翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Combined small-cell lung carcinoma
・ Combined spinal and epidural anaesthesia
・ Combined Statistical Area
・ Combined steam and gas
・ Combined Systems, Inc.
・ Combined Task Force 150
・ Combined Task Force 151
・ Combined Task Force Iraqi Maritime
・ Combined track and field events
・ Combined transport
・ Combined Universities GAA
・ Combined Universities in Cornwall
・ Combined word
・ Combines Investigation Act
・ CombineZ
Combing
・ Combing (torture)
・ Combining
・ Combining character
・ Combining Cyrillic Hundred Thousands
・ Combining Cyrillic Millions
・ Combining Diacritical Marks
・ Combining Diacritical Marks Extended
・ Combining Diacritical Marks for Symbols
・ Combining Diacritical Marks Supplement
・ Combining dimensions
・ Combining Grapheme Joiner
・ Combining Half Marks
・ Combining rules
・ Combino


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Combing : ウィキペディア英語版
Combing

Combing is a method for preparing carded fiber for spinning. Combing is divided into linear and circular combing. The Noble comb is an example of circular combing. The French comb is an example of linear combing. The process of combing is accompanied by gilling, a process of evening out carded or combed top making it suitable for spinning. Combing separates out short fibers by means of a rotating ring or rectilinear row of steel pins. The fibers in the 'top' it produces, have been straightened and lie parallel to each other. When combing wool, the discarded short fibers are called noils, and are ground up into shoddy.
In general there are two main systems of preparing fiber for yarn: the worsted system and the woollen system. The worsted system is defined by the removal of short fibers by combing and top preparation by gilling. In the woollen system short fibers are retained, and it may or may not involve combing.
==Description==
The circular combs used have long metal teeth, and only barely resemble the comb used on hair. However, they are used in a similar fashion with one comb holding the fiber, which is slowly dubbed in by a brush, while the other is moved through, slowly transferring the fiber to the moving comb.
The rectilinear comb uses a circular comb mounted on a drum to comb out the fringe and remove short fiber (set by a scale so fibers less than, for example, 25 mm are removed) not held by a clamping mechanism. The row of pins known as a top comb is a very fine tooth comb, for example 25 teeth per inch; it is inserted in cylindrical combed fringe to act as an impediment to contaminates (burr, seed etc.) flow. The top comb acts as an impediment to contamination moving into a combed sliver. On a next circular combing short finer and contaminates are removed. The circular combing without short fibers are placed on a moving belt in an overlapping motion. The of circular combing and top comb insertion is repeated and combed fibers - now called tuft are overlapped. The overlapping produces some cohesion allowing the tuft then to be twisted to form a combed sliver. This sliver is weak and unsuitable for spinning. To allow spinning to take place additional gilling is required to introduce fiber end irregularity (Sokolov 1994).
Combing the fibers removes the short fibers and arranges the fiber in a flat bundle, with all the fibers going the same direction. This preparation is commonly used to spin a worsted yarn. Woollen yarns cannot be spun from fiber prepared with combs, instead the fiber must be carded. Cotton is combed when it is to be used for quality fabric with high thread counts.
In general, combing is done to filter or sieve out any short length fibers (for example, fibers shorter than 21 mm). Combing/carding is a primary process, followed by the gilling process, which removes hooks and involves 3 separate machines. Combing is then followed by two gillings to remove irregularity in the sliver and randomize fiber ends. This post-combing process is required if spinning is to follow. It is known that a sliver can be spun to a yarn of only 21 fibers with a suitable average length of 150 mm.
Combing is a mechanical sieve, and so will not remove any containment with a form similar to the fiber being combed. Such contaminants must be mended out from a final garment. The manual mending out is a costly process.
There are two competing combing technologies: the Noble (1853) Comb (variants Lister, Heilman (1846) and Holden) and the French comb. The Noble comb technology is inefficient, hence most combing in the world is carried out on the French system. The French system is superior as it combs the entire length of a fiber. Noble combs suffer from the problem that they will not comb 2 mm of a fiber length. The 2 mm is distance between counter rotating pins. The French system is a rectilinear combing system as oppose to earlier woollen system developed in England. Although the Heilman and Noble comb was an original circular design (also developed in min and 18-19th-century England) as it happens in modern history, English mills didn't share technology – resulting in development of superior technology on continental Europe in mid-19th century, as in France.〔Happey, F., "Contemporary Textile Engineering", 1982 ISBN 0-12-323750-5〕
Efforts were made by Bradford to study the mechanism of noble combing but it failed to produce tangible results.〔Dyson E and Happey 1960〕 The Noble and French combs are now well understood technology thanks to work by CSIRO.〔Sokolov and Kirby, CSIRO 1990-94〕 Post 1994, Sokolov has endeavored to improve combing performance in the rectilinear comb. Combing technology continues to develop: Sokolov and Kirby developed a theory for combing model, simulation software for combing and drive design in 1982. Current technology used in providing comb drive by introducing innovation on cam performance to deliver textile fiber needs and separate mechanical performance of the comb was developed by Sokolov. The cam technology was an advance on century-old technology of cams by producing a sub species of new cam design.


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Combing」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.