Search Results: spinning (2837)

Two spinning concepts for the economic production of high quality bico filament yarns promise tailormade solutions for all applications, explain Günter Schütt and Susanne Beyer from Oerlikon. Although bicomponent yarns have been around for about 50 years now and they are not a new phenomenon, we have seen a constant increase in demand over the past few years (with frequent fashion-related peaks in 2015, for example). Reasons for this development are manifold. In addition to current fashion trends, new, highly-efficient solutions for manufacturing textile fabrics such as circular knitting, for instance, reduce production costs.

SPIDERweb, the basis module, is today the well-known and proven SPIDERweb system, writes Marcel Rengel. SPIDERweb of the latest generation is the only mill management system that collects, displays and analyses all relevant data from the spinning preparation to all four spinning systems as well as providing support.

What sets a spinner apart from the rest? The answer obviously is the absolutely consistent production of yarns of best quality, year after year. That’s exactly where TeraSpin comes in – in helping spinning mills to produce yarns of finest quality consistently with its high precision spinning components.

SUESSEN, a manufacturer of airjet, warp spinning and ring spinning equipment with facilities in Germany, Brazil, India, the Czech Republic and a subsidiary in the USA, is planning to exhibit its products during ITM Istanbul to demonstrate the competence in handling and processing natural and man-made-fibres within the ring- and rotor spinning process. SUESSEN’s EliTe CompactSet is the world’s most in demand compact spinning system.

The history of industrial cotton spinning began in the 18th century in England. In 1781, the first steam-driven cotton spinning mill was opened in Manchester. There, at the pulsating heart of industrialisation, no less than 108 cotton spinning mills were existing in 1853. About 80 per cent of the world’s production came from Manchester, which bore the nickname “Cottonopolis”.

The innovative spinning geometry has already proved its worth with the S 60, which is the only spin box to influence trash extraction during the opening process by means of the BYpass, says Stephan Weidner-Bohnenberger. The new S 66 spin box is the heart of the R 66 rotor spinning machine and the core of innovations. Further developed from the S 60 box, it allows higher yarn tenacity and better yarn evenness. With the new CHANNELpass, it is additionally more flexible. The improved ergonomic design makes operation even easier and more time-saving.

For the best working of a spinning mill, we have to keep everything ideal, based on industry norms, benchmarking with the best technical study by an independent research institute and our own achieved figures, feels SB Agarwal.