1 October 2009, Obertshausen – According to leading warp
knitting machine builder Karl Mayer, technical textiles are no longer simply
materials, but they are rapidly becoming ready-to-use components. The German
company says that the manufacturing sector is increasingly following this trend
by developing tailor-made solutions which are aimed at minimising costs and
processing sequences during production and by integrating as many functions as
possible into the design of the product from the outset. The same trend is also
being seen in other knitting technologies such flat knitting and seamless
circular knitting where garments and other items such as seat covers are
produced in one piece with integrally knitted functional features.
Product developers at Karl Mayer are showing how
warp-knitted spacer fabrics can greatly reduce the distance between the machine
and the end product. The company’s engineers have developed processes for
manipulating the typical characteristics of 3D fabrics, such as their
compression elasticity and breathability, and have perfected the machine technology
to enable pile-free zones to be produced. The zones without spacer can be
arranged as channels in the transverse direction to the processing direction,
or alternatively they may alternate with zones having spacers to produce
chessboard patterns in the fabric.
Karl Mayer’s warp knitting specialists have now taken
another successful step along the road to process-integrated production by
manufacturing so called HighDistance materials, which have contours that match
the shape of the end product.
Adjustable compressive strength and breathability
Important characteristics for using spacer fabrics in their
normal end-uses, for example seats and beds, are their stability under the
influence of pressure and how efficiently they deal with moisture. Their
breathability can be manipulated by incorporating different patterns in the
outer faces of the spacer structures. Constructions which have different
opening widths can also be produced and these can be arranged all over the
surface in an alternating arrangement or at the sides, depending on the
drawing-in arrangement of the ground guide bars.
The monofilament yarns between the cover faces are
responsible for the compression stability. In particular, the number per unit
of area (which is the result of the stitch number setting), the count and the
laying angle have a decisive effect on the cushioning characteristics of the
spacer textiles. Furthermore, the compression stability can either be set so
that it is constant over the entire textile or so that it varies from zone to
zone.
Seamless integration of channels and articulating points
3D warp-knitted fabrics consist of two-dimensional ground
faces produced by a plain jersey construction, with a pile layer lying
in-between produced by a 1 x 1 rib knitted construction. By selectively
integrating the pile yarns into the ground sides, the lappings for the 2D and
3D elements are changed sequentially. The zones without spacers can be arranged
in two ways, as stripes in the form of channels and specific flexing points or
as square segments alternating with full spacer zones. This variant increases
the deployable radius of the 3D warp-knitted textiles considerably.
Manufactured-to-shape
Extensive research carried out at Karl Mayer on HighDistance
materials have led to some promising results when developing products which
have contours that match the final application, on the machine itself. The
technical concept of the innovative HDR 6 EL high-speed, double-bar raschel
machine makes it the perfect machine for producing textiles which have specific
end-use characteristics, Karl Mayer says.
The technical features of the machine enable it to produce
tailor-made products, where the spacer height can be continuously adjusted
centrally from 20 to 65 mm via an electro-motor, and the stitch comb is
adjusted automatically when the distance between the knock-over bars is
changed. The machine also features patented electronic guide bar control and
electronically controlled fabric take-down.
The HighDistance machine is therefore extremely flexible in
terms of the structures it can produce and the pile yarns it can process. The
pile yarns are laid by means of two guide bars, whose positions can be changed
in relation to each other, enabling the laying density to be specified per unit
of surface area. Reducing the distance between the pile guide bars via the
lapping reduces the 3D segment width and vice versa. Consequently, warp-knitted
spacer textiles having perfectly formed circular, layered, wavy or oval
contours can be produced. The edges of the spacer textiles are clean and neat
with firmly anchored pile yarns. The Multispeed system enables the stitch
number to be adjusted so that any compression of the yarns in the pile zone can
be more or less equalised.
In addition to the wide range of different contours that can
be created, circular and oval shapes without pile yarns can also be produced in
the middle of the fabric by varying the distance between the pile bars.
Karl Mayer concludes that all of the different design
possibilities offered by the HighDistance machine have turned textile
manufacturers into component providers and textile roll goods into piece goods.