US3116587A - Doffing mechanism - Google Patents
Doffing mechanism Download PDFInfo
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- US3116587A US3116587A US245861A US24586162A US3116587A US 3116587 A US3116587 A US 3116587A US 245861 A US245861 A US 245861A US 24586162 A US24586162 A US 24586162A US 3116587 A US3116587 A US 3116587A
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- bobbin
- spindle
- doffing
- ejector element
- wound
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- D—TEXTILES; PAPER
- D01—NATURAL OR MAN-MADE THREADS OR FIBRES; SPINNING
- D01H—SPINNING OR TWISTING
- D01H9/00—Arrangements for replacing or removing bobbins, cores, receptacles, or completed packages at paying-out or take-up stations ; Combination of spinning-winding machine
- D01H9/02—Arrangements for replacing or removing bobbins, cores, receptacles, or completed packages at paying-out or take-up stations ; Combination of spinning-winding machine for removing completed take-up packages and replacing by bobbins, cores, or receptacles at take-up stations; Transferring material between adjacent full and empty take-up elements
- D01H9/08—Doffing arrangements independent of spinning or twisting machines
- D01H9/10—Doffing carriages ; Loading carriages with cores
Definitions
- the present invention relates to doffing means and in particular to a construction having means for positively breaking the drive between the bobbin and spindle and thereafter ejecting the bobbin from the spindle by spring means.
- the present invention is an improvement over the invention disclosed and claimed in our copending application, Serial No. 175,136, filed February 23, 1962, now Patent No. 3,070,949.
- a spring-urged ejector element is employed for both breaking the drive between the spindle and bobbin and for ejecting the bobbin.
- the initial impact required for breaking the driving connection was quite high. In some instances such impact caused damage to the wound bobbin.
- to get the high impact necessitated the use of heavy springs. Since the springs are cocked by the action of the star wheel which is driven by engaging the spindles as the carriage moves along the frame, a high, sustained lateral load was placed on the spindles.
- a feature of the invention is the elimination of the impact of the ejector member with the wound bobbin in order to break the spindle-bobbin drive, thus removing a danger of damage to the bobbin by the dofrlng means.
- lighter springs may be employed since their only function is to move the released bobbin upwardly and eject it from the spindle. This will reduce the sustained force required to turn the sleeve by the star wheel which engages the spindle during the cocking of the springs by a first cam means.
- a further feature of the invention resides in the fact that the second cam means may be relatively short and thus the higher force requirement for breaking the drive is of relatively short duration and does not have a tendency to bend or damage the spindles.
- FIGURE 1 shows a front view of the doffing device.
- FIG. 2 is a top view of FIG. 1.
- FIG. 3 is a side view of FIG. 1 partly in section.
- FIG. 4 is a view of the cam means showing the follower about to engage the drive breaking cam.
- FIG. 5 is a view similar to FIG. 4 showing the drive breaking cam at substantially the end of the drive breaking operation.
- the present invention is an improvement on the doffing 3,116,587 Patented Jan. 7, 1964 means disclosed in said application Serial No. 175,136 now Patent No. 3,070,949, and having a carriage mounted on the frame of a spinning or the like machine for movement therealong for carrying said dofling means into operative relation with the packages to doff them from parallel spindles on the frame.
- the novel dofiing means is mounted on a spinning frame having a plurality of spaced spindles 10 having bobbins 11 impaled thereon and having a driving connection at 10a to be driven thereby to produce wound bobbins 12.
- the dofiing means is carried by a carriage 14 adapted to move along the side of the frame on rails (not shown) carried by brackets 15 so as to doif the bobbins from the spindles in response to movement thereof.
- One or more dofiing units may be used. However, since they all have the same construction, only one will be described.
- the doffing means comprises a base 26 mounted on the top of the frame 18 of the carriage 14 to extend transversely thereof.
- a slide 27 carrying the ejector unit is slidably mounted in ways 28 on the top of the base to a projected position in which it cooperates with the wound bobbins on the spindles.
- a member 29 projects upwardly from the slide and carries one or more doffing units 30 having ejector members 31 for cooperating with the wound bobbins to eject them from the spindle. While the upwardly projecting member may take many forms and positions, it is herein illustrated as a sleeve 32 mounted to rotate on a shaft 33 adapted to lie in a plane parallel to the row of parallel spindles.
- the shaft is locked to a timer plate 34 ad justably mounted on the transverse portion 35a of a bridge member 35 secured to the slide 27.
- the sleeve may be provided with any number of dofiing units, in the herein illustrated form of the invention the sleeve is provided with three dofiing units 30 located 120 apart as shown in FIG. 2.
- the dofiing units have a slide member 36 mounted to slide on bearing portions 32a on the outer surface of the sleeve.
- the slide members 36 are held in position on the bearing portions by plates 37 disposed between the bearing portions and secured to the sleeve by bolts 37a.
- the plates have their edges extended to overlap the edges of the slide members 36 to form Ways therefor. It will be seen, therefore, that the slide members can be readily assembled on the sleeve for rotation therewith and for sliding movement therealong.
- Each slide member has an ejector member projecting therefrom for cooperating with the bobbin to move it 01f v the spindle.
- the ejector member may be a gripper or other element cooperating with the wound bobbin depending on the type of bobbin or driving connection thereto, in the herein illustrated form of the invention it comprises :a bifurcated member 39 having the forks v 39a, 39b thereof projecting perpendicular to the slide member at the lower end and adapted to be disposed on opposite sides of the spindle below the wound bobbin, when in cooperating relation therewith, as shown in FIGS. 2 and 3.
- the slide members are normally urged to a raised position and are movable to a lower bobbin engaging position in which they are held until the bobbin drive is broken after which they are released, preferably by means controlled by the location of the spindle, to eject the freed wound bobbin from the spindle.
- a spring 40 having one end 40a connected to a pin 42 carried by a cap 43 secured to the top of the sleeve and having the other end 40b of the spring connected to the ejector slide.
- the spring is of such character that it normally urges the slide to an upper position wherein it engages a stop 44.
- the lower edge of the stop is provided with a resilient bumper 45 to absorb the shock of the ejector slide as it ejects bobbins from the spindles.
- the shaft has a fixed cam 46 thereon cooperating with a follower 47 on the slide member projecting through a slot 48 in the sleeve.
- the cam has a helical cam surface 46a so arranged that rotation of the unit with the sleeve will cause the follower to ride along the helical surface and be moved downwardly from the raised position. This will charge or tension the spring as it moves the slide and its ejector member to a lower position in which the ejector member is below the level of the bottom of the bobbin.
- the sleeve is connected to the shaft through a one-way clutch and brake device 50 which, as shown in FIG. 3, comprises a coil spring 51 wrapped around a portion of a collar 52 secured to the shaft and a portion wrapped around a collar 53 rotatable on the shaft and secured to the sleeve to rotate therewith through pin 54.
- the spring is of the type which will permit rotation of the sleeve in an operative direction under the rotating means for the sleeve but will brake the sleeve and prevent backward or retrograde rotation thereof under the urging of the springs.
- the sleeve can be rotated by various means, it is at present preferred to rotate the sleeve by means of a star wheel 55 secured to the bottom of the sleeve and having notches 56 in its edge, as shown in FIGS. 1 to 3, which are shaped to cooperate with the row of spindles on the machine, when the ejector units are in projected position, as the carriage is moved along the frame to be rotated thereby.
- a star wheel 55 secured to the bottom of the sleeve and having notches 56 in its edge, as shown in FIGS. 1 to 3, which are shaped to cooperate with the row of spindles on the machine, when the ejector units are in projected position, as the carriage is moved along the frame to be rotated thereby.
- lighter springs may be used so that the lateral load on the spindles necessary to turn the star wheel thereby to cock the springs is substantially reduced.
- the second cam may be relatively short so that the period of maximum effort for the spindle to drive the star wheel is but a small part of the doffing operation whereby any danger of damage to the spindles as an incident to driving the star wheel is substantially eliminated.
- the ejected bobbins can be collected in any suitable manner, as, for example, by a deflector 61, as shown in FIG. 3, which is adapted to guide the ejected bobbin to a container therefor in a manner disclosed in said prior application.
- a dotting device for dofiing wound bobbins from a row of parallel spindles on a textile machine comprising a carriage adapted to be mounted on the side of the machine to move along said row of parallel spindles, and dofiing means mounted on the carriage to break the drive to and remove wound bobbins from said spindles as said carriage moves along the machine, said doffing means comprising an ejector element adapted to be moved into position below the wound bobbin and normally urged by operating means to rapidly move to a raised position, means holding said ejector element in said position below the bobbin and against the action of the operating means, and means controlled by the position of the spindle for positively raising the ejector element to break the drive and thereafter releasing the last-named means whereby said ejector element moves rapidly upward to eject the bobbin from the spindle.
- a dofiing device for doffing wound bobbins from a row of parallel spindles on a textile machine comprising a carriage adapted to be mounted on the side of the machine to move along said row of parallel spindles, and dofling means mounted on the carriage to break a driving connection to and remove wound bobbins from said spindles as said carriage moves along the machine, said doffing means comprising an ejector element adapted to be moved into position below the wound bobbin and normally urged by spring means to rapidly move to a raised position, means holding said ejector element in said position below the bobbin and against the action of the spring means, and cam means controlled by the position of the spindle for progressively raising the element to engage the bobbin without impact and positively move the bobbin relative to the spindle to break the driving connection and free the bobbin for movement therealong, said element being thereafter released to enable the spring means to move rapidly upward to eject the freed bobbin from the spindle.
- a doffing means for breaking the drive connection to and ejecting wound bobbins from spindles comprising a rotatable sleeve having a plurality of dofiing units slidably mounted thereon, means for rotating the sleeve to move the dofling units into operative dolfing relation with the wound packages, each doffing unit comprising a wound bobbin ejector element, spring means normally urging the ejector element to a raised position on the sleeve, 21 first fixed cam cooperating with the ejector element and moving the ejector element against said spring means to a lower position in response to relative movement of said sleeve with respect to said cam to charge said spring means, said cam having means to hold the ejector element below the wound package, and a second cam cooperable with the ejector element in said last position to positively elevate the wound package and break the drive to the spindle, said first cam thereafter releasing said ejector element whereby said spring means rapidly moves
- a dofiing means for breaking the drive between a bobbin and a spindle and for ejecting the bobbin therefrom comprising a sleeve rotatable on a fixed shaft having a plurality of doffing units slidably mounted thereon, and a star wheel connected to the sleeve for cooperating with said spindles for driving the sleev on the shaft as an incident to the movement of the carriage to move the doffing units into operative doffing relation with the wound packages, each dofling unit comprising a wound bobbin ejector element, spring means normally urging the ejector element to a raised position on the sleeve, a first cam on the shaft cooperating with a follower on the ejector element for moving the ejector element against said spring means to a lower position in response to relative movement of said sleeve with respect to said cam to charge said spring means, said first cam having means to hold the ejector element below the wound package
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- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
- Textile Engineering (AREA)
- Sewing Machines And Sewing (AREA)
- Spinning Or Twisting Of Yarns (AREA)
Description
Jan. 7, 1964 E. o. DU BUlS ETAL 3,116,587
DOFFING MECHANISM Filed Dec. 19, 1962 i 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 INVENTOR5I Ed W517 O. Dal-520 HTTORNEYS 1964 E. o. DU BUIS ETAL 3,115,537
DOFFING MECHANISM Filed Dec. 19, 1962 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 INVENTOR? Zdw/n 0. DMBMLS Fdwa/d L. C'acksg ATTORNEYS United States Patent 3,116,587 DOFFING MECHANISM Edwin 0. Du Buis, Pearl River, and Edward L. Cucksey,
Upper Nyack, N.Y., assignors to Willcox & Gibbs Sewing Machine Company, New York, N.Y., a corporation of New York Filed Dec. 19, 1962, Ser. No. 245,861 6 Claims. (CI. 57-53) The present invention relates to doffing means and in particular to a construction having means for positively breaking the drive between the bobbin and spindle and thereafter ejecting the bobbin from the spindle by spring means.
The present invention is an improvement over the invention disclosed and claimed in our copending application, Serial No. 175,136, filed February 23, 1962, now Patent No. 3,070,949. In this application a spring-urged ejector element is employed for both breaking the drive between the spindle and bobbin and for ejecting the bobbin. With some bobbin-spindle combinations the initial impact required for breaking the driving connection was quite high. In some instances such impact caused damage to the wound bobbin. Further, to get the high impact necessitated the use of heavy springs. Since the springs are cocked by the action of the star wheel which is driven by engaging the spindles as the carriage moves along the frame, a high, sustained lateral load was placed on the spindles.
It is an object of the present invention to provide means, separate from the spring means, for breaking the spindlebobbin driving connection whereby impact blow is eliminated and lighter springs can be used and the sustained load on the spindle reduced.
This is accomplished by providing a second cam means in the path of movement of the ejector member carried by a rotatable sleeve, when the member is in its position below the Wound bobbin, which will move into engagement with and positively lift the bobbin with respect to the spindle and break the drive by the cam means in response to the rotation of the sleeve. As soon as the drive is broken, a relatively light spring will become effective to eject the bobbin from the spindle to doff the same.
A feature of the invention is the elimination of the impact of the ejector member with the wound bobbin in order to break the spindle-bobbin drive, thus removing a danger of damage to the bobbin by the dofrlng means.
Another feature of the invention resides in the fact that lighter springs may be employed since their only function is to move the released bobbin upwardly and eject it from the spindle. This will reduce the sustained force required to turn the sleeve by the star wheel which engages the spindle during the cocking of the springs by a first cam means.
A further feature of the invention resides in the fact that the second cam means may be relatively short and thus the higher force requirement for breaking the drive is of relatively short duration and does not have a tendency to bend or damage the spindles.
Other features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the specification and claims when considered in connection with the accompanying drawings in which:
FIGURE 1 shows a front view of the doffing device.
FIG. 2 is a top view of FIG. 1.
FIG. 3 is a side view of FIG. 1 partly in section.
FIG. 4 is a view of the cam means showing the follower about to engage the drive breaking cam.
FIG. 5 is a view similar to FIG. 4 showing the drive breaking cam at substantially the end of the drive breaking operation.
The present invention is an improvement on the doffing 3,116,587 Patented Jan. 7, 1964 means disclosed in said application Serial No. 175,136 now Patent No. 3,070,949, and having a carriage mounted on the frame of a spinning or the like machine for movement therealong for carrying said dofling means into operative relation with the packages to doff them from parallel spindles on the frame. Reference may be made to said application for details of the device which are not necessary to an understanding of the present invention.
As shown in FIGS. 13, the novel dofiing means is mounted on a spinning frame having a plurality of spaced spindles 10 having bobbins 11 impaled thereon and having a driving connection at 10a to be driven thereby to produce wound bobbins 12. The dofiing means is carried by a carriage 14 adapted to move along the side of the frame on rails (not shown) carried by brackets 15 so as to doif the bobbins from the spindles in response to movement thereof. One or more dofiing units may be used. However, since they all have the same construction, only one will be described.
As shown in FIGS. 13, the doffing means comprises a base 26 mounted on the top of the frame 18 of the carriage 14 to extend transversely thereof. A slide 27 carrying the ejector unit is slidably mounted in ways 28 on the top of the base to a projected position in which it cooperates with the wound bobbins on the spindles. A member 29 projects upwardly from the slide and carries one or more doffing units 30 having ejector members 31 for cooperating with the wound bobbins to eject them from the spindle. While the upwardly projecting member may take many forms and positions, it is herein illustrated as a sleeve 32 mounted to rotate on a shaft 33 adapted to lie in a plane parallel to the row of parallel spindles. The shaft is locked to a timer plate 34 ad justably mounted on the transverse portion 35a of a bridge member 35 secured to the slide 27. While the sleeve may be provided with any number of dofiing units, in the herein illustrated form of the invention the sleeve is provided with three dofiing units 30 located 120 apart as shown in FIG. 2. The dofiing units have a slide member 36 mounted to slide on bearing portions 32a on the outer surface of the sleeve. The slide members 36 are held in position on the bearing portions by plates 37 disposed between the bearing portions and secured to the sleeve by bolts 37a. The plates have their edges extended to overlap the edges of the slide members 36 to form Ways therefor. It will be seen, therefore, that the slide members can be readily assembled on the sleeve for rotation therewith and for sliding movement therealong.
Each slide member has an ejector member projecting therefrom for cooperating with the bobbin to move it 01f v the spindle. While the ejector member may be a gripper or other element cooperating with the wound bobbin depending on the type of bobbin or driving connection thereto, in the herein illustrated form of the invention it comprises :a bifurcated member 39 having the forks v 39a, 39b thereof projecting perpendicular to the slide member at the lower end and adapted to be disposed on opposite sides of the spindle below the wound bobbin, when in cooperating relation therewith, as shown in FIGS. 2 and 3.
The slide members are normally urged to a raised position and are movable to a lower bobbin engaging position in which they are held until the bobbin drive is broken after which they are released, preferably by means controlled by the location of the spindle, to eject the freed wound bobbin from the spindle. While many mechanisms may be used for operating the slide member to eject the freed bobbin from the spindle, it is at present preferred to employ a spring 40 having one end 40a connected to a pin 42 carried by a cap 43 secured to the top of the sleeve and having the other end 40b of the spring connected to the ejector slide. The spring is of such character that it normally urges the slide to an upper position wherein it engages a stop 44. Preferably, the lower edge of the stop is provided with a resilient bumper 45 to absorb the shock of the ejector slide as it ejects bobbins from the spindles.
In order to move the ejector member from its upper position to a lower position in which it is disposed beneath the wound bobbin for cooperating therewith, the shaft has a fixed cam 46 thereon cooperating with a follower 47 on the slide member projecting through a slot 48 in the sleeve. The cam has a helical cam surface 46a so arranged that rotation of the unit with the sleeve will cause the follower to ride along the helical surface and be moved downwardly from the raised position. This will charge or tension the spring as it moves the slide and its ejector member to a lower position in which the ejector member is below the level of the bottom of the bobbin. When the slide reaches the lower position, the fiat surface 46]) on the bottom of the cam will hold the ejector member in this position until it has moved into cooperative relation with the wound package :as shown in FIGS. 2 and 3. When the ejector element is in this position, continued rotation of the sleeve will cause the follower to engage a second cam 49 disposed on the shaft as shown in FIGS. 4 and 5. The follower will ride up the inclined surface 49a thereof; cam 46- being cut away at 46d permits and controls the rise of the ejector member. This applies a positive gradual lifting force on the bobbin rather than an impact and breaks the driving connection a. As soon as the follower leaves the surface 46d, the spring will rapidly move the released or freed wound bobbin upwardly along the spindle to eject it from the spindle.
To prevent the pressure of the springs against the cam surface 46 from causing a counter-rotation of the sleeve, the sleeve is connected to the shaft through a one-way clutch and brake device 50 which, as shown in FIG. 3, comprises a coil spring 51 wrapped around a portion of a collar 52 secured to the shaft and a portion wrapped around a collar 53 rotatable on the shaft and secured to the sleeve to rotate therewith through pin 54. The spring is of the type which will permit rotation of the sleeve in an operative direction under the rotating means for the sleeve but will brake the sleeve and prevent backward or retrograde rotation thereof under the urging of the springs.
While the sleeve can be rotated by various means, it is at present preferred to rotate the sleeve by means of a star wheel 55 secured to the bottom of the sleeve and having notches 56 in its edge, as shown in FIGS. 1 to 3, which are shaped to cooperate with the row of spindles on the machine, when the ejector units are in projected position, as the carriage is moved along the frame to be rotated thereby. Thus, it will be seen that the rotation of the sleeve and operation of the ejector mechanism will be accurately controlled by the location of the spindles irrespective of variations in the spacing of the spindle.
Since the springs no longer are required to provide the impact to break the drive connection but are merely strong enough to move the freed bobbin off the spindle, lighter springs may be used so that the lateral load on the spindles necessary to turn the star wheel thereby to cock the springs is substantially reduced. Further, the second cam may be relatively short so that the period of maximum effort for the spindle to drive the star wheel is but a small part of the doffing operation whereby any danger of damage to the spindles as an incident to driving the star wheel is substantially eliminated.
The ejected bobbins can be collected in any suitable manner, as, for example, by a deflector 61, as shown in FIG. 3, which is adapted to guide the ejected bobbin to a container therefor in a manner disclosed in said prior application.
Variations and modifications may be made within the scope of the claims and portions of the improvements may be used without others.
We claim:
1. A pop-up doffing device for breaking the driving connection to and doffing wound bobbins from a row of parallel spindles on a textile machine comprising doffing means, means mounting the dofiing means to move along said row of parallel spindles to remove wound bobbins from said spindles, said dofiing means including an ejector element adapted to be located below the wound bobbin and normally urged by spring means to a raised position, means holding said ejector element in said position below the bobbin and against the action of the spring means, and cam means controlled by the position of the spindle for positively moving said ejector element upwardly to break the drive between the bobbin and spindle and thereafter releasing the last-named means whereby said spring moves the ejector element rapidly upward to eject the wound bobbin from the spindle.
2. A dotting device for dofiing wound bobbins from a row of parallel spindles on a textile machine comprising a carriage adapted to be mounted on the side of the machine to move along said row of parallel spindles, and dofiing means mounted on the carriage to break the drive to and remove wound bobbins from said spindles as said carriage moves along the machine, said doffing means comprising an ejector element adapted to be moved into position below the wound bobbin and normally urged by operating means to rapidly move to a raised position, means holding said ejector element in said position below the bobbin and against the action of the operating means, and means controlled by the position of the spindle for positively raising the ejector element to break the drive and thereafter releasing the last-named means whereby said ejector element moves rapidly upward to eject the bobbin from the spindle.
3. A dofiing device for doffing wound bobbins from a row of parallel spindles on a textile machine comprising a carriage adapted to be mounted on the side of the machine to move along said row of parallel spindles, and dofling means mounted on the carriage to break a driving connection to and remove wound bobbins from said spindles as said carriage moves along the machine, said doffing means comprising an ejector element adapted to be moved into position below the wound bobbin and normally urged by spring means to rapidly move to a raised position, means holding said ejector element in said position below the bobbin and against the action of the spring means, and cam means controlled by the position of the spindle for progressively raising the element to engage the bobbin without impact and positively move the bobbin relative to the spindle to break the driving connection and free the bobbin for movement therealong, said element being thereafter released to enable the spring means to move rapidly upward to eject the freed bobbin from the spindle.
4. A doffing means for breaking the drive connection to and ejecting wound bobbins from spindles comprising a rotatable sleeve having a plurality of dofiing units slidably mounted thereon, means for rotating the sleeve to move the dofling units into operative dolfing relation with the wound packages, each doffing unit comprising a wound bobbin ejector element, spring means normally urging the ejector element to a raised position on the sleeve, 21 first fixed cam cooperating with the ejector element and moving the ejector element against said spring means to a lower position in response to relative movement of said sleeve with respect to said cam to charge said spring means, said cam having means to hold the ejector element below the wound package, and a second cam cooperable with the ejector element in said last position to positively elevate the wound package and break the drive to the spindle, said first cam thereafter releasing said ejector element whereby said spring means rapidly moves said ejector element upwardly to eject the bobbin from the spindle.
5. A dofiing means for breaking the drive between a bobbin and a spindle and for ejecting the bobbin therefrom comprising a sleeve rotatable on a fixed shaft having a plurality of doffing units slidably mounted thereon, and a star wheel connected to the sleeve for cooperating with said spindles for driving the sleev on the shaft as an incident to the movement of the carriage to move the doffing units into operative doffing relation with the wound packages, each dofling unit comprising a wound bobbin ejector element, spring means normally urging the ejector element to a raised position on the sleeve, a first cam on the shaft cooperating with a follower on the ejector element for moving the ejector element against said spring means to a lower position in response to relative movement of said sleeve with respect to said cam to charge said spring means, said first cam having means to hold the ejector element below the wound package, and a second cam on the shaft cooperating with the follower to positively move the ejector element and bobbin upwardly in response to actuation of the star wheel to break the drive between the spindle and bobbin, said first cam thereafter releasing said ejector element whereby said spring means rapidly moves said ejector element upwardly to eject the bobbin from the spindle.
6. A pop-up doffing device for breaking the driving connection to and doffing wound bobbins from a row of parallel spindles on a textile machine comprising dofiing means, means mounting the dofling means to move along said row of parallel spindles to remove wound bobbins from said spindles, said dofiing means comprising a sleeve rotatable on a fixed shaft having a plurality of doffing units slidably mounted thereon, and a star Wheel connected to the sleeve for cooperating with said spindles for rotating the sleeve on the shaft as an incident to the movement of the carriage to move the dofiing units into operative dotfing relation with the wound packages, each dofiing unit comprising a wound bobbin ejector element, spring means normally urging the ejector element to a raised position on the sleeve, a first fixed cam on the shaft cooperating with the ejector element and moving the ejector element against said spring means to a lower position in response to relative movement of said sleeve with respect to said cam to charge said spring means, said cam having means to hold the ejector element below the wound package, and a second fixed cam on the shaft for moving the ejector element upwardly to positively break the drive between the spindle and bobbin in response to rotative movement of the sleeve, said first cam thereafter releasing said ejector element when said sleeve is moved to a predetermined position by the star wheel cooperating with the spindle whereby said spring means becomes effective to rapidly move said ejector element upwardly and eject the bobbin from the spindle.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS
Claims (1)
1. A POP-UP DOFFING DEVICE FOR BREAKING THE DRIVING CONNECTION TO AN DOFFING WOUND BOBBINS FROM A ROW OF PARALLEL SPINDLES ON A TEXTILE MACHINE COMPRISING DOFFING MEANS, MEANS MOUNTING THE DOFFING MEANS TO MOVE ALONG SAID ROW OF PARALLEL SPINDLES TO REMOVE WOUND BOBBINS FROM SAID SPINDLES, SAID DOFFING MEANS INCLUDING AND EJECTOR ELEMENT ADAPTED TO BE LOCATED BELOW THE WOUND BOBBIN AND NORMALLY URGED BY SPRING MEANS TO A RAISED POSITION, MEANS HOLDING SAID EJECTOR ELEMENT IN SAID POSITION BELOW THE BOBBIN AND AGAINST THE ACTION OF THE SPRING MEANS, AND CAM MEANS CONTROLLED BY THE POSITION OF THE SPINDLE FOR POSITIVELY MOVING SAID EJECTOR ELEMENT UPWARDLY TO BREAK THE DRIVE BETWEEN THE BOBBIN AND SPINDLE AND THEREAFTER RELEASING THE LAST-NAMED MEANS WHEREBY SAID SPRING MOVES THE EJECTOR ELEMENT REPIDLY UPWARD TO EJECT THE WOUND BOBBIN FROM THE SPINDLE.
Priority Applications (3)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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US245861A US3116587A (en) | 1962-12-19 | 1962-12-19 | Doffing mechanism |
GB48220/63A GB987367A (en) | 1962-12-19 | 1963-12-06 | Improved doffing mechanism |
CH1551563A CH464028A (en) | 1962-02-23 | 1963-12-17 | Sleeve or bobbin withdrawal device that can be moved along a textile machine |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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US245861A US3116587A (en) | 1962-12-19 | 1962-12-19 | Doffing mechanism |
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Publication Number | Publication Date |
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US3116587A true US3116587A (en) | 1964-01-07 |
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Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
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US245861A Expired - Lifetime US3116587A (en) | 1962-02-23 | 1962-12-19 | Doffing mechanism |
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US (1) | US3116587A (en) |
GB (1) | GB987367A (en) |
Cited By (8)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US3204397A (en) * | 1963-07-05 | 1965-09-07 | Draper Corp | Doffing mechanism |
US3280545A (en) * | 1964-06-30 | 1966-10-25 | Bahnson Co | Automatic bobbin doffing apparatus |
US3287889A (en) * | 1964-02-12 | 1966-11-29 | Draper Corp | Bobbin doffing mechanism |
US3300960A (en) * | 1965-05-13 | 1967-01-31 | Waldo H Banks | Yarn control mechanism |
US3300958A (en) * | 1963-01-16 | 1967-01-31 | Maier Eugen Metallverarbeitung | Bobbin removal mechanism for spinning machines |
US3300962A (en) * | 1965-03-31 | 1967-01-31 | Draper Corp | Yarn severing mechanism |
US4667807A (en) * | 1984-12-21 | 1987-05-26 | Murao Boki Kabushiki Kaisha | Apparatus for taking up bobbins placed on the conveyor |
CN105671711A (en) * | 2016-04-01 | 2016-06-15 | 清华大学 | Vertical shaft type ring spinning automatic yarn falling device |
Families Citing this family (1)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
DE2756397A1 (en) * | 1977-12-17 | 1979-06-28 | Schlafhorst & Co W | METHOD AND DEVICE FOR AUTOMATICALLY REMOVING THE SPOOL FROM THE SPINDLE OF A RING SPINNING OR RING TWISTING MACHINE |
Citations (3)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US1115564A (en) * | 1910-12-02 | 1914-11-03 | Barber & Colman Company | Machine for doffing spinning-frames. |
US2573367A (en) * | 1946-07-01 | 1951-10-30 | Schweiter Ag Maschf | Ejector and thread clamp |
US3070949A (en) * | 1962-02-23 | 1963-01-01 | Willcox & Gibbs Sewing Machine | Doffing device |
-
1962
- 1962-12-19 US US245861A patent/US3116587A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
-
1963
- 1963-12-06 GB GB48220/63A patent/GB987367A/en not_active Expired
Patent Citations (3)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US1115564A (en) * | 1910-12-02 | 1914-11-03 | Barber & Colman Company | Machine for doffing spinning-frames. |
US2573367A (en) * | 1946-07-01 | 1951-10-30 | Schweiter Ag Maschf | Ejector and thread clamp |
US3070949A (en) * | 1962-02-23 | 1963-01-01 | Willcox & Gibbs Sewing Machine | Doffing device |
Cited By (8)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US3300958A (en) * | 1963-01-16 | 1967-01-31 | Maier Eugen Metallverarbeitung | Bobbin removal mechanism for spinning machines |
US3204397A (en) * | 1963-07-05 | 1965-09-07 | Draper Corp | Doffing mechanism |
US3287889A (en) * | 1964-02-12 | 1966-11-29 | Draper Corp | Bobbin doffing mechanism |
US3280545A (en) * | 1964-06-30 | 1966-10-25 | Bahnson Co | Automatic bobbin doffing apparatus |
US3300962A (en) * | 1965-03-31 | 1967-01-31 | Draper Corp | Yarn severing mechanism |
US3300960A (en) * | 1965-05-13 | 1967-01-31 | Waldo H Banks | Yarn control mechanism |
US4667807A (en) * | 1984-12-21 | 1987-05-26 | Murao Boki Kabushiki Kaisha | Apparatus for taking up bobbins placed on the conveyor |
CN105671711A (en) * | 2016-04-01 | 2016-06-15 | 清华大学 | Vertical shaft type ring spinning automatic yarn falling device |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
GB987367A (en) | 1965-03-31 |
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