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cylinder clothing

  • 1 Card Clothing

    The name used for the clothing of a carding machine, and it consists of a foundation material in which wires are fastened. These wires do the work of carding the cotton. The foundation is secured to the revolving cylinder and is usually made of cotton and woollen cloth and rubber. This cloth is very compactly woven in three layers firmly cemented together, with rubber face to give elasticity to the wires. The wire teeth are inserted in pairs - The coupling bar of each pair is known as the " crown," the carding end of each tooth is termed the " point." Each tooth is bent near the middle, and the bend is the " knee " (see Filleting)

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Card Clothing

  • 2 рубашка цилиндра

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > рубашка цилиндра

  • 3 обшивка цилиндра

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > обшивка цилиндра

  • 4 sylinderkledning

    subst. cylinder clothing

    Norsk-engelsk ordbok > sylinderkledning

  • 5 цилиндр

    1) General subject: a chimney-pot hat, a high hat, a silk hat, a stove-pipe hat, a tall hat, a top hat, barrel, cylinder, drum, high hat, plug (шляпа), roll, silk hat, tall hat, tile (шляпа), top hat (шляпа)
    2) Medicine: barrel (шприца)
    3) Colloquial: chimney-pot hat (шляпа), topper (шляпа), stove-pipe hat (шляпа)
    5) Engineering: bowl (каландра), cup, cylinder arrangement, cylinder component, muff, ram (силовой)
    8) Mathematics: cyl (cylinder)
    10) Automobile industry: barrel (мера ёмкости: англ.=163,65 л; амер.=119 л; нефтяной= 159 л)
    12) Veterinary medicine: cast
    14) Polygraphy: couette, (вращающийся) roll, (вращающийся) roller
    16) Jargon: plug hat
    17) Information technology: cylinder (в ЗУ на дисках)
    19) Mechanic engineering: thimble
    21) Polymers: roller
    22) Automation: (силовой) ram
    23) Plastics: sleeve
    25) General subject: bore ( зд.)
    27) Combustion gas turbines: rod (геометрическое тело)
    28) Clothing: top hat

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > цилиндр

  • 6 Garnett Machine

    A machine for opening hard-twisted woollen, worsted, cotton and silk wastes; also for use in succession to the rag-tearing machine in further opening the material and preparing it for the subsequent process of carding. The machines are made ' with one, two, three or more swifts, with self-contained component parts, while the back and front parts of the machine are detachable and can be moved away on rails. The material is fed to the machine either by hand or through an automatic feeder, and after passing between feed rollers is subjected to the first opening process by encountering the teeth or " Garnett " clothing on a licker-in roller. The points of this clothing pass through the material held by the feed rollers, and carry forward any loose fibres liberated from their grip. Continuing its course through the machine the material is carried on to the first large cylinder or swift, which is also covered with " Garnett " clothing, the points of which are keener than those on the licker-in roller.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Garnett Machine

  • 7 Hancock, Thomas

    SUBJECT AREA: Chemical technology
    [br]
    b. 8 May 1786 Marlborough, Wiltshire, England
    d. 26 March 1865 Stoke Newington, London, England
    [br]
    English founder of the British rubber industry.
    [br]
    After education at a private school in Marlborough, Hancock spent some time in "mechanical pursuits". He went to London to better himself and c.1819 his interest was aroused in the uses of rubber, which until then had been limited. His first patent, dated 29 April 1820, was for the application of rubber in clothing where some elasticity was useful, such as braces or slip-on boots. He noticed that freshly cut pieces of rubber could be made to adhere by pressure to form larger pieces. To cut up his imported and waste rubber into small pieces, Hancock developed his "masticator". This device consisted of a spiked roller revolving in a hollow cylinder. However, when rubber was fed in to the machine, the product was not the expected shredded rubber, but a homogeneous cylindrical mass of solid rubber, formed by the heat generated by the process and pressure against the outer cylinder. This rubber could then be compacted into blocks or rolled into sheets at his factory in Goswell Road, London; the blocks and sheets could be used to make a variety of useful articles. Meanwhile Hancock entered into partnership with Charles Macintosh in Manchester to manufacture rubberized, waterproof fabrics. Despite these developments, rubber remained an unsatisfactory material, becoming sticky when warmed and losing its elasticity when cold. In 1842 Hancock encountered specimens of vulcanized rubber prepared by Charles Goodyear in America. Hancock worked out for himself that it was made by heating rubber and sulphur, and obtained a patent for the manufacture of the material on 21 November 1843. This patent also included details of a new form of rubber, hardened by heating to a higher temperature, that was later called vulcanite, or ebonite. In 1846 he began making solid rubber tyres for road vehicles. Overall Hancock took out sixteen patents, covering all aspects of the rubber industry; they were a leading factor in the development of the industry from 1820 until their expiry in 1858.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1857, Personal Narrative of the Origin and Progress of the Caoutchouc or Indiarubber Manufacture in England, London.
    Further Reading
    H.Schurer, 1953, "The macintosh: the paternity of an invention", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 28:77–87.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Hancock, Thomas

  • 8 Bourn, Daniel

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    fl. 1744 Lancashire, England
    [br]
    English inventor of a machine with cylinders for carding cotton.
    [br]
    Daniel Bourn may well have been a native of Lancashire. He set up a fourth Paul-Wyatt cotton-spinning mill at Leominster, Herefordshire, possibly in 1744, although the earliest mention of it is in 1748. His only known partner in this mill was Henry Morris, a yarn dealer who in 1743 had bought a grant of spindles from Paul at the low rate of 30 shillings or 40 shillings per spindle when the current price was £3 or £4. When Bourn patented his carding engine in 1748, he asked Wyatt for a grant of spindles, to which Wyatt agreed because £100 was offered immedi-ately. The mill, which was probably the only one outside the control of Paul and his backers, was destroyed by fire in 1754 and was not rebuilt, although Bourn and his partners had considerable hopes for it. Bourn was said to have lost over £1,600 in the venture.
    Daniel Bourn described himself as a wool and cotton dealer of Leominster in his patent of 1748 for his carding engine. The significance of this invention is the use of rotating cylinders covered with wire clothing. The patent drawing shows four cylinders, one following the other to tease out the wool, but Bourn was unable to discover a satisfactory method of removing the fibres from the last cylinder. It is possible that Robert Peel in Lancashire obtained one of these engines through Morris, and that James Hargreaves tried to improve it; if so, then some of the early carding engines in the cotton industry were derived from Bourn's.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1748, British patent no. 628 (carding engine).
    Further Reading
    A.P.Wadsworth and J.de Lacy Mann, 1931, The Cotton Trade and Industrial Lancashire 1600–1780, Manchester (the most significant reference to Bourn).
    R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester (provides an examination of the carding patent).
    R.S.Fitton, 1989, The Arkwrights, Spinners of Fortune, Manchester (mentions Bourn in his survey of the textile scene before Arkwright).
    R.Jenkins, 1936–7, "Industries of Herefordshire in Bygone Times", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 17 (includes a reference to Bourn's mill).
    C.Singer (ed.), 1957, A History of Technology, Vol. III, Oxford: Clarendon Press; ibid., 1958, Vol, IV (brief mentions of Bourn's work).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Bourn, Daniel

  • 9 Goulding, John

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    b. 1791 Massachusetts, USA d. 1877
    [br]
    American inventor of an early form of condenser carding machine.
    [br]
    The condenser method of spinning was developed chiefly by manufacturers and machine makers in eastern Massachusetts between 1824 and 1826. John Goulding, a machinist from Dedham in Massachusetts, combined the ring doffer, patented by Ezekiel Hale in 1825, and the revolving twist tube, patented by George Danforth in 1824; with the addition of twisting keys in the tubes, the carded woollen sliver could be divided and then completely and continuously twisted. He divided the carded web longitudinally with the ring doffer and twisted these strips to consolidate them into slubbings. The dividing was carried out by covering the periphery of the doffer cylinder with separate rings of card clothing and spacing these rings apart by rings of leather, so that instead of width-way detached strips leaving the card, the strips were continuous and did not require piecing. The strips were passed through rotating tubes and wound on bobbins, and although the twist was false it sufficed to compress the fibres together ready for spinning. Goulding patented his invention in both Britain and the USA in 1826, but while his condensers were very successful and within twenty years had been adopted by a high proportion of woollen mills in America, they were not adopted in Britain until much later. Goulding also worked on other improvements to woollen machinery: he developed friction drums, on which the spools of roving from the condenser cards were placed to help transform the woollen jenny into the woollen mule or jack.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1826, British patent no. 5,355 (condenser carding machine).
    Further Reading
    D.J.Jeremy, 1981, Transatlantic Industrial Revolution. The Diffusion of Textile Technologies Between Britain and America, 1790–1830s, Oxford (provides a good explanation of the development of the condenser card).
    W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London (a brief account).
    C.Singer (ed.), 1958, A History of Technology, Vol. IV, Oxford: Clarendon Press (a brief account).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Goulding, John

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