US3800719A - Sewing machine material feed mechanism - Google Patents

Sewing machine material feed mechanism Download PDF

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US3800719A
US3800719A US00287587A US3800719DA US3800719A US 3800719 A US3800719 A US 3800719A US 00287587 A US00287587 A US 00287587A US 3800719D A US3800719D A US 3800719DA US 3800719 A US3800719 A US 3800719A
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station
sewing machine
conveyor belts
stitching
feeding
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US00287587A
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J Rockerath
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JETSEW Inc
Westpoint Pepperell Inc
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JETSEW Inc
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Assigned to CLUETT, PEABODY & CO. INC., A CORP. OF GEORGIA reassignment CLUETT, PEABODY & CO. INC., A CORP. OF GEORGIA MERGER (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: CLUETT, PEABODY & CO., INC., A CORP OF NY, (MERGED INTO)
Assigned to WEST POINT PEPPERELL, INC. reassignment WEST POINT PEPPERELL, INC. MERGER (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: CLUETT, PEABODY & CO., INC.
Assigned to BANKERS TRUST COMPANY reassignment BANKERS TRUST COMPANY LICENSE (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: WEST POINT-PEPPERELL, INC.
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Assigned to WEST POINT-PEPPERELL, INC. reassignment WEST POINT-PEPPERELL, INC. RELEASE OF SECURITY INTEREST & ASSIGNMENT Assignors: BANKERS TRUST COMPANY
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D05SEWING; EMBROIDERING; TUFTING
    • D05BSEWING
    • D05B33/00Devices incorporated in sewing machines for supplying or removing the work
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D05SEWING; EMBROIDERING; TUFTING
    • D05DINDEXING SCHEME ASSOCIATED WITH SUBCLASSES D05B AND D05C, RELATING TO SEWING, EMBROIDERING AND TUFTING
    • D05D2207/00Use of special elements
    • D05D2207/02Pneumatic or hydraulic devices
    • D05D2207/04Suction or blowing devices
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D05SEWING; EMBROIDERING; TUFTING
    • D05DINDEXING SCHEME ASSOCIATED WITH SUBCLASSES D05B AND D05C, RELATING TO SEWING, EMBROIDERING AND TUFTING
    • D05D2303/00Applied objects or articles
    • D05D2303/02Tape
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D05SEWING; EMBROIDERING; TUFTING
    • D05DINDEXING SCHEME ASSOCIATED WITH SUBCLASSES D05B AND D05C, RELATING TO SEWING, EMBROIDERING AND TUFTING
    • D05D2305/00Operations on the work before or after sewing
    • D05D2305/02Folding
    • D05D2305/04Folding longitudinally to the sewing direction
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D05SEWING; EMBROIDERING; TUFTING
    • D05DINDEXING SCHEME ASSOCIATED WITH SUBCLASSES D05B AND D05C, RELATING TO SEWING, EMBROIDERING AND TUFTING
    • D05D2305/00Operations on the work before or after sewing
    • D05D2305/08Cutting the workpiece
    • D05D2305/12Cutting the workpiece transversally

Definitions

  • the present invention relates generally to sewing machine material feed mechanisms and more particularly to a new and improved material feed mechanism providing greater feed control and elimination of imperfections resulting from improper material feed.
  • FIG. 1 is a generally diagramatic elevation view, partly broken away, of a sewing machine installation for sewing shirt front box hems and employing an embodiment of a material feed mechanism incorporating the present invention
  • FIG. 2 is a partial perspective view, partly broken away and partly in section, showing a shirt front box hem of the type stitched with the sewing machine installation of FIG. 1;
  • FIG. 3 is generally diagramatic plan view of the sewing machine installation
  • FIG. 4 is a generally diagramatic elevation view, partly broken away of a sewing machine installation employing another embodiment of a material feed mechanism incorporating the present invention
  • FIG. 5 is an enlarged plan view of a pressure roll subassembly of the sewing machine installation.
  • FIG. 6 is an enlarged plan view of another pressure roll subassembly of the sewing machine installation.
  • a sewing machine installation 8 incorporating an embodiment of a material feed mechanism of the present invention is shown comprising a material support table 12 for supporting material as it is being fed, from right to left as viewed in FIG. 1, for being stitched at a stitching station 13 by a sewing machine head 14 and for being sheared at a shearing station 15 by a cutter 16.
  • the sewing machine installation 8 shown is employed for stitching a box front hem or pleat 17 (shown in FIG. 2) of a man's shirt front 5 and employs conventional material handling apparatus 18 for prefolding and preassembling the components of the shirt front 5.
  • the material handling apparatus 18 comprises a lower folding device 19 for prefolding an inner edge 20 of a precut shirt front blank 6 upwardly and inwardly and an upper folding device 21 for prefolding the lateral edges of an elongated pre-cut band 22 of shirt material downwardly and inwardly around a liner or stiffener 23 and guiding the assembled band 22 and liner 23 onto the prefolded shirt blank 6 to be stitched together at the stitching station 13.
  • the liner 23 is fed into the upper folding device 21 from a roll 24, and the pre-cut band 22 and shirt front blank 6 are manually fed into the upper and lower folding devices 19, 21 respectively.
  • the sewing machine head 14 incorporates a needle bar 30 with a pair of laterally spaced needles 32 for stitching both edges of the box front hem 17.
  • a band 22 and an edge of a pre-cut shirt front blank 6 are initially manually fed through the respective folding devices 19,21 to the stitching station.
  • the machine is then energized to automatically feed the preassembled shirt front blank 6, band 22 and liner 23 together through (a) the stitching station 13 to stitch a box front hem 17 along the entire lateral edge of the shirt front and then the (b) shearing station 15 to properly shear the leading and trailing edges of the box front hem.
  • a section of a box front hem 17 is shown in FIG. 2 to illustrate how the pre-cut shirt front blank 6, liner 23 and pre-cut band 22 are folded and stitched together.
  • the sewing machine feed mechanism provides for feeding the shirt front through the stitching station 13 and' through the shearing station 15.
  • the cutter 16 is preferably of the type described in my copending U. S. patent application Ser. No. 153,664 filed June 16, l97l and entitled Retractable Sewing Machine Cutting Mechanism and as explained in detail in that application provides for accurately severing the leading and trailing edges of the shirt hem.
  • the material feed mechanism comprises upper and lower conveyers having three laterally spaced pairs 38-40 of cooperating belts 36, 37 respectively engageable along a plane slightly above the table and cooperable for advancing the material along the table.
  • the lower conveyor also comprises three additional conveyor belts 42 which may be identical to the lower belts 37 and which provide for conveying the body of the front blank 6 along the table, it being seen that the pairs 38-40 of conveyor belts 36, 37 are located to engage the center hem of material to ensure that the center hem is positively conveyed along the table.
  • the inner and outer lower conveyor belts 37 of the lower conveyor are positioned immediately laterally inwardly and laterally outwardly respectively of the two laterally spaced sewing machine needles 32 and the intermediate conveyor belt 37 of the lower conveyor is located centrally between the needles 32 and such that the three lower conveyor belts 37 do not interfere with the operation of the sewing machine head 14.
  • the conveyor belts 36, 37, 42 are supported on a number of suitable rollers 50 rotatably mounted on parallel support shafts for guiding the endless conveyor belts around a circuitous path.
  • the circuitous path is provided in part to provide belt separation at the cutting station 15 to permit the cutter 16 to function properly without interfering with the operation of the upper and lower conveyors.
  • the upper and lower conveyor belts are driven together by parallel drive shafts S6, 57 which are interconnected by a timing belt 58 and pulleys 59 to be driven at the same angular velocity.
  • Individual knurled drive wheels 60, 61, 62 detachably mounted on the shafts 56, 57 respectively by suitable set screws 55 are provided for driving the conveyor belts 36, 37, 42.
  • the conveyor belt guide rollers 50 are positioned so that the conveyor belts engage a substantial peripheral portion of the knurled drive wheels.
  • the conveyor belts are elastic and are mounted in a slightly stretched condition to firmly engage the knurled drive wheels 60, 61, 62 so that the belts are driven without slippage.
  • the lower belt drive shaft 56 is connected to a treadle operated motor 68 by a belt and pulley system 69 and a suitable transmission 70.
  • the sewing machine 14 is also connected to the treadle operated motor 68 by a suitable belt and pulley system 71 and such that the sewing machine head 14 and the belt drive system are simultaneously driven at coordinated speeds.
  • the upper conveyor also comprises a pair of laterally spaced feed rolls 72 mounted immediately adjacent to and, as shown, after the stitching station 13. Also the pair of feed rolls 72 are preferably mounted between the three laterally spaced lower conveyor belts 37.
  • the feed rolls 72 are fixed onto a laterally extending drive shaft 74, and the shaft 74 is rotatably mounted on a shaft 74, and the shaft 74 is rotatably mounted on a support 75 for limited vertical displacement on a pair of guide rods 76, 77 and biased downwardly by a compression spring 78 for biasing the rolls 72 into engagement with the workpiece material.
  • the feed rolls 72 are connected to be driven along with the conveyor belts 36, 37 and sewing machine head 14 by a transmission 80 having an output shaft parallel to the roll shaft 74 and connected thereto by a drive shaft 82 and suitable universal joints 84.
  • the input shaft 86 of the transmission 80 is driven by a sewing machine head drive shaft 88 via a belt and pulley system 89.
  • the transmission 80 is of the type which is infinitely adjustably within a given drive ratio range and such that the peripheral speed of the feed rolls 72 can be accurately adjusted with the transmission 80 in accordance with the linear speed of the conveyor belts 36, 37.
  • a modified conveyor system may be used in which three upper conveyor belts 92 are mounted to cooperate with the three lower conveyor belts 37 for conveying the material through the stitching station 13 as well as the shearing station 15.
  • a slightly arcuate or arches convex throat plate 94 is provided at the stitching station 13 for maintaining substantially constant belt clamping pressure on the intermediate material workpiece for ensuring essentially positive conveyance of the workpiece material through the stitching station 13.
  • the throat plate 94 is preferably mounted so that the pair of laterally spaced stitch ing needles 32 are located essentially at the top of the throat plate 94 and so that the belts provide for positively conveying the material both to and from the stitching station 13.
  • the workpiece material is preferably continuously conveyed by the conveyor system during stitching and the needles are therefore distorted 4 slightly by the moving material during the short interval the needles penetrate the material for each stitch.
  • firm engagement of the material is found to be very desirable to prevent any material slippage and resulting inferior stitching.
  • the convex throat plate 94 ensures continuous material movement and good stitching results.
  • Pressure roll or puller subassemblies 100, 102 are provided before and after the cutting station 15 to ensure that the cooperating belts 36 (or belts 92 in the embodiment of FIG. 4) and 37 firmly clamp the material and positively convey the material through the cutting station 15.
  • the leading pressure roll subassembly is shown in FIG. 5 to comprise a frame having a pair of laterally spaced support plates 104, 106 an upper cross bar 108 secured to the plates 104, 106 and a lower roller support shaft 1 10.
  • Three laterally spaced generally barrel shaped rolls 112 are rotatably supported on the shaft for engagement with the three laterally spaced belts 36 of the upper conveyor system.
  • the support plates 104, 106 are pivotally mounted on an adjacent belt roller support shaft 113 and a leaf spring 114 is mounted on a support shaft 115 for engagement with the upper cross bar 108 for urging the rolls 112 into engagement with the belts 36 with an initial predetermined minimum bias.
  • a pneumatic cylinder 118 is connected to an arm 120 of the support plate 106 to increase the roll pressure and to thereby increase the belt clamping force on the material where found desirable in certain applications and with certain materials.
  • the pneumatic cylinder 1 18 is connected via a suitable manually adjustable pressure regulator 122 for manually setting the bias on the conveyor belts provided by the pneumatic cylinder 118.
  • the trailing pressure roller subassembly 102 is similarly constructed with a pair of supports 104, 106 a cross bar 108 and a roller support shaft 125. However, only a single cylindrical roll 126 is mounted on the support shaft 125 for engagement with the center belt 36.
  • a leaf spring 1 14 engages the cross bar 108 to urge the roll 126 into engagement with the center belt 36 and a pneumatic cylinder 118 is provided for establishing an additional bias on the center belt 36.
  • the pneumatic cylinder 118 is connected via a separate manually adjustable pressure regulator 122 for adjusting the roll pressure in accordance with the sewing machine application, material used, etc.
  • the knurled drive wheels 62 mounted on the lower conveyor drive shaft 56 may have a diameter of 2.266 in. and the remaining knurled drive wheels 60, 61 on the upper and lower conveyor drive shafts may have a diameter of 2.254 in. such that a differential belt speed of approximately 5 .3 percent is provided.
  • the adjustable transmission 80 would be set to drive the pressure rolls 72 such that their peripheral speed is also approximately 5.3 percent less than the linear speed of the two innermost lower conveyor belts 37.
  • a different sewing machine application may require a different differential speed and/or require other elements of the conveyor system to be increased in speed or decreased in speed depending upon the type of material handling apparatus employed, the form of the stitched hem, etc., and the weights and types of material used.
  • adjustment of the differential speed for each application will normally be required to obtain optimum results, it is believed that the required differential speed will normally be 5.5 percent or less and not likely ever in excess of percent. Also to be effective it is believed that the required speed differential will normally exceed 2 percent.
  • a sewing machine having a sewing machine head for stitching material at a stitching station and material feeding apparatus for feeding the material through the stitching station and comprising upper and lower cooperating belt conveyors having at least one pair of cooperating conveyor belts extending through the stitching station and engageable with opposite sides of the material for feeding the material through the stitching station and drive means for driving the upper and lower belt conveyors together for feeding the material through the stitching station
  • the sewing machine further comprises a convex support extending through the stitching station belowthe cooperating conveyor belts for guiding the cooperating conveyor belts through an arcuate path at the stitching station for maintaining the conveyor belts in effective gripping engagement with the material.
  • a sewing machine having a sewing machine head for stitching material at a stitching station, a cutting mechanism for cutting the material at a cutting station after the stitching station and material feeding apparatus for feeding the material from the stitching station and through the cutting station and comprising upper and lower cooperating belt conveyors having at least one pair of cooperating conveyor belts engageable with opposite sides of the material both before and after the cutting station for feeding the material through the cutting station and drive means for driving the upper and lower belt conveyors together for feeding the material
  • the material feeding apparatus comprises pressure roll means engageable with the conveyor belt of one of the belt conveyors for biasing the conveyor belt toward the other conveyor belt for firmly gripping the material, the pressure roll means comprising a reciprocable frame, a pressure roll rotatably mounted on the frame for engagement with the belt of said one belt conveyor, and biasing means for biasing the frame in one direction for urging the belt conveyors together for gripping the material.
  • the biasing means comprises a pneumatic cylinder connected for urging the frame in said one direction and pneumatic pressure regulator means connected to the pneumatic cylinder and adjustable for controlling the pneumatic pressure in the cylinder for controlling the bias on the frame in said one direction.

Abstract

A sewing machine installation for sewing a shirt front box hem having material handling apparatus for preassembling the shirt front and a material feed mechanism with pairs of cooperating upper and lower conveyor belts for feeding the shirt front. Certain conveyor belts are driven at different speeds to compensate for different effective feed rates of the material through the material handling apparatus and pneumatically operated pressure rolls are provided for urging the conveyor belts together for positively gripping the shirt front material. In one embodiment additional drive rolls are provided adjacent the sewing station for assisting in feeding the material through the sewing station and in a second embodiment the upper and lower conveyor belts convey the material through the sewing station and air arcuate conveyor belt support plate is provided at the sewing station for ensuring positive gripping of the material.

Description

United States Patent 1191 Rockerath Apr. 2, 1974 SEWING MACHINE MATERIAL FEED MECHANISM Inventor:
US. Cl. 112/203, 112/208 Int. Cl. D05b 27/00, D05b 27/ 16 Field of Search ..1l2/2,121.l1,121.12, l12/l2l.15, 121.26, 203, 208, 209, 214,
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS Flach et al. 112/203 Primary Examiner-Werner H. Schroeder Attorney, Agent, or Firm-Prutzman, Hayes, Kalb &
Chilton [57] V '7 ABSTRACT A sewing machine installation for sewing a shirt front box hem having material handling apparatus for preassembling the shirt front and a material feed mechanism with pairs of cooperating upper and lower conveyor belts for feeding the shirt front. Certain conveyor belts are driven at different speeds to compensate for different effective feed rates of the material through the material handling apparatus and pneumatically operated pressure rolls are provided for urging the conveyor belts together for positively gripping the shirt front material. in one embodiment additional drive rolls are provided adjacent the sewing station for assisting in feeding the material through the sewing station and in a second embodiment the upper and lower conveyor belts convey the material through the sewing station and air arcuate conveyor belt support plate is provided at the sewing station for ensuring positive gripping of the material.
3 Claims, 6 Drawing Figures PMENIEDAPR 2 an SHEU 1 0f 3 l Df PAIENTEDAPR 2 9 I 3800719 I F IG 4 //Z w ill! w l 1W lu w i 1 we FIG. 5 FIG. 6
SEWING MACHINE MATERIAL FEED MECHANISM BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION The present invention relates generally to sewing machine material feed mechanisms and more particularly to a new and improved material feed mechanism providing greater feed control and elimination of imperfections resulting from improper material feed.
It is a primary aim of the present invention to provide a new and improved sewing machine feed mechanism having notable utility with material folding or other material handling apparatus which preassemble the material to be sewn.
It is another aim of the present invention to provide a new and improved sewing machine belt conveyor system for positively conveying the material through the sewing station of the sewing machinery and also, if desired, through a cutting station of the sewing machine.
It is a further aim of the present invention to provide a new and improved sewing machine belt conveyor system for use in a sewing machine installation designed for sewing shirt front box hems.
Other objects will be in part obvious and in part pointed out more in detail hereinafter.
A better understanding of the invention will be obtained from the following detailed description and the accompanying drawings of illustrative applications of the invention.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS In the drawings:
FIG. 1 is a generally diagramatic elevation view, partly broken away, of a sewing machine installation for sewing shirt front box hems and employing an embodiment of a material feed mechanism incorporating the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a partial perspective view, partly broken away and partly in section, showing a shirt front box hem of the type stitched with the sewing machine installation of FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is generally diagramatic plan view of the sewing machine installation;
FIG. 4 is a generally diagramatic elevation view, partly broken away of a sewing machine installation employing another embodiment of a material feed mechanism incorporating the present invention;
FIG. 5 is an enlarged plan view of a pressure roll subassembly of the sewing machine installation; and
FIG. 6 is an enlarged plan view of another pressure roll subassembly of the sewing machine installation.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS Referring now to the drawings in detail wherein like numerals represent like parts throughout the several figures, a sewing machine installation 8 incorporating an embodiment of a material feed mechanism of the present invention is shown comprising a material support table 12 for supporting material as it is being fed, from right to left as viewed in FIG. 1, for being stitched at a stitching station 13 by a sewing machine head 14 and for being sheared at a shearing station 15 by a cutter 16. The sewing machine installation 8 shown is employed for stitching a box front hem or pleat 17 (shown in FIG. 2) of a man's shirt front 5 and employs conventional material handling apparatus 18 for prefolding and preassembling the components of the shirt front 5. More particularly the material handling apparatus 18 comprises a lower folding device 19 for prefolding an inner edge 20 of a precut shirt front blank 6 upwardly and inwardly and an upper folding device 21 for prefolding the lateral edges of an elongated pre-cut band 22 of shirt material downwardly and inwardly around a liner or stiffener 23 and guiding the assembled band 22 and liner 23 onto the prefolded shirt blank 6 to be stitched together at the stitching station 13. In a conventional manner the liner 23 is fed into the upper folding device 21 from a roll 24, and the pre-cut band 22 and shirt front blank 6 are manually fed into the upper and lower folding devices 19, 21 respectively.
The sewing machine head 14 incorporates a needle bar 30 with a pair of laterally spaced needles 32 for stitching both edges of the box front hem 17. Thus, to form a shirt front 5 a band 22 and an edge of a pre-cut shirt front blank 6 are initially manually fed through the respective folding devices 19,21 to the stitching station. The machine is then energized to automatically feed the preassembled shirt front blank 6, band 22 and liner 23 together through (a) the stitching station 13 to stitch a box front hem 17 along the entire lateral edge of the shirt front and then the (b) shearing station 15 to properly shear the leading and trailing edges of the box front hem. A section of a box front hem 17 is shown in FIG. 2 to illustrate how the pre-cut shirt front blank 6, liner 23 and pre-cut band 22 are folded and stitched together. a
The sewing machine feed mechanism provides for feeding the shirt front through the stitching station 13 and' through the shearing station 15. The cutter 16 is preferably of the type described in my copending U. S. patent application Ser. No. 153,664 filed June 16, l97l and entitled Retractable Sewing Machine Cutting Mechanism and as explained in detail in that application provides for accurately severing the leading and trailing edges of the shirt hem.
The material feed mechanism comprises upper and lower conveyers having three laterally spaced pairs 38-40 of cooperating belts 36, 37 respectively engageable along a plane slightly above the table and cooperable for advancing the material along the table. The lower conveyor also comprises three additional conveyor belts 42 which may be identical to the lower belts 37 and which provide for conveying the body of the front blank 6 along the table, it being seen that the pairs 38-40 of conveyor belts 36, 37 are located to engage the center hem of material to ensure that the center hem is positively conveyed along the table. The inner and outer lower conveyor belts 37 of the lower conveyor are positioned immediately laterally inwardly and laterally outwardly respectively of the two laterally spaced sewing machine needles 32 and the intermediate conveyor belt 37 of the lower conveyor is located centrally between the needles 32 and such that the three lower conveyor belts 37 do not interfere with the operation of the sewing machine head 14.
The conveyor belts 36, 37, 42 are supported on a number of suitable rollers 50 rotatably mounted on parallel support shafts for guiding the endless conveyor belts around a circuitous path. The circuitous path is provided in part to provide belt separation at the cutting station 15 to permit the cutter 16 to function properly without interfering with the operation of the upper and lower conveyors.
The upper and lower conveyor belts are driven together by parallel drive shafts S6, 57 which are interconnected by a timing belt 58 and pulleys 59 to be driven at the same angular velocity. Individual knurled drive wheels 60, 61, 62 detachably mounted on the shafts 56, 57 respectively by suitable set screws 55 are provided for driving the conveyor belts 36, 37, 42. As seen in FIG. 1, the conveyor belt guide rollers 50 are positioned so that the conveyor belts engage a substantial peripheral portion of the knurled drive wheels. Also the conveyor belts are elastic and are mounted in a slightly stretched condition to firmly engage the knurled drive wheels 60, 61, 62 so that the belts are driven without slippage. The lower belt drive shaft 56 is connected to a treadle operated motor 68 by a belt and pulley system 69 and a suitable transmission 70. The sewing machine 14 is also connected to the treadle operated motor 68 by a suitable belt and pulley system 71 and such that the sewing machine head 14 and the belt drive system are simultaneously driven at coordinated speeds.
The upper conveyor also comprises a pair of laterally spaced feed rolls 72 mounted immediately adjacent to and, as shown, after the stitching station 13. Also the pair of feed rolls 72 are preferably mounted between the three laterally spaced lower conveyor belts 37. The feed rolls 72 are fixed onto a laterally extending drive shaft 74, and the shaft 74 is rotatably mounted on a shaft 74, and the shaft 74 is rotatably mounted on a support 75 for limited vertical displacement on a pair of guide rods 76, 77 and biased downwardly by a compression spring 78 for biasing the rolls 72 into engagement with the workpiece material. The feed rolls 72 are connected to be driven along with the conveyor belts 36, 37 and sewing machine head 14 by a transmission 80 having an output shaft parallel to the roll shaft 74 and connected thereto by a drive shaft 82 and suitable universal joints 84. The input shaft 86 of the transmission 80 is driven by a sewing machine head drive shaft 88 via a belt and pulley system 89. The transmission 80 is of the type which is infinitely adjustably within a given drive ratio range and such that the peripheral speed of the feed rolls 72 can be accurately adjusted with the transmission 80 in accordance with the linear speed of the conveyor belts 36, 37.
Referring to FIG. 4, where feasible (depending upon the material handling apparatus employed), a modified conveyor system may be used in which three upper conveyor belts 92 are mounted to cooperate with the three lower conveyor belts 37 for conveying the material through the stitching station 13 as well as the shearing station 15. With such a modified conveyor system a slightly arcuate or arches convex throat plate 94 is provided at the stitching station 13 for maintaining substantially constant belt clamping pressure on the intermediate material workpiece for ensuring essentially positive conveyance of the workpiece material through the stitching station 13. The throat plate 94 is preferably mounted so that the pair of laterally spaced stitch ing needles 32 are located essentially at the top of the throat plate 94 and so that the belts provide for positively conveying the material both to and from the stitching station 13. The workpiece material is preferably continuously conveyed by the conveyor system during stitching and the needles are therefore distorted 4 slightly by the moving material during the short interval the needles penetrate the material for each stitch. Thus, firm engagement of the material is found to be very desirable to prevent any material slippage and resulting inferior stitching. The convex throat plate 94 ensures continuous material movement and good stitching results.
Pressure roll or puller subassemblies 100, 102 are provided before and after the cutting station 15 to ensure that the cooperating belts 36 (or belts 92 in the embodiment of FIG. 4) and 37 firmly clamp the material and positively convey the material through the cutting station 15. The leading pressure roll subassembly is shown in FIG. 5 to comprise a frame having a pair of laterally spaced support plates 104, 106 an upper cross bar 108 secured to the plates 104, 106 and a lower roller support shaft 1 10. Three laterally spaced generally barrel shaped rolls 112 are rotatably supported on the shaft for engagement with the three laterally spaced belts 36 of the upper conveyor system. The support plates 104, 106 are pivotally mounted on an adjacent belt roller support shaft 113 and a leaf spring 114 is mounted on a support shaft 115 for engagement with the upper cross bar 108 for urging the rolls 112 into engagement with the belts 36 with an initial predetermined minimum bias. A pneumatic cylinder 118 is connected to an arm 120 of the support plate 106 to increase the roll pressure and to thereby increase the belt clamping force on the material where found desirable in certain applications and with certain materials. The pneumatic cylinder 1 18 is connected via a suitable manually adjustable pressure regulator 122 for manually setting the bias on the conveyor belts provided by the pneumatic cylinder 118.
The trailing pressure roller subassembly 102 is similarly constructed with a pair of supports 104, 106 a cross bar 108 and a roller support shaft 125. However, only a single cylindrical roll 126 is mounted on the support shaft 125 for engagement with the center belt 36. A leaf spring 1 14 engages the cross bar 108 to urge the roll 126 into engagement with the center belt 36 and a pneumatic cylinder 118 is provided for establishing an additional bias on the center belt 36. The pneumatic cylinder 118 is connected via a separate manually adjustable pressure regulator 122 for adjusting the roll pressure in accordance with the sewing machine application, material used, etc.
It has been found that where material is fed through some form of material handling apparatus such as the folding devices 19, 21 and/or different materials as employed, a portion or portions of the workpiece material may be distorted slightly due to the differential drag on the workpiece material by the material handling apparatus and/or be conveyed at a different effective rate by the conveyor system such that, for example, an imperfectly stitched hem with material puckering or other imperfections may result. In accordance with the present invention, such imperfections are prevented by driving the upper and lower conveyors or portions thereof with slight speed differentials such that the portion or portions of the material-being distorted due to greater drag or which are conveyed at a lower effective rate by the material handling apparatus are driven by at a slightly faster speed to compensate for such drag and/0r lower effective rate of conveyance. In the installation shown in FIG. 1, it has been found that the inner edge of the shirt front blank 6 is distorted slightly relatively to the preassembled band 22 and stiffner 23 due to the drag from the lower folding device 19 on the inner edge of the shirt front blank 6 and the greater effective rate of conveyance of the preassembled band 22 and stiffener 23 by the conveyor system resulting from the greater stiffness of the stiffener 23. It has been found that such distortion can be properly compensated for by driving the two innermost conveyor belts 37 of the lower conveyor at a speed slightly greater than the upper conveyor. The differential conveyor drive is provided by using driving wheels 62 for the two innermost lower conveyor belts 37 having a slightly larger diameter than the remaining driving wheels 60, 61 for the remaining conveyor belts. For example, the knurled drive wheels 62 mounted on the lower conveyor drive shaft 56 may have a diameter of 2.266 in. and the remaining knurled drive wheels 60, 61 on the upper and lower conveyor drive shafts may have a diameter of 2.254 in. such that a differential belt speed of approximately 5 .3 percent is provided. Where pressure rolls 72 are provided as shown in FIG. 1 the adjustable transmission 80 would be set to drive the pressure rolls 72 such that their peripheral speed is also approximately 5.3 percent less than the linear speed of the two innermost lower conveyor belts 37.
A different sewing machine application may require a different differential speed and/or require other elements of the conveyor system to be increased in speed or decreased in speed depending upon the type of material handling apparatus employed, the form of the stitched hem, etc., and the weights and types of material used. Although adjustment of the differential speed for each application will normally be required to obtain optimum results, it is believed that the required differential speed will normally be 5.5 percent or less and not likely ever in excess of percent. Also to be effective it is believed that the required speed differential will normally exceed 2 percent.
As will be apparent to persons skilled in the art, various modifications, adaptations and variations of the foregoing specific disclosure can be made without departing from the teachings of the present invention.
1 claim:
I. In a sewing machine having a sewing machine head for stitching material at a stitching station and material feeding apparatus for feeding the material through the stitching station and comprising upper and lower cooperating belt conveyors having at least one pair of cooperating conveyor belts extending through the stitching station and engageable with opposite sides of the material for feeding the material through the stitching station and drive means for driving the upper and lower belt conveyors together for feeding the material through the stitching station, the improvement wherein the sewing machine further comprises a convex support extending through the stitching station belowthe cooperating conveyor belts for guiding the cooperating conveyor belts through an arcuate path at the stitching station for maintaining the conveyor belts in effective gripping engagement with the material.
2. In a sewing machine having a sewing machine head for stitching material at a stitching station, a cutting mechanism for cutting the material at a cutting station after the stitching station and material feeding apparatus for feeding the material from the stitching station and through the cutting station and comprising upper and lower cooperating belt conveyors having at least one pair of cooperating conveyor belts engageable with opposite sides of the material both before and after the cutting station for feeding the material through the cutting station and drive means for driving the upper and lower belt conveyors together for feeding the material, the improvement wherein the material feeding apparatus comprises pressure roll means engageable with the conveyor belt of one of the belt conveyors for biasing the conveyor belt toward the other conveyor belt for firmly gripping the material, the pressure roll means comprising a reciprocable frame, a pressure roll rotatably mounted on the frame for engagement with the belt of said one belt conveyor, and biasing means for biasing the frame in one direction for urging the belt conveyors together for gripping the material.
3. In a sewing machine according to claim 2 wherein the biasing means comprises a pneumatic cylinder connected for urging the frame in said one direction and pneumatic pressure regulator means connected to the pneumatic cylinder and adjustable for controlling the pneumatic pressure in the cylinder for controlling the bias on the frame in said one direction.

Claims (3)

1. In a sewing machine having a sewing machine head for stitching material at a stitching station and material feeding apparatus for feeding the material through the stitching station and comprising upper and lower cooperating belt conveyors having at least one pair of cooperating conveyor belts extending through the stitching station and engageable with opposite sides of the material for feeding the material through the stitching station and drive means for driving the upper and lower belt conveyors together for feeding the material through the stitching station, the improvement wherein the sewing machine further comprises a convex support extending through the stitching station below the cooperating conveyor belts for guiding the cooperating conveyor belts through an arcuate path at the stitching station for maintaining the conveyor belts in effective gripping engagement with the material.
2. In a sewing machine having a sewing machine head for stitching material at a stitching station, a cutting mechanism for cutting the material at a cutting station after the stitching station and material feeding apparatus for feeding the material from the stitching station and through the cutting station and comprising upper and lower cooperating belt conveyors having at least one pair of cooperating conveyor belts engageable with opposite sides of the material both before and after the cutting station for feeding the material through the cutting station and drive means for driving the upper and lower belt conveyors together for feeding the material, the improvement wherein the material feeding apparatus comprises pressure roll means engageable with the conveyor belt of one of the belt conveyors for biasing the conveyor belt toward the other conveyor belt for firmly gripping the material, the pressure roll means comprising a reciprocable frame, a pressure roll rotatably mounted on the frame for engagement with the belt of said one belt conveyor, and biasing means for biasing the frame in one direction for urging the belt conveyors together for gripping the material.
3. In a sewing machine according to claim 2 wherein the biasing means comprises a pneumatic cylinder connected for urging the frame in said one direction and pneumatic pressure regulator means connected to the pneumatic cylinder and adjustable for controlling the pneumatic pressure in the cylinder for controlling the bias on the frame in said one direction.
US00287587A 1972-09-08 1972-09-08 Sewing machine material feed mechanism Expired - Lifetime US3800719A (en)

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Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2328065A1 (en) * 1975-10-14 1977-05-13 Saint Marcel Mfg EVACUATION AND CUTTING DEVICE AT THE EXIT OF A SEWING MACHINE
US4311106A (en) * 1978-11-06 1982-01-19 Durkoppwerke Gmbh Sewing machine with upper and lower workpiece transporters
US4421044A (en) * 1982-03-16 1983-12-20 Carl Schmale Kg Automatic method and apparatus for feeding a textile piece to a sewing machine
US4457243A (en) * 1982-02-04 1984-07-03 The Charles Stark Draper Laboratory, Inc. Automated seam joining apparatus
US4483266A (en) * 1980-05-29 1984-11-20 Csepel Muvek Jarmu Es Konfekcioipari Gepgyara Sewing machine with selectively controlled conveyor belt feed
EP0161749A1 (en) * 1984-03-08 1985-11-21 The Charles Stark Draper Laboratory, Inc. Device associated with a sewing machine for supplying and removing the work
EP0319683A2 (en) * 1987-11-04 1989-06-14 Texpa-Arbter Maschinenbaugesellschaft mbH Automatic sewing station
EP0621363A1 (en) * 1993-04-21 1994-10-26 Pegasus Sewing Machine Mfg. Co., Ltd. Automatic apparatus for hemming a tubular work piece
US20140000499A1 (en) * 2012-06-28 2014-01-02 Brother Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Sewing machine and upper feed device
US8919269B1 (en) * 2013-08-23 2014-12-30 Chee Siang Industrial Co., Ltd. Sewing machine feed mechanism
US9416473B2 (en) 2012-03-23 2016-08-16 Brother Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Upper feed device and sewing machine

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US2378730A (en) * 1943-04-06 1945-06-19 Seaman Charles Sewing machine attachment
US2411637A (en) * 1945-01-26 1946-11-26 Lockport Cotton Batting Co Feeding mechanism for cotton batting and the like
US3018746A (en) * 1959-11-24 1962-01-30 Ragnar W Winberg Combined presser foot and feeder
US3087446A (en) * 1959-05-27 1963-04-30 Fendt & Co Xaver Selvedge chain stitch machine
US3204590A (en) * 1962-08-08 1965-09-07 Jet Sew Inc Conveyor seamer sewing machine

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US2378730A (en) * 1943-04-06 1945-06-19 Seaman Charles Sewing machine attachment
US2411637A (en) * 1945-01-26 1946-11-26 Lockport Cotton Batting Co Feeding mechanism for cotton batting and the like
US3087446A (en) * 1959-05-27 1963-04-30 Fendt & Co Xaver Selvedge chain stitch machine
US3018746A (en) * 1959-11-24 1962-01-30 Ragnar W Winberg Combined presser foot and feeder
US3204590A (en) * 1962-08-08 1965-09-07 Jet Sew Inc Conveyor seamer sewing machine

Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2328065A1 (en) * 1975-10-14 1977-05-13 Saint Marcel Mfg EVACUATION AND CUTTING DEVICE AT THE EXIT OF A SEWING MACHINE
US4311106A (en) * 1978-11-06 1982-01-19 Durkoppwerke Gmbh Sewing machine with upper and lower workpiece transporters
US4483266A (en) * 1980-05-29 1984-11-20 Csepel Muvek Jarmu Es Konfekcioipari Gepgyara Sewing machine with selectively controlled conveyor belt feed
US4457243A (en) * 1982-02-04 1984-07-03 The Charles Stark Draper Laboratory, Inc. Automated seam joining apparatus
US4421044A (en) * 1982-03-16 1983-12-20 Carl Schmale Kg Automatic method and apparatus for feeding a textile piece to a sewing machine
US4632046A (en) * 1984-03-08 1986-12-30 The Charles Stark Draper Laboratory, Inc. Assembly system for seamed articles
EP0161749A1 (en) * 1984-03-08 1985-11-21 The Charles Stark Draper Laboratory, Inc. Device associated with a sewing machine for supplying and removing the work
EP0319683A2 (en) * 1987-11-04 1989-06-14 Texpa-Arbter Maschinenbaugesellschaft mbH Automatic sewing station
EP0319683A3 (en) * 1987-11-04 1989-08-09 Texpa Arbter Maschinenbau Gmbh Automatic sewing station
EP0621363A1 (en) * 1993-04-21 1994-10-26 Pegasus Sewing Machine Mfg. Co., Ltd. Automatic apparatus for hemming a tubular work piece
US9416473B2 (en) 2012-03-23 2016-08-16 Brother Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Upper feed device and sewing machine
US20140000499A1 (en) * 2012-06-28 2014-01-02 Brother Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Sewing machine and upper feed device
US9212438B2 (en) * 2012-06-28 2015-12-15 Brother Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Sewing machine and upper feed device
US8919269B1 (en) * 2013-08-23 2014-12-30 Chee Siang Industrial Co., Ltd. Sewing machine feed mechanism

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