首页 / 国际专利分类库 / 纺织;造纸 / 织造 / 机织织物;织造方法;织机 / 传动、起动或停车装置;自停装置{(织机上结合织物检验的织机控制入 D03J1/007)}
序号 专利名 申请号 申请日 公开(公告)号 公开(公告)日 发明人
61 LACROSSE HEAD POCKET AND RELATED METHOD OF MANUFACTURE US15015375 2016-02-04 US20160151690A1 2016-06-02 David K. Morrow; Bruce Huffa; Thomas H. Burns; Richard J. Janisse; Sean J. Slater; Dale W. Kohler; Craig M. Herman
A lacrosse head pocket and a related method of manufacture are provided to facilitate consistent, repeatable and/or custom manufacture of lacrosse equipment. The pocket can be constructed from multiple different sections joined with one another, or can be knitted, weaved or otherwise assembled on an automated assembly machine from strands, and/or can be formed as a unitary textile material having regions/sections with different physical and/or mechanical properties. The pocket can be integrally molded within portions of a lacrosse head to eliminate manually constructed connections between the pocket and lacrosse head. The lacrosse head can be integrally molded with a lacrosse handle to provide a one-piece unitary lacrosse stick. Related methods of manufacturing also are provided.
62 LACROSSE HEAD POCKET AND RELATED METHOD OF MANUFACTURE US14971020 2015-12-16 US20160096094A1 2016-04-07 David K. Morrow; Bruce Huffa; Thomas H. Burns; Richard J. Janisse; Sean J. Slater; Dale W. Kohler; Craig M. Herman
A lacrosse head pocket and a related method of manufacture are provided to facilitate consistent, repeatable and/or custom manufacture of lacrosse equipment. The pocket can be constructed from multiple different sections joined with one another, or can be knitted, weaved or otherwise assembled on an automated assembly machine from strands, and/or can be formed as a unitary textile material having regions/sections with different physical and/or mechanical properties. The pocket can be integrally molded within portions of a lacrosse head to eliminate manually constructed connections between the pocket and lacrosse head. The lacrosse head can be integrally molded with a lacrosse handle to provide a one-piece unitary lacrosse stick. Related methods of manufacturing also are provided.
63 Lacrosse head pocket and related method of manufacture US14843558 2015-09-02 US09283699B2 2016-03-15 David K. Morrow; Bruce Huffa; Thomas H. Burns; Richard J. Janisse; Sean J. Slater; Dale W. Kohler; Craig M. Herman
A lacrosse head pocket and a related method of manufacture are provided to facilitate consistent, repeatable and/or custom manufacture of lacrosse equipment. The pocket can be constructed from multiple different sections joined with one another, or can be knitted, weaved or otherwise assembled on an automated assembly machine from strands, and/or can be formed as a unitary textile material having regions/sections with different physical and/or mechanical properties. The pocket can be integrally molded within portions of a lacrosse head to eliminate manually constructed connections between the pocket and lacrosse head. The lacrosse head can be integrally molded with a lacrosse handle to provide a one-piece unitary lacrosse stick. Related methods of manufacturing also are provided.
64 LACROSSE HEAD POCKET AND RELATED METHOD OF MANUFACTURE US14815001 2015-07-31 US20160040331A1 2016-02-11 David K. Morrow; Bruce Huffa; Thomas H. Burns; Richard J. Janisse; Sean J. Slater; Dale W. Kohler; Craig M. Herman
A lacrosse head pocket and a related method of manufacture are provided to facilitate consistent, repeatable and/or custom manufacture of lacrosse equipment. The pocket can be constructed from multiple different sections joined with one another, or can be knitted, weaved or otherwise assembled on an automated assembly machine from strands, and/or can be formed as a unitary textile material having regions/sections with different physical and/or mechanical properties. The pocket can be integrally molded within portions of a lacrosse head to eliminate manually constructed connections between the pocket and lacrosse head. The lacrosse head can be integrally molded with a lacrosse handle to provide a one-piece unitary lacrosse stick. Related methods of manufacturing also are provided.
65 LACROSSE HEAD POCKET AND RELATED METHOD OF MANUFACTURE US14815100 2015-07-31 US20160040329A1 2016-02-11 David K. Morrow; Bruce Huffa; Thomas H. Burns; Richard J. Janisse; Sean J. Slater; Dale W. Kohler; Craig M. Herman
A lacrosse head pocket and a related method of manufacture are provided to facilitate consistent, repeatable and/or custom manufacture of lacrosse equipment. The pocket can be constructed from multiple different sections joined with one another, or can be knitted, weaved or otherwise assembled on an automated assembly machine from strands, and/or can be formed as a unitary textile material having regions/sections with different physical and/or mechanical properties. The pocket can be integrally molded within portions of a lacrosse head to eliminate manually constructed connections between the pocket and lacrosse head. The lacrosse head can be integrally molded with a lacrosse handle to provide a one-piece unitary lacrosse stick. Related methods of manufacturing also are provided.
66 LACROSSE HEAD POCKET AND RELATED METHOD OF MANUFACTURE US14881442 2015-10-13 US20160040327A1 2016-02-11 David K. Morrow; Bruce Huffa; Thomas H. Burns; Richard J. Janisse; Sean J. Slater; Dale W. Kohler; Craig M. Herman
A lacrosse head pocket and a related method of manufacture are provided to facilitate consistent, repeatable and/or custom manufacture of lacrosse equipment. The pocket can be constructed from multiple different sections joined with one another, or can be knitted, weaved or otherwise assembled on an automated assembly machine from strands, and/or can be formed as a unitary textile material having regions/sections with different physical and/or mechanical properties. The pocket can be integrally molded within portions of a lacrosse head to eliminate manually constructed connections between the pocket and lacrosse head. The lacrosse head can be integrally molded with a lacrosse handle to provide a one-piece unitary lacrosse stick. Related methods of manufacturing also are provided.
67 LACROSSE HEAD POCKET AND RELATED METHOD OF MANUFACTURE US14815057 2015-07-31 US20160039133A1 2016-02-11 David K. Morrow; Bruce Huffa; Thomas H. Burns; Richard J. Janisse; Sean J. Slater; Dale W. Kohler; Craig M. Herman
A lacrosse head pocket and a related method of manufacture are provided to facilitate consistent, repeatable and/or custom manufacture of lacrosse equipment. The pocket can be constructed from multiple different sections joined with one another, or can be knitted, weaved or otherwise assembled on an automated assembly machine from strands, and/or can be formed as a unitary textile material having regions/sections with different physical and/or mechanical properties. The pocket can be integrally molded within portions of a lacrosse head to eliminate manually constructed connections between the pocket and lacrosse head. The lacrosse head can be integrally molded with a lacrosse handle to provide a one-piece unitary lacrosse stick. Related methods of manufacturing also are provided.
68 LACROSSE HEAD POCKET AND RELATED METHOD OF MANUFACTURE US14815186 2015-07-31 US20160038805A1 2016-02-11 Thomas H. Burns; Adam D. Paquette; Sean J. Slater
A lacrosse head pocket and a related method of manufacture are provided to facilitate consistent, repeatable and/or custom manufacture of lacrosse equipment. The pocket can be constructed from multiple different sections joined with one another, or can be knitted, weaved or otherwise assembled on an automated assembly machine from strands, and/or can be formed as a unitary textile material having regions/sections with different physical and/or mechanical properties. The pocket can be integrally molded within portions of a lacrosse head to eliminate manually constructed connections between the pocket and lacrosse head. The lacrosse head can be integrally molded with a lacrosse handle to provide a one-piece unitary lacrosse stick. Related methods of manufacturing also are provided.
69 LACROSSE HEAD POCKET AND RELATED METHOD OF MANUFACTURE US14815117 2015-07-31 US20160038802A1 2016-02-11 David K. Morrow; Bruce Huffa; Thomas H. Burns; Richard J. Janisse; Sean J. Slater; Dale W. Kohler; Craig M. Herman
A lacrosse head pocket and a related method of manufacture are provided to facilitate consistent, repeatable and/or custom manufacture of lacrosse equipment. The pocket can be constructed from multiple different sections joined with one another, or can be knitted, weaved or otherwise assembled on an automated assembly machine from strands, and/or can be formed as a unitary textile material having regions/sections with different physical and/or mechanical properties. The pocket can be integrally molded within portions of a lacrosse head to eliminate manually constructed connections between the pocket and lacrosse head. The lacrosse head can be integrally molded with a lacrosse handle to provide a one-piece unitary lacrosse stick. Related methods of manufacturing also are provided.
70 Method and device for maintaining a weft thread which is introduced into a weaving machine, in particular an air-jet weaving machine, after the starting process US11920791 2006-05-17 US07650913B2 2010-01-26 Valentin Krumm; Wolfgang Metzler; Dieter Teufel
A weaving machine starts-up in slow speed operation during a first weaving cycle following the machine start. To help avoid weft breaks, a method is provided to hold a weft thread inserted into the loom shed during the first weaving cycle. A sensor monitors the weft insertion. The inserted weft thread is held by binding threads at a location downstream from an inlet side of the loom shed, before the weft thread is bound by the warp threads. The binding of the weft thread by the binding threads is carried out dependent on a signal of the sensor.
71 Method and Device for Maintaining a Weft Thread Which Is Introduced Into a Weaving Machine, In Particular an Air-Jet Weaving Machine, After the Starting Process US11920791 2006-05-17 US20090120527A1 2009-05-14 Valentin Krumm; Wolfgang Metzler; Dieter Teufel
Even weft yarns having low tearing force shall be processible without problems on weaving machines, especially air-jet weaving machines, that are operated in the slow speed running in the first weaving cycle after a weaving machine start. This is achieved according to the invention in that the weft thread (3) inserted into a loom shed (4) in the first weaving cycle after a weaving machine start is bound by separate binding threads (8) temporally before the binding by the warp threads (2), and in that the binding by the binding threads (8) occurs spatially at at least one position of the loom shed (4) after its inlet.
72 Air jet weaving machine US939156 1986-12-08 US4729411A 1988-03-08 Kurt Ellenberger; Georg Senn
In an air jet weaving machine having: a picking nozzle (61, 62) outside the shed (15); and a weft yarn deflector (7, 90, 23) disposed between such nozzle and the shed (15) and operative to keep the weft yarn (5) away from the shed in response to a machine stop signal caused by a disturbance, a conveying line (22) for the deflected weft yarn (5) is received in the sley (10). The conveying line (22) is closed at its entry end by an end member (24) into which a funnel (23) of the weft yarn deflector leads. A receiver (30) having a suction or intake duct (32) is disposed at the exit end of the conveying line, the duct entry aperture being so dimensioned that the exit aperture of the conveying line (22) leads freely into the extraction or exhaust duct (32) in all positions of the sley (10).
73 Safety lock for looms US47576274 1974-06-03 US3880196A 1975-04-29 BUDZYNA JOSEPH M
A safety lock for the shipper lever of a loom which is operatively connected to and actuated by pivotal movement of the loom''s shuttle guard from its active to inactive position to prevent starting the loom when the shuttle guard is not in its active or shuttle confining position relative to the loom''s lay beam.
74 Device for controlling the heddles of the harness of a loom US32249873 1973-01-10 US3831637A 1974-08-27 JUILLARD
A loom having a device for driving the dobby which operates the heddles of the harness of the loom. The dobby is driven selectively either from the crankshaft of the loom during normal operation thereof or from an auxillary motor when the loom is stationary and the crankshaft is held stationary at a position corresponding to the wide-open state of the shed of the loom.
75 Loom stopping device US3439716D 1967-09-29 US3439716A 1969-04-22 ADAMS RUSSELL E
76 Enclosed drive for looms US58549366 1966-10-10 US3381720A 1968-05-07 HIGGINS THEODORE S
77 Driving mechanism for textile machines US20411651 1951-01-03 US2690243A 1954-09-28 SHERILL JR PRICE E; BROWNE GODFREY H
78 Driving arrangement for looms US55391944 1944-09-13 US2477709A 1949-08-02 GEORG WIGET
79 Filling stop motion for looms US2365044D US2365044A 1944-12-12
80 Clutch mechanism for looms US56910722 1922-06-17 US1666717A 1928-04-17 JONAS NORTHROP
QQ群二维码
意见反馈