Warp Differs From Weft Patents (Class 442/208)
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Patent number: 7611997Abstract: A 3-D woven fabric having substantially elongated foam elements integrally formed therein during fabric formation for providing open corridors within the fabric. The fabric is preferably used for structural, stiffener, or component applications.Type: GrantFiled: November 7, 2005Date of Patent: November 3, 2009Inventor: Donald E. Wigent, III
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Publication number: 20090111346Abstract: The invention relates to a woven fabric comprising warp threads or wires and comprising weft wires, wherein the woven fabric comprises an offset weft wire. The offset is particularly suitable for fastening objects separate from the woven fabric.Type: ApplicationFiled: November 3, 2006Publication date: April 30, 2009Inventors: Ingo Kufferath-Kassner, Jakob Sistig, Christoph Kronhagel, Ralf Muller
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Patent number: 7507679Abstract: A paper machine fabric comprising at least two machine direction yarn systems, which are bound together by means of a binding yarn system. The layer of the machine side is formed of a warp system and a binding yarn system. The binding yarn system comprises a binding yarn, binding yarns or a pair of binding yarns. The binding yarn, the binding yarns or the pair of binding yarns is/are bound to more than one bottom warps at the point where the binding yarn binds the top and bottom warps together.Type: GrantFiled: June 29, 2004Date of Patent: March 24, 2009Assignee: Tamfelt OYJ ABPInventors: Seppo Taipale, Terttu Turpeinen, Tania Rautio, Pekka Kortelainen
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Publication number: 20090029617Abstract: The present invention provides a layered product, which, when processed into a textile product by sewing, fusing, or the like, overcomes such a practical restriction that a knit must be used on the side to be subjected to a sealing treatment, makes the sealing treatment easier, has intact appearance and touch feeling, and is lightweight. The layered product comprises a flexible film and a woven fabric layered thereon at the side to be subjected to the sealing treatment in processing the layered product into the textile product. The layered product has a total cover factor (CFtotal) from 700 to 1400, calculated from the cover factors of the warp and the weft constituting the woven fabric.Type: ApplicationFiled: March 10, 2006Publication date: January 29, 2009Inventors: Junichi Akimori, Hiroki Sadato
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Patent number: 7476630Abstract: A woven panel is formed from at least one first polymer yarn and at least one second polymer yarn wherein the second polymer yarn has a core. The core yarns provide mechanical strength for the woven material in supporting the coreless yarns when used in load bearing articles such as the seat or back portions of an article of furniture.Type: GrantFiled: April 1, 2005Date of Patent: January 13, 2009Assignee: Casual Living Worldwide, Inc.Inventors: Larry Schwartz, Coley Chris Mathis
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Patent number: 7402538Abstract: This invention relates to heat and flame resistant single ply fabric for use as a single or outer layer of a protective garment for a wearer. The fabric comprises at least one warp system and at least two weft systems. The warp system comprises a blend of 60 to 90 wt-% poly-m-phenylenisophtalamid (meta-aramid) and 10 to 40 wt-% poly-p-phenylenterephtalamid (para-aramid). The first of the at least two weft systems comprises a blend of 85 to 95 wt-% meta-aramid and 5 to 15 wt-% para-aramid. The second of the at least two weft systems essentially comprises para-aramid.Type: GrantFiled: January 27, 2005Date of Patent: July 22, 2008Assignee: E.I. du Pont de Nemours and CompanyInventors: Yves Bader, Andre Capt
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Patent number: 7370766Abstract: A filter cloth whose underside comprises substantially parallel, additional yarns 8 that are thicker than the rest of the yarns of the cloth, substantially parallel channels 9 being formed between the yarns, wherein filtered liquid passed through the cloth is allowed to flow in the direction of the surface of a filtering element 10 between the filtering portion of the cloth and the surface of the element. The invention further relates to a filtering module manufactured from the filter cloth of the invention.Type: GrantFiled: November 14, 2003Date of Patent: May 13, 2008Assignee: Tamfelt OYJ ABPInventor: Aulis Perälä
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Patent number: 7365032Abstract: A flame retardant union fabric obtained by combining (A) 30 to 70% by weight of a fiber comprising as a main component a flame retardant halogen-containing fiber made of a composition comprising 100 parts by weight of an acrylic copolymer of 30 to 70% by weight of acrylonitrile, 30 to 70% by weight of a halogen-containing vinyl monomer and 0 to 10% by weight of a vinyl monomer copolymerizable with them, 10 to 30 parts by weight of an antimony compound and 8 to 30 parts by weight of a zinc stannate compound, with (B) 70 to 30% by weight of a cellulosic fiber. The flame retardant union fabric shows a high flame resistance which passes the M1 class of NF P 92-503 burning test in France even after the post-treatment.Type: GrantFiled: October 31, 2000Date of Patent: April 29, 2008Assignee: Kaneka CorporationInventors: Masayuki Adachi, Masaharu Fujii, Toshimitsu Mori, Akio Konishi
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Patent number: 7361618Abstract: A carbon fiber-made reinforcing woven fabric comprising a carbon-fiber woven fabric formed from warps consisting of carbon fibers and wefts consisting of carbon fibers, and auxiliary yarns arranged along at least either warps or wefts, the auxiliary yarns being passed over and under other yarns differently from associated warps or wefts. When prepreg is produced by applying matrix resin to this woven fabric by a wet/prepreg processing method before drying, the presence of auxiliary yarns in gaps in the vicinities of warp-weft intersections on the woven fabric allows matrix resin to remain around auxiliary yarns to produce no apertures in the obtained prepreg, whereby the woven fabric is suitable for a prepreg production by wet/prepreg processing.Type: GrantFiled: December 19, 2001Date of Patent: April 22, 2008Assignee: Toray Industries, Inc.Inventors: Kiyoshi Homma, Akira Nishimura
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Patent number: 7332451Abstract: Paper-machine clothing comprising a woven structure and a filling component. A filament and a second filament of the woven structure intersect in a weave pattern contact each other. Void spaces produced by the intersection of the first filament and the second filament are substantially filled by a durable filling component. The durable component adheres to at most one of the first and second filaments.Type: GrantFiled: November 17, 2004Date of Patent: February 19, 2008Assignee: The Procter & Gamble CompanyInventors: Steven Lee Barnholtz, Michael Gomer Stelljes, Jr., Douglas Jay Barkey, Alyssandrea Hope Hamad
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Patent number: 7312166Abstract: The invention concerns a textile surface having at least a high-visibility face. It is obtained from yarns or fibres of at least three types, of blanketing yarns or fibres, heat-stable yarns or fibres and high-visibility yarns or fibres. The surfaces provide excellent protection against fire and flames.Type: GrantFiled: October 26, 2001Date of Patent: December 25, 2007Assignee: KermelInventor: Laurent Thiriot
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Patent number: 7309667Abstract: A fabric includes mutually transverse thread systems, with at least one of the thread systems including a differential shrinkage yarn C. The shrinkage yarn C has at least one effect component A that irreversibly elongates itself upon heat treatment, and at least one shrinkage component B that shortens itself upon heat treatment. The components A and B are bound together by nodes, wherein the number (y) of nodes per meter in the yarn C is predetermined as a function of the yarn count (x) of the transverse thread system so that the number (y) of nodes exceeds a minimum value and increases proportionally above the minimum value as a function of the yarn count (x).Type: GrantFiled: October 10, 2002Date of Patent: December 18, 2007Assignee: Deutsche Institute fur Textilund Faserforschung StuttgartInventors: Stefan Schindler, Helmut Weinsdörfer, Jürgen Wolfrum
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Patent number: 7309666Abstract: A silicone coated fabric having a base woven fabric that is formed from a synthetic fiber weaving yarn that has a yarn size of from 100 to 270 dtex, and a weaving size expressed by product calculated by multiplying the yarn size of a weaving yarn and a weave density (ends or picks/2.54 cm) of from 10,000 to 25,000 (dtex·ends (or picks)/2.54 cm) in both the warp direction and the weft direction, a silicone being applied to the woven fabric in an amount of from 5 to 25 g/m2, and having on one side a uniform silicone coating layer forming part of the silicone mentioned above. The silicone coated fabric is a lightweight coated fabric that shows improved heat resistance, improved flexibility and an improved low coefficient of friction as well as particularly improved burning resistance. The fabric can therefore be used for producing lightweight and compactly storable airbags that suppress bursting starting from a burnt-through-hole, and that shorten a deployment time.Type: GrantFiled: February 23, 2006Date of Patent: December 18, 2007Assignee: Asahi Kasei Kabushiki KaishaInventors: Hideaki Ishii, Toshirou Nagaoka
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Patent number: 7306014Abstract: In a lower surface side layer of an industrial two-layer fabric, warps are formed by sequentially arranging a repeating design unit, in which one warp passes over six successive lower surface side wefts, passes under one lower surface side weft, passes over two lower surface side wefts, and passes under one lower surface side weft while shifting the design by three lower surface side wefts. Two adjacent lower surface side warps simultaneously weave therein, from the lower surface side, one lower surface side weft, whereby the lower surface side weft passes over two lower surface side warps and then passes under eight lower surface side warps to form a weft long crimp corresponding to eight lower surface side warps on the lower surface side surface.Type: GrantFiled: November 10, 2005Date of Patent: December 11, 2007Assignee: Nippon Filcon Co., Ltd.Inventors: Hiroyuki Nagura, Ikuo Ueda, Keiichi Takimoto
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Patent number: 7304006Abstract: Woven reinforcing fabrics for such conveyor belts characterized by an improved resistance to tearing in the longitudinal or travel direction. The woven reinforcing fabric includes a plurality of weft yarns and a plurality of warp yarns aligned substantially orthogonal to the plurality of weft yarns. The warp yarns are woven through the weft yarns to define a plurality of passages arranged in substantially parallel first and second planes. At least one of the weft yarns is positioned in each of the passages and two of the weft yarns are positioned in at least one of the passages in each of the first and second planes.Type: GrantFiled: June 24, 2004Date of Patent: December 4, 2007Assignee: The Goodyear Tire & Rubber CompanyInventors: Eun Kyung Lee, Edwin Lee Haines, Douglas Brooks Deans
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Patent number: 7304007Abstract: As subject of the present invention, a woven composite fabric, comprising metal elements and polymer elements is provided. The metal elements being metal wires, bundles of metal wires, metal strands or metal cords. According to the invention, the polymer elements are polymer tapes, having a substantially rectangular cross-section.Type: GrantFiled: March 11, 2004Date of Patent: December 4, 2007Assignee: NV Bekaert SAInventor: Geert Braekevelt
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Patent number: 7279436Abstract: A wide-meshed grid fabric, in particular a geogrid, in which warp thread bundles composed of multiple warp threads and weft thread bundles composed of multiple weft threads intersect and surround meshes or lattice openings. To give the grid fabric, which may also be a scrim, a greater volume, whereby, among other things, improved reinforcement of the soil may be achieved, individual threads of a thread bundle in a mesh are longer than other threads of the same thread bundle, the longer threads running in a wave pattern and forming at least one open loop or bulge per mesh; the open loop or bulge may protrude upward and/or downward from the plane of the grid fabric. A plastic coating may stiffen the grid fabric.Type: GrantFiled: April 19, 2003Date of Patent: October 9, 2007Assignee: Huesker Synthetic GmbHInventor: Heiko Pintz
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Patent number: 7196025Abstract: A method for forming a material having an individually stabilized ply includes providing a ply having a non-orthogonal orientation. A stabilizing agent is then applied to maintain the orientation of the ply. The stabilizing agent could alternately be applied before forming the ply. The ply may be woven in a non-orthogonal orientation, or may have its orientation changed to the final non-orthogonal orientation. Changing may occur over multiple steps and may include using an accumulator and/or payout station to change the orientation.Type: GrantFiled: April 29, 2004Date of Patent: March 27, 2007Assignee: Saint-Gobain Performance Plastics CorporationInventors: Katherine M. Sahlin, Michael P. Cushman
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Patent number: 7196024Abstract: A protective drainage wrap comprises a first portion, a second portion and a solid sheet portion. The first portion comprises cross-woven or cross-laminate material in the machine direction and in the transverse direction. The material in the machine direction comprises a polyolefin, polyester, nylon or combinations thereof and has a first thickness. The material in the transverse direction comprises a polyolefin, polyester, nylon or combinations thereof and has a second thickness. The second thickness is at least about 2 times greater than the first thickness so as to assist in providing drainage for moisture build-up. The second portion is a coating comprising a polyolefin, polyester, nylon or combinations thereof. The first and second portions are located adjacent to each other. The solid sheet portion comprises a polyolefin, polyester, nylon or combinations thereof. The solid sheet portion is attached to at least one of the first portion and the second portion.Type: GrantFiled: June 16, 2004Date of Patent: March 27, 2007Assignee: Pactiv CorporationInventor: John W. Lubker, II
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Patent number: 7179762Abstract: An air bag of the type utilized in a vehicle occupant restraint system has at least one panel of coated air bag fabric comprising a base fabric coated with a urethane coating material. The base fabric is woven in warp and fill directions from synthetic multifilament yarns. In at least one of the weave directions, the yarns comprise first yarns of a first yarn size and second yarns of a second yarn size, with the second yarn size being a lesser yarn size than the first yarn size. The first yarns and the second yarns are in predetermined positions in the base fabric to produce a crest and trough pattern on a surface thereof.Type: GrantFiled: October 14, 2003Date of Patent: February 20, 2007Assignee: Safety Components Fabric Technologies, Inc.Inventor: Alonzo W. Beasley, Jr.
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Patent number: 7153792Abstract: A flexible composite includes a ply having a non-orthogonal orientation. The flexible composite may be a component of a flexible assembly. The flexible assembly may be any number of fabric-based assemblies such as a radome cover of a radome, a belt for an industrial machine, an expanision joint to connect ducts of a factory, and/or a roof or skylight of a structure (notably permanent structures). The ply may be individually stabilized by a stabilizing agent such as a matrix material. The ply may be woven and may include warp yarns and fill yarns.Type: GrantFiled: April 29, 2004Date of Patent: December 26, 2006Assignee: Saint-Gobain Performance Plastics CorporationInventors: Katherine M. Sahlin, Michael P. Cushman
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Patent number: 6998165Abstract: A fabric system for producing at least a woven fabric of controlled modulus or elongation in the MD or warp axis, has a core layer which is the main structural element, and may have one or more woven cover fabrics adhesively bonded with an off axis configuration to one or both sides of the core layer. In a preferred embodiment the core fabric is covered with at least one off axis fabric on both sides. The cover fabrics may also have resin or film top layers laminated or coated on their outside surfaces, for mechanical performance or UV protection or both.Type: GrantFiled: November 13, 2002Date of Patent: February 14, 2006Assignee: Warwick Mills, Inc.Inventor: Charles A. Howland
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Patent number: 6974785Abstract: The outer shell fabric according to the invention is made of a textile material which is a double-weave woven fabric or a warp-knit knitted fabric constructed in such a manner that preferably a majority of one yarn type is placed on the face of the fabric and the majority of a different yarn type is placed on the back surface. One of the yarns may consist of multi-filamentary meta-aramid fiber (e.g. Nomex), the other of either a multi-filamentary or a spun (staple) para-aramid fiber (e.g. Kevlar). The textile material can be visualized as two separate fabrics being interlaced together by the sharing of yarns between them. When used as part of a firefighter or work garment for protection against heat and flame, the outer shell fabric has superior tear resistance, abrasion resistance, UV resistance, and thermal protective performance when compared to other outer shell fabrics used for the same application.Type: GrantFiled: March 2, 2000Date of Patent: December 13, 2005Assignee: Bacou-Dailoz Protective ApparelInventors: Claude Barbeau, Ross Cochran
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Patent number: 6938922Abstract: The present invention relates to air bag tethers and to a pattern-wise arrangement of such tethers in relation to air bag panels on a fabric blank, thus resulting in increased fabric utilization per tether and an overall cost savings per finished air bag. The air bag tether system of the present invention is comprised of two congruent tether panels that are joined to one another and to a respective air bag panel. In a preferred embodiment, the tether panel that is attached to the face panel of the air bag is cut in alignment with the warp and the fill of the fabric blank, while the rear tether panel that is attached to the rear panel of the air bag is cut on the bias with respect to the warp and the fill of the fabric blank. The two tether panels are then connected to one another to form a functional tether system.Type: GrantFiled: June 7, 2001Date of Patent: September 6, 2005Assignee: Milliken & CompanyInventor: Ramesh Keshavaraj
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Patent number: 6930065Abstract: The present invention relates to air bag tethers and to a pattern-wise arrangement of such tethers in relation to air bag panels on a fabric blank. In one embodiment, the front tether panel is comprised of two or more tether segments that cut in alignment with the warp and the fill of the fabric blank, while the rear tether panel is comprised of two or more tether segments that are cut on the bias with respect to the warp and the fill of the fabric blank. The front and rear tether panels are then connected to one another to form a functional tether system. This multiple-segment construction, with its bias-cut segments, decreases the amount of fabric that is used in the manufacture of the air bag and tethers, while providing sufficient elongation for the tether system to be functional.Type: GrantFiled: May 21, 2002Date of Patent: August 16, 2005Assignee: Milliken & CompanyInventor: Ramesh Keshavaraj
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Patent number: 6908869Abstract: A woven fabric structure for outdoor furniture use is provided. The woven fabric structure is a blended fabric containing a coated multifilament yarn and an elastomeric yarn that is resistant to water, ultraviolet, heat degradation or other significant outdoor exposure. The elastomeric yarn is provided in the fill direction and the coated multifilament yarn is provided in the warp direction. Additionally, the coated multifilament yarn can be combined with a yarn such as spun acrylic, polyester, nylon yarn, texturized filament yarns; or other uncoated filament yarns.Type: GrantFiled: December 24, 2002Date of Patent: June 21, 2005Assignee: Phifer Wire Products, Inc.Inventors: Steve Haun, Reese Brooks
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Patent number: 6869901Abstract: A protective drainage wrap comprises a first portion, a second portion and a solid sheet portion. The first portion comprises cross-woven or cross-laminate material in the machine direction and in the transverse direction. The material in the machine direction comprises a polyolefin, polyester, nylon or combinations thereof and has a first thickness The material in the transverse direction comprises a polyolefin, polyester, nylon or combinations thereof and has a second thickness. The second thickness is at least about 2 times greater than the first thickness so as to assist in providing drainage for moisture build-up The second portion is a coating comprising a polyolefin, polyester, nylon or combinations thereof The first and second portions are located adjacent to each other The solid sheet portion comprises a polyolefin, polyester, nylon or combinations thereof The solid sheet portion is attached to at least one of the first portion and the second portion.Type: GrantFiled: September 26, 2002Date of Patent: March 22, 2005Assignee: Pactiv CorporationInventor: John W. Lubker, II
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Patent number: 6866068Abstract: A method for producing woven fabrics, especially airbag woven fabrics, while using a multiphase weaving machine in the following steps: weaving a fabric comprised of filament threads in warp and weft on the multiphase weaving machine, whereby a high shrinking type of yarn is used as the warp and an average to low shrinking type of yarn is used as the weft, and finishing the woven fabric by hydroshrinking and/or thermoshrinking.Type: GrantFiled: March 19, 2002Date of Patent: March 15, 2005Assignee: Berger Seiba-Technotex Verwaltungs GmbH & Co.Inventors: Johann Berger, Holger Saint-Denis
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Publication number: 20040248488Abstract: A wallcovering having a synthetic fabric backing. Generally, the wallcovering includes a top sheet having an adhesively bonded scrim fabric backing substrate that is chemically bonded to the top sheet by a suitable adhesive. The adhesively bonded scrim fabric backing is preferably made of 100% synthetic materials, and includes plural warp yarns crossing plural weft yarns in, either a bi-directional or tri-directional arrangement.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 5, 2003Publication date: December 9, 2004Inventor: Carly P. Tebbetts
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Publication number: 20040229012Abstract: A protective drainage wrap comprises a first portion, a second portion and a solid sheet portion. The first portion comprises cross-woven or cross-laminate material in the machine direction and in the transverse direction. The material in the machine direction comprises a polyolefin, polyester, nylon or combinations thereof and has a first thickness. The material in the transverse direction comprises a polyolefin, polyester, nylon or combinations thereof and has a second thickness. The second thickness is at least about 2 times greater than the first thickness so as to assist in providing drainage for moisture build-up. The second portion is a coating comprising a polyolefin, polyester, nylon or combinations thereof The first and second portions are located adjacent to each other. The solid sheet portion comprises a polyolefin, polyester, nylon or combinations thereof The solid sheet portion is attached to at least one of the first portion and the second portion.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 16, 2004Publication date: November 18, 2004Inventor: John W. Lubker
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Publication number: 20040219845Abstract: A cement panel that is reinforced with a fabric made of carbon fibers. The cement panel includes a core layer that is made of a lightweight cement composition. This core layer is covered with a layer of reinforcing carbon fabric on the top and on the bottom, each bonded to the core with a coating of cementitious material on the top and on the bottom of the core layer. On the edges of the cement panels, the fabric layers are overlapped so as to augment the strength of these edges.Type: ApplicationFiled: April 29, 2003Publication date: November 4, 2004Inventors: Samuel E. Graham, George C. McLarty
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Publication number: 20040194841Abstract: Provided is a woven, glass textile fabric comprised of glass sliver in the weft or cross direction and air texturized glass yarn in the machine direction having a titer of from 60 to 80 tex. The resulting fabric is aesthetically pleasing in appearance, strong, yet lightweight. The fabric finds excellent applicability as a wall covering.Type: ApplicationFiled: January 22, 2003Publication date: October 7, 2004Inventors: Lennart J. Brandel, Per-Olof Georg Algotsson, Krister Draxo, Frank Johansson, Michaela Klaus, Andrej Kalinay
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Publication number: 20040198118Abstract: A fabric incorporating flattened filaments for use as a support fabric in producing a nonwoven product by a hydroentangling process, and a hydroentangling method employing such a fabric.Type: ApplicationFiled: December 8, 2003Publication date: October 7, 2004Inventors: Mark J. Levine, Christian B. Widen
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Publication number: 20040198119Abstract: The aim is to uniformly reinforce a matrix material and improve the resistance to centrifugal force.Type: ApplicationFiled: December 10, 2003Publication date: October 7, 2004Inventors: Kiyoyuki Narumi, Keiji Ueno, Shigeo Nagaya
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Patent number: 6794319Abstract: The present invention relates to an unbalanced twill weave fabric having fill yarns at least about three times larger than the warp yarns. Such a fabric thus has increased strength provided by the fill direction. The present invention further relates to an airbag restraint device for vehicles, where the airbag is constructed of the unbalanced twill weave fabric and has the fill yarns oriented substantially parallel to the longest direction of the airbag.Type: GrantFiled: August 12, 2003Date of Patent: September 21, 2004Assignee: Precision Fabrics Group, Inc.Inventors: Otis Bryce Rose, III, Ronald J. Small, Wilford Allen Leonard, Jr.
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Publication number: 20040180591Abstract: A belt reinforcing fabric for conveyor belts including sets of longitudinal warp yarns that are woven in leno weave fashion about lateral weft yarns that are made of monofilament. For each area on the fabric including sets of warp yarns, there is also an adjacent area that does not include warp yarns. Therefore, a space or gap is created between the areas occupied by the sets of warp yarns. When the belt is cut, it can be cut along the gap so that only the monofilament weft yarns are visible along the edges and not the warp yarns, which, if exposed at the cut edges, would tend to wick moisture into the belt. The present conveyor belt is particularly useful in conveying food items because of its tendency to reduce the opportunity to pick up and spread contaminating agents such as bacteria.Type: ApplicationFiled: March 13, 2003Publication date: September 16, 2004Inventor: Jules A. Haneburger
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Publication number: 20040176007Abstract: As subject of the present invention, a woven composite fabric, comprising metal elements and polymer elements is provided. The metal elements being metal wires, bundles of metal wires, metal strands or metal cords. According to the invention, the polymer elements are polymer tapes, having a substantially rectangular cross-section.Type: ApplicationFiled: March 11, 2004Publication date: September 9, 2004Applicant: N.V. BEKAERT S.A.Inventor: Geert Braekevelt
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Patent number: 6787491Abstract: As subject of the present invention, a woven composite fabric, comprising metal elements (51) and polymer elements (52) is provided. The metal elements (51) being metal wires, bundles of metal wires, metal strands or metal cords. According to the invention, the polymer elements (52) are polymer tapes, having a substantially rectangular cross-section.Type: GrantFiled: June 7, 2002Date of Patent: September 7, 2004Assignee: N.V. Bekaert S.A.Inventor: Geert Braekevelt
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Patent number: 6787488Abstract: An electrically conductive fabric plated with a metal is disclosed wherein a percent fabric surface occupancy of warp as a constituent of the fabric is 90% to 110% and that of weft is 40% to 80%. The electrically conductive fabric is superior in all of resin back leak preventing property, flexibility yarn fray preventing property, electrical conductivity and electromagnetic wave shieldability.Type: GrantFiled: March 27, 2001Date of Patent: September 7, 2004Assignee: Seiren Co., Ltd.Inventors: Susumu Takagi, Shigekazu Orita
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Patent number: 6780800Abstract: A single layer textile for manufacturing a construction material is obtained by weaving warps and wefts. Each of the warps are selected from a monofilament, a monofilament twine and a core line yarn having a core line of a monofilament, and a bundled yarn having small-diameter raw yarns bundled to form fine water sucking spaces between the raw yarns. The wefts contain both monofilaments and the bundled yarns.Type: GrantFiled: June 21, 2002Date of Patent: August 24, 2004Assignee: Nippon Filicon Co., Ltd.Inventor: Senri Itoh
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Publication number: 20040142142Abstract: Secondary carpet backings woven in a flat weave construction from warp tapes and multifilament picks with 50 to about 100% theoretical coverage in the warp but less than full effective coverage and average pick counts of 10 to 20 per inch impart dimensional stability and high peel strength in carpets incorporating the backings and facilitate robust drying rates in manufacture of carpets.Type: ApplicationFiled: November 6, 2003Publication date: July 22, 2004Inventors: Hugh C. Gardner, Thomas L. Baker, Barclay B. Payne, Carroll M. Yawn
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Publication number: 20040142143Abstract: A moulding material comprising a fibrous layer carrying resinous material to have at lest one area of relatively high resin content and at least one other area of relatively low resin content defined on a surface of the fibrous layer such that upon curing or partial curing resin from the said relatively high resin content area(s) moves over the relatively low resin content area(s) to provide a substantially even distribution of resin between the areas.Type: ApplicationFiled: March 8, 2004Publication date: July 22, 2004Inventors: Thomas Corden, Arshad Choudry, Mark Raymond Steele
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Patent number: 6764970Abstract: According to the invention the labels (22) are produced in a broad woven fabric (21) comprising ground warp yarn (4) and ground weft yarn (5) for a ground woven fabric (11), embroidery weft yarn (12) which forms a figure and code weft yarn (10) which forms a barcode, said yarn being distinguishable from the ground warp yarn only in a light outside the visible spectrum. In the broad woven fabric (21) several labels (22) are produced whose longitudinal sides (1) adjoin each other in the weft direction and remain unfolded and whose lateral sides (2) are adjacent to each other in the warp direction and can be folded. The embroidery weft yarn (12) and the code weft yarn (10) extend parallel to each other and at a distance from the longitudinal sides (1) so that the backs of the labels (22) are evenly covered and thus uniformly transparent.Type: GrantFiled: November 29, 2001Date of Patent: July 20, 2004Assignee: Textilma AGInventor: Christian Kuoni
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Publication number: 20040121684Abstract: A woven fabric structure for outdoor furniture use is provided. The woven fabric structure is a blended fabric containing a coated multifilament yarn and an elastomeric yarn that is resistant to water, ultraviolet, heat degradation or other significant outdoor exposure. The elastomeric yarn is provided in the fill direction and the coated multifilament yarn is provided in the warp direction. Additionally, the coated multifilament yarn can be combined with a yarn such as spun acrylic, polyester, nylon yarn, texturized filament yarns; or other uncoated filament yarns.Type: ApplicationFiled: December 24, 2002Publication date: June 24, 2004Applicant: PHIFER WIRE PRODUCTS, INC.Inventors: Steve Haun, Reese Brooks
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Publication number: 20040116020Abstract: A woven fabric having yarns which float, and fibers of the yarns which form connecting elements of the main bodies of yarns interlaced in the second direction of the fabric.Type: ApplicationFiled: December 13, 2002Publication date: June 17, 2004Inventors: William O. Boyd, John L. Tucker
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Publication number: 20040102116Abstract: Electrostatic dissipating fabrics incorporating spun yarns which include conductive staple fiber constituents incorporated within the spun yarns. The fabrics may be of either a woven or knit construction. The conductive fiber constituents are dispersed at an effective concentration to establish a network of charge carrying junctions within and between the individual yarns. The large number of junctions between the yarns facilitates the dissipation of static electricity between regions of a garment formed by the yarns. In particular, the fabric retains a high degree of conductivity across seams within the garment even after multiple washings.Type: ApplicationFiled: November 25, 2002Publication date: May 27, 2004Applicant: Milliken & CompanyInventor: Samuel M. Caudell
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Patent number: 6734125Abstract: A woven textile fabric is disclosed which is formed of synthetic yarns of at least two different deniers to which a solid polymeric film is laminated. An adhesive polymeric coating is provided for adhering the solid polymeric film to the woven textile fabric. The combination of yarns of different deniers provides a superior adhesion surface for the polymeric film. The yarns and the polymeric coating are preselected respectively in deniers and thicknesses so as to render the fabric substantially impermeable to fluid under pressure, while maintaining superb packageability and anti-blocking properties for use in vehicle occupant restraint systems. An air bag incorporating the woven textile fabric of the invention and having two outer surfaces and pre-configured air holding cavities woven therein to which a solid polymeric film is bonded for receiving and containing fluid under pressure for use in a vehicle air restraint system is also disclosed.Type: GrantFiled: August 30, 2002Date of Patent: May 11, 2004Assignee: Bradford Industries, Inc.Inventor: Manuel J. Veiga
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Publication number: 20040077242Abstract: The present invention provides a composite backing suitable for use in the manufacturing of carpeting, particularly tufted synthetic turf carpeting, or any other fabric product where dimensional stability in the presence of thermal or moisture gradients is desirable. The composite backing comprises reinforcement strands integrated into a woven backing fabric. The reinforcement strands may be laid in an open network structure needlepunched into a woven backing or may also be integrated into the woven backing by directly weaving the reinforcement strands into the woven backing as it is being fabricated. A synthetic turf product may be constructed by tufting the composite backing.Type: ApplicationFiled: October 16, 2002Publication date: April 22, 2004Inventor: Bruce W. Layman
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Publication number: 20040077236Abstract: The present invention provides a silicone coated fabric comprising a base woven fabric that is formed from a synthetic fiber weaving yarn that has a yarn size of from 100 to 270 dtex, and a weaving size expressed by a product calculated by multiplying the yarn size of a weaving yarn and a weave density (ends or picks/2.54 cm) of from 10,000 to 25,000 (dtex•ends (or picks)/2.54 cm) in both the warp direction and the weft direction, a silicone being applied to the woven fabric in an amount of from 5 to 25 g/m2, and having on one side a uniform silicone coating layer formeding part of the silicone mentioned above.Type: ApplicationFiled: October 9, 2002Publication date: April 22, 2004Inventors: Hideaki Ishii, Toshirou Nagaoka
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Patent number: 6720277Abstract: A protective fabric of high penetration resistance is formed from a plurality of layered, densely woven base fabrics, each formed by tightly weaving multifilament yarns to obtain a warp yarn “density” or “cover” in excess of 100% at the center of the fill yarn, and a fill yarn density or cover preferably also in excess of 75%. The yarns themselves preferably comprise a high modulus, high breaking strength yarn of materials such as Kevlar, Spectra, or Vectran. The resultant layered fabric offers especially high penetration resistance to weapons such as ice picks and the like. Additional resistance to penetration by sharp knives is provided by interruptedly coating the base fabric with an epoxy in such a manner as to inhibit penetration while providing drapability and breathability.Type: GrantFiled: April 9, 1999Date of Patent: April 13, 2004Assignee: Warwick Mills, Inc.Inventor: Charles A. Howland