Abstract:
A parasitic Acari barrier fabric that impedes parasitic Acari movement, traps parasitic Acari, and/or exterminates parasitic Acari thereon or therein. The barrier fabric includes an outer face formed from open mesh construction having evenly spaced openings formed thereon that are adapted for passing parasitic Acari from outside the fabric to inside the fabric, an inner face that is breathable and configured for moisture vapor transmission from a wearer's skin therethrough but is impenetrable to parasitic Acari passed to the inside of the fabric, and an intermediate spacer that extends between and interconnects the inner face to the outer face to form the parasitic Acari barrier fabric.
Abstract:
A parasitic Acari barrier fabric that impedes parasitic Acari movement, traps parasitic Acari, and/or exterminates parasitic Acari thereon or therein. The barrier fabric includes an outer face formed from open mesh construction having evenly spaced openings formed thereon that are adapted for passing parasitic Acari from outside the fabric to inside the fabric, an inner face that is breathable and configured for moisture vapor transmission from a wearer's skin therethrough but is impenetrable to parasitic Acari passed to the inside of the fabric, and an intermediate spacer that extends between and interconnects the inner face to the outer face to form the parasitic Acari barrier fabric.
Abstract:
A burning wick for hydrocarbons and the like is manufactured by continuously forming two wick bodies by two juxtaposed raschel knitting machines, and then fastening the two bodies together transversely along spaced lines, by wrap yarns or other linking yarns. The composite strip thus formed is then cut off along those transverse junction lines, to provide a plurality of separate cylindrical sleeves, each of which serves as a wick. The individual knit wick bodies can have various weaves across their transverse width, such as a burning portion at one edge, an intermediate suction portion for drawing up the fuel, and a bending or stretching portion between the edges of the body and characterized by a reduced number of weft yarns. In this way a cylindrical wick is produced which has various characteristics along its axial length.
Abstract:
An improved elastic yarn supply package is provided in the form of a double-face, warp-knit tape from which the elastic yarns can be unravelled for feeding to subsequent fabric-making operations. The improved package, which is readily spittable into narrower tapes, has repeating stitch patterns whose underlaps do not cross each other or run in opposite directions between wales.
Abstract:
A warp knit fabric which is stretchable in the direction of the wales by virtue of elastomer yarn forming the wales is made ravel resistant when cut in a transverse direction, by having a plurality of ends of elastomer yarn form each wale, with each yarn end having alternating knitted and laid in portions, each for a succession of stitches, the knitting and laying in of one yarn end being out of phase with the knitting and laying in of another yarn end. The wales are interconnected by inelastic yarn to form the fabric.
Abstract:
A double faced warp knit fabric is made on a double needle bar in each successive course of each pair of opposite wales of each opposite face warp knitting machine having a common guide bar and common chain stitch thread forming chain stitches on one needle bar and then on the other needle bar to bind and unite the two knit structures into a unitary double faced fabric. The common chain stitch thread may also be looped coursewise around adjacent chain stitches in adjacent wales to not only serve as the body yarn for both faces but to also serve as the weft portions of a simulated weave, in cooperation with a pair of inlaid warp yarns in each knit structure.
Abstract:
A BASE FABRIC, SUCH AS FIBROUS FLEECE SHEET, IS PERFORATED FROM OPPOSITE SIDES BY NEEDLES KNITTING WALES AND COURSES. THE LOOPS OF SUCCESSIVE COURSES ARE ALTERNATINGLY PLACED IN ADJACENT WALES SO THAT BACK LOOP PORTIONS EXTEND BETWEEN ADJACENT WALES, AND CAN BE DRAWN OUT TO FORM PILE LOOPS.