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1 weaving machinery
Техника: ткацкое оборудование -
2 weaving machinery
Англо-русский словарь текстильной промышленности > weaving machinery
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3 cotton weaving machinery
English-Russian dictionary on textile and sewing industry > cotton weaving machinery
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4 machinery
@beaming machinery сновальное оборудование @bleaching machinery отбелочная или белильная аппаратура; отбелочное или белильное оборудование @carding machinery кардочесальное оборудование @cloth-making machinery ткацкое оборудование @combing machinery гребнечесальное оборудование @dry-cleaning machinery аппаратура для химической чистки @dyeing machinery красильное оборудование @finishing machinery отделочная аппаратура; отделочное оборудование @knitting machinery трикотажное оборудование @loom machinery 1. ткацкое оборудование; 2. парк ткацких станков @opening-and-lap-forming machinery 1. разрыхлительно-трепальное оборудование; 2. разрыхлительно-трепальный агрегат @picking machinery трепальное оборудование @pirning machinery уточномотальное или уточноперемоточное оборудование @preparatory machinery оборудование приготовительного отдела @spinning machinery прядильное оборудование @testing machinery контрольно-испытательная аппаратура; лабораторное оборудование @textile machinery текстильное оборудование @tow-to-yarn machinery однопроцессный агрегат для производства штапельной пряжи из жгута @tufting machinery оборудование для производства ворсопрошивных или прошивных ковров и изделий @wadding machinery оборудование ваточного производства @waste machinery оборудование угарного производства @weaving machinery ткацкое оборудование @winding machinery мотальное или перемоточное оборудование @woolen machinery оборудование суконного производства @worsted machinery шерстяное гребенное оборудование; камвольное оборудование @ -
5 machinery
@beaming machinery сновальное оборудование @bleaching machinery отбелочная или белильная аппаратура; отбелочное или белильное оборудование @carding machinery кардочесальное оборудование @cloth-making machinery ткацкое оборудование @combing machinery гребнечесальное оборудование @dry-cleaning machinery аппаратура для химической чистки @dyeing machinery красильное оборудование @finishing machinery отделочная аппаратура; отделочное оборудование @knitting machinery трикотажное оборудование @loom machinery 1. ткацкое оборудование; 2. парк ткацких станков @opening-and-lap-forming machinery 1. разрыхлительно-трепальное оборудование; 2. разрыхлительно-трепальный агрегат @picking machinery трепальное оборудование @pirning machinery уточномотальное или уточноперемоточное оборудование @preparatory machinery оборудование приготовительного отдела @spinning machinery прядильное оборудование @testing machinery контрольно-испытательная аппаратура; лабораторное оборудование @textile machinery текстильное оборудование @tow-to-yarn machinery однопроцессный агрегат для производства штапельной пряжи из жгута @tufting machinery оборудование для производства ворсопрошивных или прошивных ковров и изделий @wadding machinery оборудование ваточного производства @waste machinery оборудование угарного производства @weaving machinery ткацкое оборудование @winding machinery мотальное или перемоточное оборудование @woolen machinery оборудование суконного производства @worsted machinery шерстяное гребенное оборудование; камвольное оборудование @ -
6 weaving
B modif [frame, machine, machinery] à tisser ; [workshop, factory, mill] de tissage ; [trade, industry] du tissage. -
7 weaving
['wiːvɪŋ] 1.noun tissage m2. -
8 weaving-preparatory machinery
Универсальный англо-русский словарь > weaving-preparatory machinery
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9 dokuma makineleri
weaving machinery -
10 ткацкое оборудование
1) Engineering: weaving machinery2) Textile: cloth-making machinery, loom machinery, weaving equipmentУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > ткацкое оборудование
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11 Fairbairn, Sir Peter
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. September 1799 Kelso, Roxburghshire, Scotlandd. 4 January 1861 Leeds, Yorkshire, England[br]British inventor of the revolving tube between drafting rollers to give false twist.[br]Born of Scottish parents, Fairbairn was apprenticed at the age of 14 to John Casson, a mill-wright and engineer at the Percy Main Colliery, Newcastle upon Tyne, and remained there until 1821 when he went to work for his brother William in Manchester. After going to various other places, including Messrs Rennie in London and on the European continent, he eventually moved in 1829 to Leeds where Marshall helped him set up the Wellington Foundry and so laid the foundations for the colossal establishment which was to employ over one thousand workers. To begin with he devoted his attention to improving wool-weaving machinery, substituting iron for wood in the construction of the textile machines. He also worked on machinery for flax, incorporating many of Philippe de Girard's ideas. He assisted Henry Houldsworth in the application of the differential to roving frames, and it was to these machines that he added his own inventions. The longer fibres of wool and flax need to have some form of support and control between the rollers when they are being drawn out, and inserting a little twist helps. However, if the roving is too tightly twisted before passing through the first pair of rollers, it cannot be drawn out, while if there is insufficient twist, the fibres do not receive enough support in the drafting zone. One solution is to twist the fibres together while they are actually in the drafting zone between the rollers. In 1834, Fairbairn patented an arrangement consisting of a revolving tube placed between the drawing rollers. The tube inserted a "middle" or "false" twist in the material. As stated in the specification, it was "a well-known contrivance… for twisting and untwisting any roving passing through it". It had been used earlier in 1822 by J. Goulding of the USA and a similar idea had been developed by C.Danforth in America and patented in Britain in 1825 by J.C. Dyer. Fairbairn's machine, however, was said to make a very superior article. He was also involved with waste-silk spinning and rope-yarn machinery.Fairbairn later began constructing machine tools, and at the beginning of the Crimean War was asked by the Government to make special tools for the manufacture of armaments. He supplied some of these, such as cannon rifling machines, to the arsenals at Woolwich and Enfield. He then made a considerable number of tools for the manufacture of the Armstrong gun. He was involved in the life of his adopted city and was elected to Leeds town council in 1832 for ten years. He was elected an alderman in 1854 and was Mayor of Leeds from 1857 to 1859, when he was knighted by Queen Victoria at the opening of the new town hall. He was twice married, first to Margaret Kennedy and then to Rachel Anne Brindling.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1858.Bibliography1834, British patent no. 6,741 (revolving tube between drafting rollers to give false twist).Further ReadingDictionary of National Biography.Obituary, 1861, Engineer 11.W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London (provides a brief account of Fairbairn's revolving tube).C.Singer (ed.), 1958, A History of Technology, Vols IV and V, Oxford: Clarendon Press (provides details of Fairbairn's silk-dressing machine and a picture of a large planing machine built by him).RLH -
12 shuttle
1) (in weaving, a piece of equipment for carrying the thread backwards and forwards across the other threads.) skyttel2) (a piece of machinery for making loops in the lower thread in a sewing-machine.) undertråd3) (an air, train or other transport service etc which operates constantly backwards and forwards between two places: an airline shuttle between London and Edinburgh; space shuttle (= a craft travelling between space stations).) rute-; pendulrute; rumskib•* * *1) (in weaving, a piece of equipment for carrying the thread backwards and forwards across the other threads.) skyttel2) (a piece of machinery for making loops in the lower thread in a sewing-machine.) undertråd3) (an air, train or other transport service etc which operates constantly backwards and forwards between two places: an airline shuttle between London and Edinburgh; space shuttle (= a craft travelling between space stations).) rute-; pendulrute; rumskib• -
13 Cotchett, Thomas
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]fl. 1700s[br]English engineer who set up the first water-powered textile mill in Britain at Derby.[br]At the beginning of the eighteenth century, silk weaving was one of the most prosperous trades in Britain, but it depended upon raw silk worked up on hand twisting or throwing machines. In 1702 Thomas Cotchett set up a mill for twisting silk by water-power at the northern end of an island in the river Derwent at Derby; this would probably have been to produce organzine, the hard twisted thread used for the warp when weaving silk fabrics. Such mills had been established in Italy beginning with the earliest in Bologna in 1272, but it would appear that Cotchett used Dutch silk-throwing machinery that was driven by a water wheel that was 13½ ft (4.1 m) in diameter and built by the local engineer, George Sorocold. The enterprise soon failed, but it was quickly revived and extended by Thomas and John Lombe with machinery based on that being used successfully in Italy.[br]Further ReadingD.M.Smith, 1965, Industrial Archaeology of the East Midlands, Newton Abbot (provides an account of Cotchett's mill).W.H.Chaloner, 1963, "Sir Thomas Lombe (1685–1739) and the British silk industry", History Today (Nov.).R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester (a brief coverage of the development of early silk throwing mills).D.Kuhn, 1988, Science and Civilisation in China, Vol. V: Chemistry and ChemicalTechnology, Part 9, Textile Technology: spinning and reeling, Cambridge (covers the diffusion of the techniques of the mechanization of the silk-throwing industry from China to the West).RLH -
14 shuttle
1) (in weaving, a piece of equipment for carrying the thread backwards and forwards across the other threads.) lanzadera2) (a piece of machinery for making loops in the lower thread in a sewing-machine.) lanzadera3) (an air, train or other transport service etc which operates constantly backwards and forwards between two places: an airline shuttle between London and Edinburgh; space shuttle (= a craft travelling between space stations).) servicio regular•shuttle n1. puente aéreo2. servicio de enlacethere's a shuttle service between the airport and the city centre hay un servicio de enlace entre el aeropuerto y el centro3. transbordador espacialthe space shuttle placed the station in orbit el transbordador espacial puso en órbita la estación espacialtr['ʃʌtəl]1 SMALLAVIATION/SMALL puente nombre masculino aéreo2 (spacecraft) transbordador nombre masculino espacial3 (bus, train) servicio regular de enlace4 (in weaving) lanzadera1 trasladar, transportar1 (plane) volar regularmente; (bus, train) viajar, ir regularmente\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto shuttle back and forth ir y venirshuttle service servicio regular de enlace: transportarshe shuttled him back and forth: lo llevaba de acá para alláshuttle vi: ir y venirshuttle n1) : lanzadera f (para tejer)2) : vehículo m que hace recorridos cortosn.• espolín s.m.• lanzadera s.f.v.• hacer viajes cortos de ida y vuelta v.• ir y venir acompasadamente v.'ʃʌtḷ
I
1) (in loom, sewing machine) lanzadera f2)a) ( Aviat) puente m aéreo; (bus, train service) servicio m (regular) de enlace; (before n)shuttle diplomacy — diplomacia f al estilo Kissinger
shuttle service — servicio m de enlace; ( Aviat) puente m aéreo
b) ( space shuttle) transbordador m or lanzadera f espacial
II
1.
intransitive verb ( by plane) volar* (regularmente); (by bus, train) viajar (regularmente)to shuttle back and forth — ir* y venir*
2.
vt \<\<passengers\>\> transportar, llevar['ʃʌtl]1. N1) (for weaving, sewing) lanzadera f2) (Aer) puente m aéreo; (=plane, train etc) servicio m regular de enlaceair shuttle — puente m aéreo
3) (Space) (also: space shuttle) lanzadera f or transbordador m espacial2.3.VT (=transport) transportar, trasladar4.CPDshuttle bus N — autobús m lanzadera
shuttle flight N — vuelo m de puente aéreo
shuttle diplomacy N — viajes mpl diplomáticos
shuttle service N — servicio m regular de enlace
* * *['ʃʌtḷ]
I
1) (in loom, sewing machine) lanzadera f2)a) ( Aviat) puente m aéreo; (bus, train service) servicio m (regular) de enlace; (before n)shuttle diplomacy — diplomacia f al estilo Kissinger
shuttle service — servicio m de enlace; ( Aviat) puente m aéreo
b) ( space shuttle) transbordador m or lanzadera f espacial
II
1.
intransitive verb ( by plane) volar* (regularmente); (by bus, train) viajar (regularmente)to shuttle back and forth — ir* y venir*
2.
vt \<\<passengers\>\> transportar, llevar -
15 shuttle
1. noun1) (in loom, sewing machine) Schiffchen, das2) (Transport) (service) Pendelverkehr, der; (bus) Pendelbus, der; (aircraft) Pendelmaschine, die; (train) Pendelzug, der; see also academic.ru/69147/space_shuttle">space shuttle2. transitive verb 3. intransitive verb* * *1) (in weaving, a piece of equipment for carrying the thread backwards and forwards across the other threads.) das Weberschiffchen2) (a piece of machinery for making loops in the lower thread in a sewing-machine.) das Schiffchen3) (an air, train or other transport service etc which operates constantly backwards and forwards between two places: an airline shuttle between London and Edinburgh; space shuttle (= a craft travelling between space stations).) die Pendelverbindung•* * *shut·tle[ˈʃʌtl̩, AM ˈʃʌt̬l̩]I. nair \shuttle [service] Shuttleflug mspace \shuttle Raumfähre fII. vt▪ to \shuttle sb jdn hin- und zurückbefördernpassengers were \shuttled by bus from the bus stop to the airport die Passagiere wurden mit dem Bus von der Bushaltestelle zum Flughafen gebrachtIII. vi hin- und zurückfahrenthere are trains which \shuttle from the airport to the city centre zwischen dem Flughafen und der Innenstadt verkehren Züge* * *['ʃʌtl]1. n1) (of loom, sewing machine) Schiffchen nt2) (= shuttle service) Pendelverkehr m; (= plane/train etc) Pendelflugzeug nt/-zug m etc; (= space shuttle) Raumtransporter m, Spaceshuttle m3) (= shuttlecock) Federball m2. vtpassengers, goods hin- und hertransportierento shuttle sb around —
the form was shuttled around between different departments — das Formular wurde in den verschiedenen Abteilungen herumgereicht
3. vi(people) pendeln; (goods) hin- und hertransportiert werden; (forms) herumgereicht werden* * *shuttle [ˈʃʌtl]A s1. TECHa) Weberschiff(chen) n, (Web)Schütze(n) mb) Schiffchen n (der Nähmaschine)2. TECH Schützentor n (einer Schleuse)b) Pendelroute fC v/i1. sich (schnell) hin- und herbewegen* * *1. noun1) (in loom, sewing machine) Schiffchen, das2) (Transport) (service) Pendelverkehr, der; (bus) Pendelbus, der; (aircraft) Pendelmaschine, die; (train) Pendelzug, der; see also space shuttle2. transitive verb 3. intransitive verb* * *(weaving) n.Schiffchen n.Weberschiffchen n. v.pendeln v. -
16 shuttle
['ʃʌtl] 1. n( plane etc) środek transportu kursujący tam i z powrotem (wahadłowo); ( space shuttle) prom m kosmiczny; (also: shuttle service) linia f lokalna; ( for weaving) czółenko nt2. vi3. vtto shuttle to and fro/between — kursować tam i z powrotem/pomiędzy +instr
* * *1) (in weaving, a piece of equipment for carrying the thread backwards and forwards across the other threads.) czółenko2) (a piece of machinery for making loops in the lower thread in a sewing-machine.) czółenko3) (an air, train or other transport service etc which operates constantly backwards and forwards between two places: an airline shuttle between London and Edinburgh; space shuttle (= a craft travelling between space stations).) środek transportu w systemie wahadłowym• -
17 ткацкий
1. textile2. weaver; weaving -
18 Gorton, Richard
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]fl. 1790s England[br]English patentee of a power loom for weaving narrow fabrics.[br]In May 1791, Richard Gorton took out a patent for a new type of power-driven loom for narrow fabrics to "work one or several pieces at the same time, either by hand, lath, steam engine, or by water-machinery". The sley with the reed was worked by a crank, and the picker by a lever and cam. The shuttle-box had springs to retain the shuttle, and the warp was kept tight by weights. A stop, which was usually pushed out of the way by the shuttle entering the box, prevented the sley or lath "driving the shuttle against the piece" when the shuttle stuck in the middle. One particularly interesting feature was the sizing of the warp threads by means of brushes and a roller that turned in a square trough filled with size. This pre-dates Radcliffe's sizing machine, which is always considered the first, by a number of years. The mill in which these machines worked was at Cuckney, near Mansfield, England. In 1788 Thomas Gorton had installed one of the earliest Boulton \& Watt rotative steam engines there.[br]BibliographyMay 1791, British patent no. 1,804 (power loom for weaving narrow fabrics).Further ReadingR.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester (provides an account of Gorton's patent).S.D.Chapman, 1967, The Early Factory Masters, Newton Abbot (makes a brief mention of this invention).RLH -
19 industry
n1) промышленность, индустрия
- advertising industry
- agricultural industry
- agricultural processing industry
- aircraft industry
- allied industries
- armament industry
- artisan industry
- automobile industry
- automotive industry
- auxiliary industry
- aviation industry
- basic industry
- building industry
- capital goods industry
- capital-intensive industry
- catering industry
- chemical industry
- clothing industry
- coal industry
- construction industry
- construction materials producing industry
- consumer goods industry
- continuous process industries
- cottage industry
- dairy industry
- defence industry
- discretionary purchase industry
- diversified industry
- domestic industry
- durable goods manufacturing industry
- electronic industry
- engineering industry
- extraction industry
- extractive industry
- fabricating industries
- fast-growing industry
- financial services industry
- fish industry
- food industry
- food canning industry
- food processing industry
- forest industry
- foundry industry
- fuel-producing industries
- gas industry
- handicraft industry
- heavy industry
- highly developed industry
- high-tech industry
- high-technology industry
- home industry
- infant industry
- insurance industry
- investment industry
- investment goods industry
- iron industry
- key industry
- labour-intensive industry
- large-scale industry
- leisure industry
- leather goods industry
- light industry
- linked industry
- livestock industry
- local industry
- machine industry
- machinery-building industry
- machinery-producing industry
- machine-tool industry
- manufacturing industry
- metallurgical industry
- metallurgy industry
- metal processing industry
- metal working industry
- mineral industry
- mining industry
- motor industry
- munitions industry
- nationalized industry
- native industry
- noncommodity domestic industries
- nondurable industries
- nondurable goods manufacturing industries
- nonmanufacturing industries
- nuclear industry
- oil industry
- oil extraction industry
- oil processing industry
- packaging industry
- petrochemical industry
- petroleum industry
- petroleum-refining industry
- petty industry
- pharmaceutical industry
- pottery industry
- poultry industry
- power industry
- primary industry
- private industry
- privatised industry
- process industry
- processing industry
- producer goods industry
- public industries
- public utility industries
- publishing industry
- raw materials industry
- regional industry
- related industry
- rural industry
- sagging industry
- seasonal industry
- secondary industry
- service industries
- sheltered industry
- shipbuilding industry
- shiprepairing industry
- small industry
- small-scale industry
- stagnant industry
- state industry
- steel industry
- sunrise industries
- sunset industries
- supply industry
- tertiary industries
- textile industry
- timber industry
- tool-making industry
- tourism industry
- trade industry
- transport industry
- transportation industry
- travel industry
- truck industry
- weaving industry
- wine industry
- wood industry
- woodwork and timber industry
- develop industry
- protect home industry
- expand industry
- reorganize industry
- streamline industryEnglish-russian dctionary of contemporary Economics > industry
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20 factory
фабрика; завод @clothing factory швейная фабрика @cotton factory хлопчатобумажная фабрика @ginning factory хлопкоочистительный завод @hosiery factory чулочновязальная фабрика @knitting factory трикотажная фабрика @knitting machinery factory завод трикотажного машиностроения @linen factory льноперерабатывающая фабрика @rayon factory завод искусственного волокна @shirt factory бельевая фабрика @silk factory 1. кокономотальная фабрика; 2. шёлкопрядильная фабрика @silk-weaving factory шёлкоткацкая фабрика @textile machinery factory завод текстильного машиностроения @woolen-goods factory суконная фабрика @worsted-goods factory камвольная фабрика @
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