Spining Process
Spining Process
Spining Process
Fibre Length:
Short staple
1 in. or less
Medium staple 1 1/32- 1 1/8 in.
Long staple
1 5/32- 1 3/8 in.
Extra Long Staple
1 13/32 in. above.
Fibre Fineness:
Micronaire Value
up to 3.1
3.1 to 3.9
4.0 to 4.9
5.0 to 5.9
6.0 & above
Fineness
Very fine
fine
Medium
Slightly Coarse
Coarse
Fibre Strength:
Pressley value Grading
93 & above
Excellent
87 to 92
Very strong
81 to 86
Strong
75 to 80
Medium strong
70 to 74
Fair strong
Below 70
Weak
Fibre Cleanliness:
Trash %
Up to 1.2%
1.2 to 2%
2 to 4%
4 to 7%
above 7%
Grading
Very clean
Clean
Medium
Dirty
Very dirty
Dust:
Grading
Trash
above 500
Dust
50-500
Micro dust
15-50
Breathable dustbelow 15
Chemical deposits:
Secretions:
Fungi and Bacteria
Vegetable substances
Fats, oil
Synthetic substances
from
Honeydew
Decomposition products
Sugar from plant juices, leaf nectar,
overproduction of wax
Seed oil from ginning, pathogens
defoliants, insecticides, fertilizers, oil
harvesting machines.
Blending:
When different fibers of same or different
grades are kept together, then it is called
blending.
Types of Blending:
1. hand stock blending
2. bin blending
3. lap blending
4. card blending
5. draw frame blending
BLOW ROOM
Blow room:
Cotton fibre is compressed in a bale of 200 to 250
kg. This highly compressed cotton firbe need to be
open at first as a part of yarn manufacturing. And
there are 1.5% to 7% trash in cotton bale which is
also needed to be removed before further
processing. This process of opening & cleaning is
knows as blow room process. Blow room consists of
a number of m/c used in succession to open & clean
the cotton fibre to the required degree. 40% to 70%
of total trash is removed in this section.
Process parameter in the blow room:
Number of opening machines
Type of beater
Type of beating
Beater speed
Setting between feed roller and beater
Production rate of individual machine
Production rate of the entire line
Thickness of the feed web
Density of the feed web
Fibre micronaire
Openness of the fiber material after the various blowroom machine stages; axis A: Degree of opening (specific
volume); axis B: Blowroom stages
Cleaning:
A blowroom
installation
removes
approximately 40 - 70% of the impurities. The result is
dependent on the raw material, the machines and the
environmental conditions. The diagram by illustrates
the dependence of cleaning on raw material type, in
this case on the level of impurities.
The cleaning effect is a matter of adjustment. It is shown
in bottom figure that, increasing the degree of cleaning
also increases the negative effect on cotton when trying
to improve cleaning by intensifying the operation, and
this occurs mostly exponentially. Therefore each
machine in the line has an optimum range of treatment.
It is essential to know this range and to operate within it.
Dust Removal:
Almost all manufacturers of blowroom
machinery now offer dust-removing
machines or equipment in addition to
opening and cleaning machines.
Dust removal is not an easy operation,
since the dust particles are completely
enclosed within the flocks and hence are
held back during suction.
It is mainly the suction units that remove
dust (in this example 64%), dust removal
will be more intensive the smaller the
tufts.
It follows that dust elimination takes
place at all stages of the spinning
process as shown in figure.
Blending:
intensive blending in a suitable blending machine
must be carried out after separate tuft extraction from
individual bales of the layout. This blending operation
must collect the bunches of fibers arriving
sequentially from individual bales and mix them
thoroughly. Multi mixer is the machine of blow room
where the uniform blending is carried out.
In conventional machineries, lap blending was the most significant one. doubling scutcher is
required in this case; this has a conveyor lattice on which four to six laps (L) could be laid and
jointly rolled-off. Lap blending produces very good transverse blends and also a good
longitudinal blend,
Opening devices:
Opening units can be classified as:
endless path
gripping devices
rotating assemblies
Depending on their design, construction, adjustment, etc., these assemblies exert enormous
influence on the whole process.
The grid:
In the final analysis, it is the grid or a grid-like
structure under the opening assembly that
determines the level of waste and its
composition in terms of impurities and good
fibers. Grids are segment-shaped devices under
the opening assemblies and consist of several
(or many) individual polygonal bars or blades
(i.e. elements with edges) and together these
form a trough. The grid encircles at least 1/4, at
most 3/4 and usually 1/3 to 1/2 of the opening
assembly.
The grid has a major influence on the cleaning effect via:
the section of the bars;
the grasping effect of the edges of the polygonal bars;
the setting angle of the bars relative to the opening elements;
the width of the gaps between the bars;
the overall surface area of the grid.
Figure:Two-part grid
Grid adjustment:
Three basic adjustments:
Distance of the complete grid from the beater;
width of the gaps between the bars
(a=closed, b=open);
setting angle relative to the beater envelope
Bale breaker:
Opening is mainly emphasized in this
machine rather cleaning.
This machine is designed to take layer
of cotton directly taken from bale and
tear them apart leaving the cotton
partially opened.
Porcupine opener:
The cotton fed by the previous
opener is carried forward by the
feed lattice.
16 circular disc are mounted on
the shaft of this opener. 14 to
18 striker blades are riveted
alternatively on each circular
disc.
The compressed sheet of cotton delivered from the feed roller is heavily beated by the
rapidly revolving striker of the porcupine beater against grid bar.
Because of this beating action, the cotton is effectively opened and extracted trash
particles are passed through the spacing of the grid bar.
Step cleaner:
The material falls into the feed hopper and
passes to the first beater.
From there it is transported upward by the
six (sometimes three or four) beater rollers,
each carrying profiled bars.
The beaters are arranged on a line inclined
upward at 45.
Elimination of impurities takes place during
the continual passage of the material over
the grids arranged under the rollers
Scutcher:
To feed the material to card is very important because it should be homogeneous,
uniform from card to card, fulfill this requirement scutcher machine is used.
It is less problematical. No need of using pipes to provide the material to separate
machine.
It can be provide
universally and this can
be used with many
blends.
Less economical as
compared to chute feed
system.
Its function is to clean the
material and form a
uniform lap for card.
Kirschner beater:
In this type of beater, instead of beater bars,
pinned bars (pinned lags) are secured to the
ends of the cast-iron arms.
The relatively high degree of penetration
results in good opening. Kirschner beaters
were therefore often used at the last opening
position in the blowroom line.
Uniclean B12
The UNIclean B 12 pre-cleaner
cleans the microtufts in the first
cleaning stage immediately after
the UNIfloc A 11
The UNIclean is designed for output
of up to 1 400 kg/h (carded sliver).
Fiber yield with simultaneous efficient
cleaning is up to 2% higher than on
conventional units.
Pre-cleaning without nipping and the
use of mote knives results in fiberpreserving cleaning.
The large dedusting surface ensures
intensive dedusting even at high
production performance.
Unimix B76
The B 72 / B 76 mixing machine
guarantees homogeneous, intimate mixing
of the bale feed in a minimum of space,
even with unfavorable bale lay-down.
Eight mixing chambers ensure not only
effective mixing, but also high production
performance.
The easy addition of an opening or cleaner
module provides flexibility with the
capability to respond to changes in market
conditions.
Bypass facility for the cleaner module (e.g.
with man-made fibers) for rapid mix
change.
Uniflex B60
Material comes from preceding machine and
then filling the chute. Thus in the chute, a very
homogeneous batting lay down is formed both
lengthwise and crosswise.
The material is carried further by a perforated
drum (2) and a plain drum.
The feed roll (3) supplies the material to the
opening cylinder (5).
A grid (4) made of carding segments and knives
forms the cleaning surface and extracts
impurities.
1= Filling Chute
2= Perforated drum
3= Feed zone
4= Grid
5= Opening Cylinder
6= Delivery
Carding Machine
Carding Machine
The flats (10) comprise 80 - 116 individual carding bars combined into a belt
moving on an endless path. Nowadays some 30 - 46 (modern cards about 27) of the
flats are located in the carding position relative to the main cylinder; the rest are on
the return run.
During this return, a cleaning unit (11) strips fibers, neps and foreign matter from
the bars. Fixed carding bars (9) and (12) are designed to assist the operation of the
card. Grids or cover plates (13) enclose the underside of the main cylinder. After the
carding operation has been completed, the main cylinder carries along the fibers
that are loose and lie parallel without hooks.
However, in this condition the fibers do not form a transportable intermediate
product. An additional cylinder, the doffer (14), is required for this purpose. The
doffer combines the fibers into a web because of its substantially lower peripheral
speed relative to the main cylinder.
A stripping device (15) draws the web from the doffer. After calendar rolls (16)
have compressed the sliver to some extent, the coiler (18) deposits it in cans (17).
The working rollers, cylinder and flats are provided with clothing, which becomes
worn during fiber processing, and these parts must be reground at regular intervals.
Licker-in
This is acast roller with
adiameter usually of around
250mm. Saw-tooth clothing is
applied to it. Beneath the licker-in
there is an enclosure of grid
elements or carding segments;
above it is aprotective casing of
sheet metal. The purpose of the
licker-in is to pluck finely opened
tufts out of the feed batt, lead
them over the dirt-eliminating
parts under the roller and then
deliver them to the main cylinder.
In high-performance cards,
rotation speeds are in the range
of 800-2000rpm for cotton and
about 600rpm for synthetics.
Carding Bar
An aluminium carding profile (1) consists of 2 carding bars (2). One of the
advantages of bars is that they can be provided in different finenesses, e.g.
they can become finer in the through-flow direction. Different
manufacturers use differing numbers of elements (between one and four)
per position. Special clothing is required that must not be allowed to choke.
Most modern high-performance cards are already fitted with these carding
aids as integral equipment; all other machines can be retrofitted by, for
example, Graf of Switzerland or Wolters of Germany.
In use are also other carding devices of different design and with different
Cylinder
The cylinder is usually
manufactured from cast iron, but
is now sometimes made of steel.
Most cylinders have adiameter of
1 280 - 1 300 mm (Rieter C 60
card 814 mm, speed up to 900
rpm) and rotate at speeds
between 250 and 500 (to 600)
rpm. The roundness tolerance
must be maintained within
extremely tight limits the
narrowest setting distance
(between the cylinder and the
doffer) is only about 0.1 mm. The
cylinder is generally supported in
Clothing configuration between
roller bearings.
main cylinder and doffer
flat
Doffer
The cylinder is followed by the doffer, which is designed to
take the individual fibers from the cylinder and condense
them to aweb. The doffer is mostly formed as acast iron
(or steel) drum with adiameter of about 600-707mm.
(680mm on Rieter machines) . It is fitted with metallic
clothing and runs at speeds up to about 300m/min.
Carding Angle ()
This is the most important angle
of the tooth as it determines :
Tooth hardness
In order to be able to
process as much material
as possible with one
clothing, the tooth point
must not wear away
rapidly.
Accordingly,
avery
hard
point
is
needed,
although
it
cannot
be
too
hard
because
otherwise
it
tends to break off. On the
other hand, to enable
winding of the wire on
around body, the base
must remain flexible. Each
tooth therefore has to be
hard at the tip and soft at
the base. Amodern tooth
has hardness structures
as shown in Fig(Graf).
Grinding:
The operating life of clothing is quoted in terms of the total throughput of material.
For the cylinder it normally lies between 300 000 and 600 000 kg, but it can be
higher in some circumstances.
Processing of materials therefore considerably wears down the teeth they
become rounded at the top and lose their aggressiveness.
The direct result is a continuous increase in the nep content of the sliver.
The points must therefore be sharpened from time to time, in order to give a better
shape to the edges by grinding them. Each new grinding operation reduces the
number of neps, but the level never returns to that prior to the previous grinding
Cylinder
Flats
First grinding
after [kg]
80000 150000
80000150000
Each additional
grinding after
[kg]
80000120000
80000120000
Frequency of grinding:
The deterioration in quality from one
grinding interval to the next arises from
the fact that the teeth are ground down
to successively lower heights, the lands
at the teeth points become steadily
larger, and softer metal layers are
gradually exposed.
The interval is best selected depending
on the mills nep limit (c).
Since the doffer clothing works much
less than that of the cylinder, it should be
ground only half as often, or even less
frequently.
The clothing on the licker-in should not
be ground; it should be renewed after a
throughput of 100 000 - 200 000 kg.