Warp Knitting Basics - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 64
About This Presentation
Title:

Warp Knitting Basics

Description:

The yarn path in the lapping diagram is rounded off to represent this * * Looping Diagrams Each dot represents one needle and each horizontal row of dots a single ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1138
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 65
Provided by: NickSun
Category:
Tags: basics | knitting | warp | yarn

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Warp Knitting Basics


1
Warp KnittingBasics
  • March 26,2010

2
Weft Warp
3
Warp Knits--the possibilities
4
(No Transcript)
5
(No Transcript)
6
Needle Technology
  • Until relatively recently warp knitting machines
    used four types of needle
  • The bearded needle
  • The latch needle
  • The compound needle
  • The carbine needle
  • Bearded and compound needles were used on tricot
    machines, the latch needle on raschel and crochet
    machines and the carbine needle on crochet
    machines.

7
(No Transcript)
8
(No Transcript)
9
(No Transcript)
10
Knitting Technology
  • Recently the bearded needle has been dropped and
    development has focused on the compound needle
    due to its greater rigidity and ability to
    withstand higher yarn lapping forces (see Loop
    formation) than the bearded or latch needle.

11
Knitting Technology
  • Furthermore at the highest speeds (above 2,500
    cycles/minute) the issue of latch impact on the
    hook starts to become a problem with latch
    needles.
  • In contrast the compound needle can be closed
    gently in a controlled manner even at the highest
    knitting speeds.

12
Warp Knitting Technology
  • Warp knitting machines--needles are mounted
    collectively and rigidly in a horizontal metal
    bar (the needle bar that runs the full knitting
    width of the machine).
  • Equally the yarn guides are also set rigidly into
    a horizontal metal bar (the guide bar that runs
    the full width of the machine).

13
Knitting Element Displacements
  • The diagram summarizes the somewhat confusing
    displacements made by the guide bar. The front of
    the machine lies to the right of the diagram.

14
Knitting Element Displacements
  • The diagram shows the individual yarn guides set
    in a solid bar. The front-to-back movements are
    called swings. The first swing from front to back
    is followed by a lateral shog the overlap, which
    wraps the yarn in the needle hook.

15
Knitting Element Displacements
  • The next movement is a swing from back to front
    followed by the underlap that may be from 0 to 8
    needle spaces depending on the fabric structure
    being knitted.

16
Tricot Knitting
  • In diagram (1.3 a b) the guide bar swings from
    the front of the machine (on the right hand side
    of the diagram) to the back of the machine taking
    the yarn through the gap between two adjacent
    needles.

17
Tricot Knitting
  • Diagram (1.4 c) shows the guide bar moving
    laterally towards the observer. This is known as
    a shog movement, specifically the overlap that
    wraps the yarn around the beard of the needle.
  • Diagram (1.4 d) shows the second swing in the
    cycle taking the yarn between adjacent needles
    back to the front of the machine. At this time
    the needle bar moves upwards to place the overlap
    below the open beard on the shank of the needle.

18
Tricot Knitting
  • Diagram (1.5 e) shows the presser bar moving
    forward to close all the needles and in (1.5 f)
    the closed needle passes down through the old
    loop and the sinkers move backwards to release
    the old loops so that knock-over can take place.

19
Tricot Knitting
  • In figure (1.6 g) the sinker bar moves forward to
    secure the fabric prior to the needle rising in
    the next cycle and at this stage the guide bar
    makes a second shog, this time an overlap which
    may be of 0 to 8 needle spaces depending on the
    structure being knitted.

20
Tricot Knitting
  • The machine type in this series of diagrams is a
    tricot machine and on this type of machine there
    is no continuous knock-over surface.
  • The belly' of the sinker provides support to the
    fabric by preventing the underlaps from moving
    downwards.
  • For this reason it is not a good idea to knit
    fabrics with few underlaps such as net or lace on
    a tricot machine.
  • They are much better knitted on a Raschel machine
    with a continuous knock-over trick plate.

21
Tricot Knitting
  • The diagrams you are about to see illustrate a
    tricot machine with compound needles.
  • The sequence of events is almost exactly the same
    as for the bearded needle with the exception that
    the overlap lays the yarn into the open hook and
    not onto the beard, and the compound needle is
    closed by relative displacement between the
    needle and the closing element.

22
Tricot Knitting
23
Tricot Knitting
24
Tricot Knitting
25
Guide Bar Shog, Overlap and Underlap
  • The displacements shown for the needle, sliding
    latch, guide bar swing and sinker bar are the
    same irrespective of the type of fabric being
    produced by the machine.

26
Guide Bar Shog, Overlap and Underlap
  • The shog movements determine the type of fabric
    produced and they need to be changed each time
    the fabric structure is modified.
  • Crucially the shog movements must place the
    guides at the centre of the gap between adjacent
    needles with 100 accuracy every knitting cycle
    for the entire lifetime of the machine.
  • If there was a failure in the shog displacement
    and the needle bar moved by less than a full
    needle pitch then in all likelihood the yarn
    guides would collide with the needles during the
    swing movement causing serious damage to the
    machine.

27
Graphical Representation of Warp Knitting
Structures
28
Warp Knit Structure
  • Warp knitting is defined as a stitch forming
    process in which the yarns are supplied to the
    knitting zone parallel to the selvedge of the
    fabric, i.e. in the direction of the wales.
  • In warp knitting, every knitting needle is
    supplied with at least one separate yarn.
  • In order to connect the stitches to form a
    fabric, the yarns are deflected laterally between
    the needles.
  • In this manner a knitting needle often draws the
    new yarn loop through the knitted loop formed by
    another end of yarn in the previous knitting
    cycle.

29
Warp Knit Structure
  • A warp knitted structure is made up of two parts.
    The first is the stitch itself, which is formed
    by wrapping the yarn around the needle and
    drawing it through the previously knitted loop.
  • This wrapping of the yarn is called an overlap.
    The diagram shows the path taken by the eyelet of
    one yarn guide traveling through the needle line,
    making a lateral overlap (shog) and making a
    return swing. This movement wraps the yarn around
    the needle ready for the knock-over displacement.

30
Warp Knit Structure
  • The second part of stitch formation is the length
    of yarn linking together the stitches and this is
    termed the underlap, which is formed by the
    lateral movement of the yarns across the needles.

31
Warp Knit Structure
  • The length of the underlap is defined in terms of
    needle spaces.
  • The longer the underlap, the more it lies at
    right angles to the fabric length axis.
  • The longer the underlap for a given warp the
    greater the increase in lateral fabric stability,
  • conversely a shorter underlap reduces the
    width-wise stability and strength and increases
    the lengthways stability of the fabric.

32
Warp Knit Structure
  • The length of the underlap also influences the
    fabric weight.
  • When knitting with a longer underlap, more yarn
    has to be supplied to the knitting needles.
  • The underlap crosses and covers more wales on its
    way, with the result that the fabric becomes
    heavier, thicker and denser.
  • Since the underlap is connected to the root of
    the stitch, it causes a lateral displacement in
    the root of the stitch due to the warp tension.
  • The reciprocating movements of the yarn,
    therefore, cause the stitch of each knitted
    course to incline in the same direction,
    alternately to the left and to the right.

33
Warp Knit Structure
  • In order to control both the lateral and
    longitudinal properties, as well as to produce an
    improved fabric appearance with erect loops, a
    second set of yarns is usually employed. The
    second set is usually moved in the opposite
    direction to the first in order to help balance
    the lateral forces on the needles. The length of
    the underlap need not necessarily be the same for
    both sets of yarns.
  • Run-in the yarn consumption during 480 knitted
    courses
  • Rack a working cycle of 480 knitted courses
  • The run-in
  • .is the yarn consumption for one rack.

34
Warp Knit Structure
  • For a given machine with a given warp
  • A longer run-in produces bigger stitches and a
    generally slacker, looser fabric
  • A shorter run-in produces smaller and tighter
    stitches
  • With more than one guide bar the ratio of the
    amount of yarn fed from each warp is termed the
    run-in ratio

35
Lapping Diagrams
  • With the exception of the very simplest
    structures, it is too time consuming to represent
    warp knitted fabric using stitch or loop
    diagrams. For this reason two methods of fabric
    representation are commonly used.
  • Lapping diagrams
  • Numerical representation

36
Looping Diagrams
  • Actual Guide Movement
  • This is the symbolic image of the technological
    process of lapping. This diagram can also be
    derived from a stitch chart by not drawing in the
    stitch legs but only the head and feet of the
    stitches.

37
Looping Diagrams
  • The needle heads are represented on paper as
    dots. The path of the guide bars is drawn in
    front of and behind the needles
  • The yarns will not lie as straight in the fabric
    as they do when they are conducted through the
    guide bars and around the needles on the machine.
    The yarn path in the lapping diagram is rounded
    off to represent this

38
Looping Diagrams
  • Each dot represents one needle and each
    horizontal row of dots a single stitch forming
    process, i.e. one course. Several rows of dots
    from bottom to top represent the succession of
    several stitch-forming processes or courses
    recording a complete repeat of the fabric
    structure.

39
Numerical Notation Related to Chain Link Height
  • The numerical notation is best understood in
    relation to the mechanical system that is used to
    generate the lateral displacements (shogs) of the
    guide bars.

40
Numerical Notation Related to Chain Link Height
  • If the pattern drive is on the right hand side of
    the machine, then the movement of the guide bar
    from the smallest chain link height (0) is only
    possible towards the left. With a chain link (1),
    the guide bar is moved to the left by one needle
    space (division), with a chain link (2) by two
    needle spaces, etc.

41
Numerical Notation Related to Chain Link Height
  • On dotted paper, therefore, the numbers read from
    right to left and are entered between each needle
    space. The numbering is done from left to right
    when the pattern drive is on the left-hand side
    of the machine. The lateral movement of the
    guides is initiated by chain links of various
    heights marked with 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, etc. This
    guide bar movement is an especially important
    part of the pattern development.

42
Chain Link Arrangement
  • The guide bar is positioned with the follower
    roller on chain link 0' it swings through, then
    moves to the left as the roller moves to chain
    link 1'. It swings back and returns to its
    starting position (chain link 0').
  • The chain should read 0
  • 1
  • In the opposite direction 1

  • 0
  • The smallest repeating unit (repeat) extends over
    one course height repeat 1 stitch, width
    repeat 1 stitch.

43
Chain Link Arrangement
  • Application
  • Pillar stitch construction can be employed in the
    production of outerwear and for ribbed velour
    fabrics (corduroy). Even in these fabrics, the
    open pillar stitch is more popular as it provides
    the necessary longitudinal stability and runs
    freely. It is used in conjunction with the
    binding element in-lay' in laces and curtains,
    though always with a second guide bar.

44
Open and Closed Stitches
  • The stitch formed has an open or closed character
    according to the direction of the underlap and
    overlap motions. The underlaps can be of
    differing magnitudes and directions
  • If the underlap and overlap are in opposite
    directions then the stitch formed would have a
    closed character
  • If the underlap and overlap are in the same
    direction, then the stitch formed will have an
    open character

45
Open and Closed Stitches
  • The stitch is open when the feet do not cross and
    closed when the feet cross. The structure of a
    warp knitted fabric depends on the lapping motion
    of the guide bars, and therefore the structure
    could be represented by
  • Drawing a stitch or stitch chart diagram, which
    takes time and is difficult
  • Lapping diagram

46
Yarn Threading Plan
  • In warp knitting a yarn guide wraps the yarn
    around the needle hook, thus forming a loop.
    However, to form a fabric, the yarn guide must
    wrap the yarn around a different needle during
    the next course. The yarn guides, therefore, must
    be displaced laterally during knitting. Different
    warp knitted structures are produced by varying
    the magnitude of their lateral displacement.
    Therefore warp knitted structures can be
    described by noting the guide bar displacement.

47
Yarn Threading Plan
  • The actual guide bar motion consists of an
    underlap, swing-through, overlap and swing-back
    movement, and this motion is known as lapping.

48
Yarn Threading Plan
  • The yarn is wrapped around the needle hook due to
    the swing-through, overlap and swing-back
    movement of the yarn guide, and this forms a
    stitch. A warp knitted fabric is, therefore, made
    from stitches (overlap) and connecting underlaps.

49
Single Bar Structures
  • A plain warp knitted structure is produced on a
    single needle bar. The resulting structures are
    known as single face fabrics. Rib and interlock
    warp knitted structures are produced on double
    needle bars, and these structures are known as
    double face fabrics.
  • In single face structures (plain), stitches are
    visible on one side, known as the technical face,
    and on the other side (known as the technical
    back) only underlaps are visible.

50
Pillar Lap
  • A pillar stitch (or chain stitch) is a stitch
    construction where lapping of a yarn guide takes
    place over the same needle.
  • As there are no lateral connections between the
    neighboring wales, the stitches are only
    interconnected in the direction of the wales.

51
Pillar Lap
  • Due to the absence of underlaps, a fabric is not
    created, only chains of disconnected wales.
  • Single bar pillar lap is technically possible
    only on Raschel machines where the trick plate
    acts a knock-over bed.
  • On a tricot machine the sinkers are unable to
    control the position of the old loop when there
    is no underlap (pillar stitch) and so the
    knitting of pillar stitch on its own is
    impossible.

52
Pillar Lap
  • Open or closed pillar stitches can be produced
    depending on the guide bar movement.

53
1 and 1 Lap (Tricot Lap)
  • The laps are executed in alternate overlap and
    underlap motions on two defined needles.
  • This stitch creates a textile fabric as the
    underlaps connect both the courses and the wales.
  • The simplest of this group of structures is made
    between two adjacent needles.

54
1 and 1 Lap (Tricot Lap)
  • The laps are executed in alternate overlap and
    underlap motions on two defined needles.
  • This stitch creates a textile fabric as the
    underlaps connect both the courses and the wales.
  • The simplest of this group of structures is made
    between two adjacent needles.

55
1 and 1 Lap (Tricot Lap)
  • Guide bar motions
  • First course

Under 1 needle to the right ?(UL)
swing through 1
over 1 needle to the right ?(OL)
Swing Back 0
56
1 and 1 Lap (Tricot Lap)
  • Second course

Under 1 needle to the left ?
swing through 1
over 1 needle to the left ?
Swing Through 2
57
1 and 1 Lap (Tricot Lap)
  • Result
  • Therefore, the chain link arrangement is
  • 1
  • 0
  • 1
  • 2 closed 1 and 1 stitch
  • As a result of the underlaps, the diagonal sinker
    loops are formed. These pull the stitch heads of
    each alternate row into the same direction.

58
2 and 1 Lap
  • Swing through ? 1
  • swing back ? 0
  • swing through ?2
  • swing back ? 3
  • swing through ? 1
  • swing back ? 0

59
3 and 1 Lap
  • Swing through ? 1
  • swing back ? 0
  • swing through ? 3
  • swing back ? 4
  • swing through ? 0
  • swing back ? 1
  • swing through ? 4
  • swing back ? 3

60
4 and 1 Lap
  • Swing through ? 1
  • swing back ? 0
  • swing through ? 4
  • swing back ? 5

61
Atlas Lap
  • The atlas construction differs in that the laps
    are continued over two or more courses in one
    direction and then return in the other direction
    to the point where they started.
  • Lapping movement
  • 0-1/2-1/3-2/4-3/5-4/3-4/2-3/1-2/

62
(No Transcript)
63
  • video

64
Stitch Diagram and Notation?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com