surveys of production control in spinning departments reveal that the number of yarn breaks on
looms decreases when the pre-spinning stage also integrates a fourth drawing step.
The machines performing the high preparation for the spinning process transform the sliver,
obtained with doubling and drawing operations, into a roving through combined drawing and
rubbing-finishing actions. This process stage is carried out on a rubbing-finishing machine.
172
Differently from the comb system where the material, in the draft range, is controlled by means
of spikes moving at the same feed speed of the head equipped with disks, the speed of the teeth
tips of the controllers is higher than the base speed; this allows the speed of the control device to
be varied within a certain range.
To check the fibres without causing eventual problems to the material, the different points of the
teeth of the controllers must operate at speed values within the feed and draft (exit) values.
Usually the standard quality diagram of the peripheral speeds of the controllers in the different
positions is the following:
V3 External
V3 Base
In special cases, for very long fibres and/or for fibres that tend to wind around the cylinders, the
quality diagram could be represented as follows:
173
V3 External
V3 Base
2-head drawframe: to process 2 slivers (one sliver per head) collected in 2 cans (one sliver
per can),
4-head drawframe: to process 4 slivers (one sliver per head) collected in 2 cans (two slivers
per can)
Table F indicates the technical data of the single-head or multi-head drawframes equipped with
intersecting rotating disks.
TABLE F
Characteristics
Heads per machine
Automatic exits: cans or reels
Slivers per can
Slivers per reel
Controllers per head
Width coated with teeth
Pitch of the controllers
Projection of the teeth
Feed twin-rollers
Draft rollers pressure roller
a)
b)
Gauge
Free draft range (last tooth draft roll.) a)
b)
Max mechanical feed rate
Max mechanical delivery speed
a)
b)
Draft
n
n
n
n
n
mm
mm
mm
mm
mm
mm
mm
mm
mm
m/min
m/min
mm
1
1-2
1-2
1
6
255
2
2 cans
1
6
103-170-200
3
4
2 cans
2
6
110-130
2.6
40/40
25/66 ; 75
30/66 ; 80
230-270
28-70
33-70
75
300
400
5.73 12.07
40/40
25/66 ; 75
30/66 ; 80
230-270
28-70
33-70
75
300
400
5.73 12.07
5/7/9
30/66 ; 80
40/66 ; 95
220
30/33 70
100
320 400
3 12
B) Drawframe with draft control through Herisson/barrel cylinders with elastic nip
This drawframe, used only when the fourth passage of preparation-to-spinning is required,
features a draft range (Figure 201) controlled by two pairs of cylinders with elastic nip and a
Herisson cylinder featuring needles or toothed disks (Figure 202), arranged near the draft rollers.
174
Fibre control during the drawing stage is carried out by means of a linear/curvilinear system:
the former by means of elastic nip of long fibres and the latter by means of the action of the
needles or of the spikes on short fibres near the draft rollers.
The elastic nip from the barrel cylinders between the feed and the Herisson cylinder prepares
and retains the material during the action of the Herisson cylinder.
The assembly of the barrel cylinders must allow the sliding of long fibres already retained by the
draft rollers but also the retention of the material to make the fibres sink into the spikes of the
Herisson cylinder.
Considering the operating conditions of the barrel cylinders with elastic nip (Figure 203), for
correct fibre control the material must run perfectly aligned within the elastic zone of the rubber
to grant the uniform distribution of
the fibres (as explained hereinafter).
The hardness and the elasticity of the
rubber of the barrel cylinders affect
the fibre nip, which - in turn determines a variation of the material
tension between the barrel cylinders
and the Herisson cylinders thus
modifying the sinking of the fibres
into the spikes of the latter.
Fig. 203 Fibre control systems with
barrel cylinders with elastic nip
The sinking degree of the material determines the fibre control, which must be suitably adjusted;
in the case of short fibres, the control must be improved to generate a deeper sinking (and on the
contrary reduced in the case of long fibres).
A greater tension of the material creates deeper sinking and favours the control and the evenness
of the sliver delivered while a slighter tension remarkably reduces the possibility generating
windings. The fibres must not float above the spikes of the Herisson cylinder; they must sink
deeply into the roller.
The Herisson cylinder divides the material into as many smaller slivers as the number of spikes
(minus one) all along the production scheme; this condition facilitates the staggering of the
fibres between one sliver and the other one but, at the same time, makes their sliding difficult.
175
The larger the quantity of spikes, the more regular the draft and the smaller the slivers into
which the material is divided; basically, the need for a high number of spikes is reduced quite
substantially by staggering the spike rows of the controllers, so that the fibres do not run along a
linear pattern but are forced to slide between them.
The fibre control exerted by the Herisson cylinder improves in proportion to the number of
spikes on its circumference due to the reduction of the nip between the fibre retaining point and
the next one in the drawing stage.
The diameter of the Herisson cylinder affects the good performance of the system since it
reduces the free draft ranges with no winding risk for the material.
Two different types of clothing are available for Herisson cylinders:
the standard clothing with round needles,
the spiked disks clothing, which gives the same technological results.
The second solution is the most frequently used since it allows easier cleaning and simpler
replacement of the damaged spikes.
C) Drawframe with draft control by means of elastic nip rollers.
This drawframe, used only when a fourth preparation step is required, features a draft range
controlled by means of two rollers with elastic
nip and an apron on the bottom guide rollers
(Figure 204).
The apron grants the uniform feeding of fibres
and represents an efficient solution to prevent
possible fibre winding in the case of direct
contact with the cylinders.
While in the previous system the performance
of the elastic nip only affects long fibres and
lets the fibre mass sink into the Herisson
cylinder, in this case the elastic control is
essentially based on the autolevelling of the
fibres, which starts with the deformation of the
rubber cot of the barrel cylinder when the
material passes onto it.
This deformation exerts a reaction pressure
that compresses the material, modifying the
bonding friction between the fibres, more or
less powerfully, according to the elastic degree
of the rubber; this ensures a smooth feeding of
the fibres also with the sliding of the longest
fibres already gripped by the draft rollers.
The rubber section of the barrel cylinders with elastic nip is thinner in the middle so that the
reaction forcing intensity is proportional to the x thickness of the cross section of the material,
as a result compressing the material (Figure 203).
The use of rubber cots of different hardness and elasticity allows an adjustment of the fibre
compression proportional to the fibre diagram and to the free draft ranges applied.
Table G shows the main technical data of the drawframes used for the fourth pre-spinning step
with two different draft control systems.
TABLE G
Characteristics
Heads per machine
Can automatic exits
Slivers per head
Slivers per can
Thickness with Herisson needle roller
Herisson clothed width
Thickness with Herisson disk roller
Barrel sleeve for elastic control
Feed load
Feeding cylinder
Draft roller pressure roller
Gauge
Free draft range
(last spike /grip draft roller)
Mechanical feed rate
Mechanical delivery speed
Draft
n
n
n
n
needles per square cm
mm
spikes per square cm
mm
g/m
mm
mm
mm
mm
max m/min
max m/min
Herisson-small barrel
cylinders
4
2
1
2
27/32
100
14
36 x 125
small barrel
cylinders/apron
4
2
1
2
36 x 125
25 30
50
25/66-75
175-265
30/66-80
135-270
23 113
40
300
3.55-7.96
38 60
50
350
7.91-11.72
177
The feeler is made of a pair of vertical-axes pulleys; one pulley features a fixed groove while the
other one has a mobile groove. The movable roller is pressed against the fixed roller by applying
a force of about 2000 N.
The feeler is interchangeable and can be adjusted in relation to the different depths of the groove
with respect to the feed loads and to the type of material, in order to translate the weight
discrepancies into a variation of thickness.
The mechanical memory is a disk in constant rotation with special threaded pegs on its edge; the
pegs can move into and out of the disk, as a result storing the weight variations detected by the
feeler.
The memory speed, which sets the operating time of the drawing process, can be adjusted
according to the machine gauge.
When the speed increases, the system tends to influence the detection intervals, thus reducing
the feeler accuracy proportionally.
The maximum feeding speed allows a correct operating mode of the mechanical autoleveller,
which can range between 40 45 m/min; in case of higher speed, more efficient systems are
preferably employed to improve accuracy and rapidity.
High preparation
High preparation equipment includes a finisher rubbing frame, which gives the sliver its size and
the cohesion suitable for the optimum execution of the following spinning operation.
In the most common finisher rubbing frames, the drafting components are positioned on a
vertical axis to keep the material as aligned as possible during the process, which, consequently,
can be carried out at higher speed to grant the same product quality.
The vertical finisher rubbing frame features a
modular structure with 2 drafting units and
double rubbing action (Figure 206) working
separately and autonomously; the modularity
grants the machine non-stop operation also
when one or more units are not working.
Since a rubbing drafting unit works on 2
rovings simultaneously, each module
produces 4 rovings, which are collected, in
pairs, on 2 bobbins.
Fig. 206 - Vertical finisher rubbing frame
The winding and cross distribution of 2 parallel rovings for each bobbin tube is carried out by a
fixed bobbin holder rail and two oscillating roving-guide twisters (performing a false twisting)
(Figure 207).
The system applies the following operating principle: a drafting unit
featuring an elastic nip control system reduces the size of the sliver
fed after the fibre bonding and after the transformation of the sliver
into a roving. The sliver is transformed into a roving by means of a
double rubbing drafting system made of two couples of elastic
sleeves, which feature an alternated cross movement (simulating
hand friction) as well as a rotation in the direction of the material
flow.
The difference between the various vertical finisher rubbing frames
mainly lies in the different assembly of the drafting unit and the
formation of the bobbins with deposition strokes and winding cross
passages of the roving on small tubes suitable for the different
counts.
Fig. 207 - Bobbin formation
179
A) Drafting unit
The elastic nip control of the fibres inside the drafting unit can be carried out through two
different systems and precisely:
a) an apron driven by the guiding rollers, with cylinders respectively coated with barrel or
cylinder-shaped rubber cots ensuring elastic control, and small cylinders to create small free
draft ranges suitable for processing short fibres (Figure 208). This system is employed to
prepare Nm 2 6 fine and extra-fine rovings and for processing fine counts;
b) two guiding rollers coated with barrel or cylinder-shape rubber cots for elastic control (Figure
209). This system is used for processing rovings of all counts but in particular for coarse Nm
0.8 4.5 ones as well as for greater feed loads (up to 18 g/m).
The driving gear of the a) drafting unit involves a
1.05 pre-draft between the feed and the
intermediate control rollers, which relaxes and
stretches the material for the drawing process
carried out by the draft rollers.
During the drawing step, the fibres are controlled
in two intermediate zones (Figure 210): in the first
zone, only long and medium-length fibres are
controlled (approx 40 50 % of all fibres) with a
powerful retaining action of the fibre mass. The
second zone controls all the fibres and grants,
thanks to the higher elasticity of the rubber cot,
easier slide to the fibres already retained by the
drafting rollers.
the deformation of the straight rubber cot with elastic control occurs by relaxing the rubber
retained at the edges of its bush with respect to the thickness of the material processed; it
slightly envelops the material on the edges (with a lower intensity with respect to the Sampre
rubber) and therefore the evenness of the control greatly depends on condensation degree and
on the cross section of the material,
the deformation of the barrel rubber cot with elastic control allows the rubber to wind the
material; therefore, with the same number of rubber cots, this system ensures better control of
the fibres with respect to the straight rubber cot system with elastic control,
180
the rotation of the elastic-control roller with straight rubber cot is effected by the pressure
applied on the edges of the bush on the relevant roller; the motion is therefore independent
from the material and interferes very little with its cross section,
the rotation of the elastic-control barrel cylinder which takes place thanks to the contribution
of the fibre mass and with reduced contact with the relevant driving roller.
Considering the operating conditions detailed above, as well as the process applied, we can state
that the barrel cylinder exerts a greater control
in the case of small feeding loads (the a
type is more suitable) and fine counts, while
the straight roller is more suitable for greater
feeding loads (the b type is more suitable)
and, therefore, for coarse and medium counts
and for conventional process.
The maximum loads, with medium count
fibres (2123 micron), are the following:
1- 8 g/m for the a) type,
2- 15 g/m, with proportional reduction of the
fibre count for b) type.
Fig. 211 Comparison between fibre control systems within the draft range
B) Double rubbing unit
The rubbing sleeves are driven by two shafts: one for rotation and the other one for alternated
oscillation.
The double rubbing process is carried out by means of two pairs of sleeves, assembled in series
on the vertical roving path and synchronised. The gauge between the two rubbing ranges is
crucial since the rovings must move forward so that the nips of the first and of the second range
are summed and the maximum action of the second range coincides with the action of first
range; the travel of the second range must not be reversed on the rubbing point of the first range
(Figure 212).
181
V2(M/min)
182
Table H shows the technical data referring to a finisher rubbing frame equipped with different
elastic stroke systems of the fibres during the drawing process.
TABLE H
Characteristics
Drafting and rubbing modules
Bobbins per unit
Rovings per unit
Max. rubbing strokes
Total rubbing strokes
Recommended counts
Max. mechanical spee
Max bobbin weight
Feeding cylinder pressure cylinder
Drawing cylinder pressure cylinder
Gauge
Free draft range (last. nip draft cylinders)
Draft ratio
n
n
n
strokes/min
mm
m/min
daN
mm
mm
mm
mm
Apron
6 8 10 12
12 16 20 24
24 32 40 48
2200
23
up to Nm 6
250
5
35 45
25/45 - 55
100 190
25 45
5.28 25.14
Two rollers
6 8 10 12
12 16 20 24
24 32 40 48
2200
23
from Nm 0.8
295
6.8
32/32 60
30.32/48.15 60
115 220
33 58
6.22 29.64
Ring spinning
The objectives of ring spinning are
to thin out the roving and give it the desired count,
to impart a specific twist to the yarn so as to give the yarn the desired resistance
to collect the yarn into a package (i.e. the bobbin) for simpler storage and handling.
The working principle of the ring spinning frame
The ring spinning frame operates as follows (Figure 213):
1. the bobbins (1), coming from the finisher rubbing frame, are suspended on the feeding rack
above the spinning frame, one bobbin for each two spindles,
2. the rovings (2), unwound tangentially from the bobbins, are pulled by the feeding cylinders
of the drafting unit (3) where they are thinned out,
3. once the fibres leave the exit rollers of the drawframe, the forming yarn (4), pulled by the
revolving spindle, passes through the yarn guide (5), inside the anti-balloon ring (6) and
inside the traveller (7), then is twisted and wound on the tube (8) placed on the spindle
(9).
The yarn twists since, when winding on the small tube on the rotating spindle, it makes the
traveller (7) rotate around the ring (10), with a movement concentric to the spindle (Figure
214); at each turn of the traveller around the ring, the yarn makes a twist in the segment of yarn
between the drafting cylinders and the traveller.
The winding of the yarn on the tube can be achieved since the traveller movement is helped and
driven by the yarn; the rotation speed of the traveller is lower than the tube (spindle) speed due
to the frictional force generated when sliding on the ring (and, to some extent, also to the
resistance of the air to the motion of the yarn between the yarn guide and the traveller).
183
2
1
A) Roving feeding
The roving feeding system, though being a quite simple
device, can greatly affect the number of defects of the yarn;
in particular, if the roving unwinds incorrectly, possible
cuts or even breakage could occur.
The structures used (Figure 215) consist of equipped with
supports hanging on rails, one behind the other, along the
whole length of the spinning frame; they are equipped with a
braking device, which prevents the bobbin from rotating too
quickly.
B) Drafting unit
The drafting unit can be equipped with different types of
fibre control devices and precisely:
three-cylinder fibre control device with double apron
(Figure 216, top) for yarns with medium and medium-fine
counts,
four-cylinder fibre control device with double apron
(Figure 216, bottom) for yarns with fine and very fine
counts with high evenness, resistance and elastic
properties.
The fibre mass entering the draft range is made of a slightly
resistant fibre sliver since it contains only few fibres; for this
reason the friction is reduced to a minimum. Two rotating
aprons grant a suitable
control; the upper apron
compresses
the
material
against the lower apron.
4
5
6
10
185
186
Fig. 221
Antiballoon ring
187
Fig. 222 Synchronised motion diagrams of the ring rail, of the anti-balloon ring and of the
yarn guide.
I) The traveller
The traveller allows the twisting and the correct
delivery of the yarn on the bobbin.
The take up speed of the yarn, which corresponds to
the difference between the peripheral speed of the
bobbin and the peripheral speed of the traveller, is
equal to the peripheral speed of the delivery cylinders
of the drafting unit.
The difference between spindle rpm and the traveller
rpm, within a specific unit of time, gives the number
of coils deposited on the bobbin within a specific unit
of time. Therefore, with the same spindle speed, the
traveller rpm increases along with the bobbin diameter
while the number of coils wound on the bobbin
decreases.
Thanks to the centrifugal force generated, when the
traveller rotates the high contact pressure between the
Fig. 223 - Driving system of the
ring and the traveller creates huge friction forces that
ring rail
generate heat; the traveller can reach temperatures
exceeding 200 300 C since its small mass does not
allow a quick transfer of the heat to the air or to the ring. For this reason, significant
improvements in ring spinning can be hardly achieved with the materials currently available,
since the speed of the traveller has apparently reached its maximum limit (approx. 33 35 m/sec
for steel travellers and 45 47 m/s for nylon-glass fibre travellers).
This is why the traveller used for producing a specific type of yarn must feature the most
suitable shape, mass, material, finish and cross section.
To reach the highest speeds, the shape of the traveller must correspond to the shape of the ring.
This creates a very large contact surface, which facilitates heat transfer; the surface must also be
very smooth to grant a low barycentre. The flat profile must allow space enough for the yarn
since the friction between the yarn and the ring could increase the yarn hairiness and
consequently the formation of flying fibres.
188
The mass of the traveller determines the friction force between the ring and the traveller, the
balloon size and consequently the take up tension of the yarn.
If the mass of the traveller is very small, the balloon will be sufficiently large, the take up
tension will be limited and the bobbin will be soft; on the contrary, a heavy traveller will
determine an increase in the take up tension and a greater number of breaks. In a few words, the
mass of the traveller must be strictly proportional to the yarn mass (count and resistance) and to
the speed of the spindle.
The structure of the bobbin
A) The shape of the bobbin
The tube is usually made of
paperboard, plastics and has a
conical shape similar to the spindle
tip; the yarn is wound on the tube
leaving a free space (10 13 mm) at
both ends. A full bobbin (Figure
224) consists of three different parts:
the H2 tapered base (kernel),
the H1cylindrical part at the
centre (yarn package or buildup),
the H cone-shape upper end
A bobbin is wound starting from the
base to the tip by overlapping the
various yarn layers frustrum-like;
except for the kernel, this gives a
conical shape to the material from
the edge of the kernel to the tip of
the bobbin.
KEY
AB-
C-
D-
Tying start
E-
F-
H Bobbin cone = 60 mm
L Tube length = 260-280 mm
MACHINE TECHNICAL DATA
Ring diameter : 51-55 mm
Run-out length : 4.14 mm
Winding ratio 1:2.5
Each step of the bobbin formation consists essentially of the overlapping of a main yarn layer
with a cross-wound tying layer.
The main layer is wound during the slow upward travel of the ring rail; the yarn coils laid one
next to the other provide the bobbin build-up. The cross layer, made of distant coils inclined
downwards, is formed during the quick downward travel of the rail. This system keeps the main
layers separated, in order to prevent them from being pressed one inside the other (thus resulting
in a quite difficult or almost impossible unwinding of the yarn).
The ratio between the number of yarn coils wound on the bobbin during the upward travel of the
rail and the number of yarn coils wound during the downward travel usually range between 2:1
and 2.5:1 (Figure 225); for this reason the rail must raise slowly (A) and lower quite quickly
(B). When unwinding the bobbin at high speed (D) the simultaneous unwinding of many coils
could lead to entanglements of the yarn (this does not occur in C case).
189
KEY
1 - Bobbin start
2 - Bobbin end
3 - Speed of the spindles
4 Bobbin build-up
5 - Bobbin tying
V Operating speed
KEY
1 - Bobbin start
2 - Bobbin end
3 End of kernel formation
4 - Bobbin build-up
5 - Bobbin tying
VR Bobbin build-up speed
VIS Kernel formation speed (bobbin start).
191
KEY
1 Bobbin start
2 Bobbin end
3 Kernel end
4 Bobbin build-up
5 Bobbin tying
6 Speed of the spindles
VR Bobbin build-up speed
VIS Kernel formation speed (bobbin start).
192
193
194
Fig. 230 - Inclination of the yarn with reference to the yarn guide
Furthermore, the yarn guide acts as a limiter of the vibrations
generated by the balloon, which rarely moves in a regular manner.
A reduced yarn angle with reference to the yarn guide (Figure 230)
allows the twist to reach the spinning triangle more often but also
with a more powerful tension, which limits the positive effect of the
twist; also vibrations reach the spinning triangle more easily.
A wider yarn angle with reference to the yarn guide allows the
elimination of all the above-mentioned problems.
Ring spinning with controlled-balloon spindles
The main feature of controlled-balloon spinning (Figure 231) is the
particular shape of the spindle tip which, having the yarn wound on
it for a given length, reduces the balloon and limits the tension of the
yarn near the spinning triangle.
The decrease in the spinning tension reduces the number of yarn
breakages, or allows higher spinning speeds with the same number
of breakages.
In case of spinning machines equipped with a balloon control
device, the yarn guide is always placed along the spindle axis and its
position is fixed to allow the correct functioning of the spindle.
The yarn tension can be modified between the draft cylinder and the
spindle tip by varying the inclination of the spinfinger; the more
inclined the spinfinger, the smaller the tension of the yarn between
the yarn guide and the draft cylinders.
Condensation spinning
The condensation principle is based on the airstream used for parallelising and condensing the
fibres to reduce the size of the spinning triangle and obtain a yarn with reduced hairiness and
improved evenness and strength.
The fibre condensation process is carried out on the draft cylinder; the vacuum created inside the
perforated draft cylinder allows the generated airstream flowing from outside into the cylinder
thus condensing the fibres on its surface without modifying the geometry (Figure 232).
196
TABLE I
Characteristic
Automatic unloading
Drafting unit
Draft
Max gauge
Free draft range (cont-deliv. roller)
3 rollers
4 rollers
Free draft range (feed cyl. -cont)
3 rollers
4 rollers
Draft cylinders/pressure roller
3 rollers
4 rollers
Spindle gauge
Rings
Spindles
Tube length
Yarn count
Max. spindle speed
single-control
mm
double-control
yes
3 or 4 rollers
more than 26
max 222
mm
mm
26
19
mm
mm
117
88
mm
mm
mm
mm
n
mm
Nm
rpm
40/50
35/50
75
42 51
up to 1056
220 260
40 140
16,000
82.5
48 55
up to 960
240 280
30 60
16,000
75
42 51
up to 672
220 260
40 140
16,000
82.5
48 55
up to 624
240 260
30 60
16,000
197
Valuable raw materials are used in the preparation stage; the processed slivers feature fine
counts and a few fibres per segment; for this reason the operations must be carried out with
utmost precision and uniformity; the fourth drawing step allows intimate control of the fibres, a
high number of doublings and a better sequencing of the various drawing steps.
Flow diagram no.1 Output rate: 500 kg/h of Nm 40 wool yarn (Table J)
The third drawing step with disk head, after two drawing steps with chain head, grant good
results as well as minimum maintenance interventions and high operating speeds (Figure 237).
Autoleveller
DRAWFRAMES
TABLE J
Vu
Pt
N of
Pp
g/m
28
N of
Exit
Elem.
1
m/min
400
kg/h
672
%
75
Units
1
kg/h
504
8,0
14
400
672
75
504
56x4
8,0
375
630
80
504
13,31
0.526
2x24
231
349.9
72
503.9
Nm 1.9
21
Nm 40
1x576
23.8
20.6
94
26
502.6
Unit
Te
Ce
Tu
1st step
g/m
25
g/m
200
7.14
28
4x2
112x2
14
4x4
7
Nm 1.9
1 sliver in 1can
2nd step
2 slivers in 1 can
3rd step
4 slivers in 2 cans
Finisher rubbing frame
2 rovings in 1 bobbin
Spinning frame
Yarn wound on bobbin
This flow diagram can be also prepared with a 2-head chain drawframe, with an electronic
autoleveller on each head (Figure 238), suitable for processing medium and light weight slivers.
The autoleveller on the drawframe that carries out the second drawing step for the preparation to
spinning (Figure 239) allows:
a good control of the evenness of the slivers during a process closer to spinning,
the autolevelling of slivers draft with fewer fibres and therefore more accurately.
DRAWFRAMES
Autoleveller
Fig. 239 Preparation for the spinning cycle of medium-coarse wool yarns (with autoleveller in
the 2nd drawing step)
199
DRAWFRAMES
TABLE K
Unit
st
1 step
Te
Ce
g/m
25
Pt
N of
Pp
kg/h
422.4
%
75
Units
1
kg/h
316.8
320
422.4
75
316.8
300
396
80
316.8
206
197.8
80
316.4
0.333
2x24
229
219.6
72
316.3
23.33 Nm 70 1x576
17.8
8.8
97
37
315.4
Tu
N of
Vu
Exit m/mi
Elem.
n
1
320
g/m
175
7.95
g/m
22
22
4x2
88x2
11
11
4x4
44x4
5.5
5.5
6x4
33x4
8.25
12
Nm 3
Nm 3
1 sliver in 1can
2nd step
2 slivers in 1 can
3rd step
4 slivers in 2 cans
4th step
4 slivers in 2 cans
Finisher rubbing frame
2 rovings in 1 bobbin
Spinning frame
Yarn wound on bobbin
200
In the case of standard output rates, this diagram could include a screw-head drawframe for the
first two drawing steps (Figure 241); in this case, the control of the evenness of the slivers is
carried out by a mechanical autoleveller (Table L)
mechanical autoleveller
DRAWFRAMES
TABLE L
Unit
st
1 step
Te
Ce
g/m
25
Pt
N of
Pp
kg/h
141.2
%
75
Units
3
kg/h
317.8
107
141.2
75
317.8
150
198
80
316.8
206
197.8
80
316.4
0.333
2x24
229
219.6
72
316.3
8.8
97
37
315.4
Tu
N of
Vu
Exit m/mi
Elem.
n
1
107
g/m
175
7.95
g/m
22
22
4x2
88x2
11
11
3x4
33x4
5.5
5.5
4x4
22x4
5.5
12
Nm 3
Nm 3
1 sliver in 1can
2nd step
2 slivers in 1 can
3rd step
4 slivers in 2 cans
4th step
4 slivers in 2 cans
Finisher rubbing frame
2 rovings in 1 bobbin
Spinning frame