Fabric Analysis-The Contraction of Warp and Weft
Fabric Analysis-The Contraction of Warp and Weft
Fabric Analysis-The Contraction of Warp and Weft
Hiram Hartley
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INTRODUCTION
An analysis ui a woven fabric is an attempt to ascertain from a pattern
of a finished material the particulars requisite for its reproduction on the
loom. Such analysis calls for the application of considerable skill and
extensive knowledge on the part of the analyst. The influence of the
processes through which the fabric has passed must be appreciated and
allowed for if a reasonably accurate analysis is to be secured. Certain par-
ticulars, such as counts of warp and weft, threads and picks per inch, finished
weight per yard, and the weave emplo3^ed can be obtained without difficulty
from the sample provided. Before, however, an}* of these can be converted
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into "loom" particulars, the contraction of the warp threads and weft picks
must be ascertained. This paper describes a machine designed to measure
this contraction, and the method of application of the machine.
CONTILACTION OF WARP AND WEFT
The contraction of the warp and weft threads is due to two chief causes—
(1) The bending of the threads due to their interlacing when woven.
(2) The shrinkage and movement of the fibres due to the processes of
djTing and finishing, though this is much less marked in cotton
yarns than in woollen and worsted yarns.
In measuring the contraction, or actuall}' the extension of warp and
weft, the method generally employed is to stamp out a piece of the finished
fabric, say 3 in. x 3 in., to pull out several threads of warp and weft, and by
placing them on a fiat rule to draw out the contraction with the finger and
thumb, and to measure the extension as accurately as possible. The
objections to this method are—
(1) That the extension of the full 3 in. can only be measured with part
of the thread held by the fingers and accuracy of reading is sacrificed.
(2) That the tension applied to each thread must vary owing to the
human element.
(3) That the tension applied to yarns of fairly soft twist may cause
fibre slip and thereby false elongation of the yam.
(4) That the apphcation of a steady even tension to all the threads
tested is impossible.
When contraction has been arrived at by this or some other method, the
following "loom particulars" can be obtained—
(a) Threads per inch in loom, and the reed width, by direct proportion
between the finished particulars and the loom particulars, as influenced
by the measured contraction of the weft threads.
(b) Similarly the picks per inch in loom, and the length of the grey
cloth can be calculated from the contraction of the warp threads.
Thus practically all these particulars depend for their verity on the
accuracy with which contraction of warp and weft may be measured.
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FIG.
:
FIG.
I
2
•
/
-
^
'
face pat;(
2^—Fabric Analysis—The Contraction of Warp and Weft—Hartley T255
automatically kept open by means of two small springs which are com-
pressed into recesses whe^n the jaws are closed. The latter are tightened
and released by small thumb-screws H, and hold material varying in diameter
from -j\j to ,uV,j of an inch without possibility of shpping when tension
is applied.
In order to ensure accuracy in the reading of the indicator a locking
device consisting of a knurled peg J (Figs. I and 2), registers through the
top of the body of the machine and through the sliding plate containing
the travelling jaws A when the indicator G is at zero. This peg J is kept
in position until extension of the material is commenced.
* Provisionally patented.
T256 25—Fabric Analysis—The Contraction of Warp and Weft—Hartley
is then inserted in the fixed jaws B, the latter gripping just up to the edge
of the cloth. A similar quantity of weft fringe is then inserted in the mov-
able jaws A, which also grip to the edge of the cluth (Fig. i). Held between
the edges of the jaws there is now exactly 3 in. of weft at the tension in the
finished cloth, the picks lying side by side exactly as in tht- fabric. By
means of a dissecting needle these weft picks (which may number from, say,
6 to 30, according to the sett of the cloth) are then separated from the
intersecting warp threads. No difficulty is experienced with this part of
the procedure as a rule, but if milled cloths are being tested, the body of the
machine can be moved inwards, once the jaws are clamped, to assist in the
dissection. When the warp has been drawn away a number of weft picks
are left firmly held between the two jaws (see Fig. 2), and when the body
of the machine is reset at 3 in. on the base scale (if it has been moved), the
tension present in the finished fabric has been restored.
The extension of these weft picks may now be tested. The peg J is
removed and the knurled hand-screw rotated in a clock-wise direction,
causing the travelling jaws A to move slowly away from the fixed jaws B,
the extension being registered by the indicator G. The tension on the material
should be tested frequently by lightly tapping with the forefinger until the
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EXPERIMENTAL
A series of cotton, artificial silk, and angola fabrics were first tested.
No fibre movement or shrinkage would be present in these cloths with the
result that the readings given by the apparatus should, if accurate, give the
actual loom particulars for the fabric concerned. In each case the cloths
had been made by the writer so that the loom particulars actually employed
were available for the purpose of comparison. The weft was tested in each
pattern to arrive at the threads per i in. in the reed in preference to testing
the warp for the picks per i in., as the latter is always liable to variation
from the number intended to be woven, to that actually put into the cloth,
owing to the setting-up of the loom and other factors, whereas the threads
per I in. in the reed are known and cannot vary. A variety of styles was
employed in order to test the machine under different conditions. The
results were as shown on following page.
25—Fabric Analysis—The Contraction of Warp and Weft—Hartley T257
Table I.
Cotton, Artificial Silk, and Angola Yarns
Ends per 1 in.
Material Warp Ends per Ex- in Reed
Style and or Inch Length tension » • , Cal-
Count Weft Finished Tested to -^'-'•"a' culated
Figd. Lining ... 2/40 Cotton Wtft 74 3' ^^^ . 1 1 11 71-0
Shaded Lining 2/80 Cotton J 1 128 3" '17" 120 119-3
Whipcord
Skirting ... 2/30 Cotton 11 131 3' •l\ - "
»»;; .J
110 110 3
Figd. Lining ... 120 den. Art.
Silk t » 124 3» ^'ll« 120 119-6
Tapestry 1 5 Cotton 1 p 59 3" 56 56-6
Poplin 2/80 Cotton t 1 44 3" •1 1 !l "
•^1! 1
40 40-0
Export Dress
Fabric 2/80 Cotton ... 1 • 124 3* *^8 120 119-0
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It was found that the fibre movement was not sufficient to affect
appreciably the accuracy of the readings. When tension approximating
to that present in the loom was applied to the weft, the extension recorded
was such that direct loom particulars could be calculated. Botany fabrics
were tested in each case, as these were the fabrics where fibre movement
was most likely to be present. In the case of cross-bred cloths, the possibility
of shrinkage affecting the readings is considerably minimised.
J
T258 Fabric Analysis—The Contraction of Warp and Weft—Hartley