Resources Contact Us Home
Browse by: INVENTOR PATENT HOLDER PATENT NUMBER DATE
 
 
Athletic support fabric
RE32387 Athletic support fabric

Patent Drawings:
Inventor: Rogers
Date Issued: March 31, 1987
Application: 06/638,240
Filed: August 6, 1984
Inventors: Rogers; Jack S. (Spartanburg, SC)
Assignee: Milliken Research Corporation (Spartanburg, SC)
Primary Examiner: Bell; James J.
Assistant Examiner:
Attorney Or Agent: Marden; Earle R.Petry; H. William
U.S. Class: 428/343; 428/354; 428/356; 442/313; 442/319; 66/195
Field Of Search: 428/253; 428/254; 428/257; 428/284; 428/287; 428/343; 428/354; 428/356; 66/195
International Class:
U.S Patent Documents: 3279221; 3567565; 3649428; 3672187; 3769815; 4277527; 4285216; 4298645; 4304813; 4388364
Foreign Patent Documents: 68316
Other References: Bahlo, K. W., "New Fabrics Without Weaving", Modern Textiles Magazine, Nov. 1965, pp. 51-54..

Abstract: An athletic support fabric having a knit synthetic substrate with an adhesive coated on the face thereof. The substrate has a weft yarn inserted on the face and a non-woven web on the rear thereof, each being held in place by a chain stitch knitted therethrough.
Claim: I claim:

1. An athletic support fabric having a substrate comprising: a warp knit fabric having a face and a rear side, a plurality of rows of weft continuous filament weft yarn laid in on theface side of said knit fabric, a layer of non-woven fabric on the rear side of side of said knit fabric, a plurality of wales of a chain stitch spaced along the course direction of said fabric being knit through said non-woven fabric and holding saidnon-woven fabric and said weft yarn in position and a layer of rubber base adhesive coated to the face side of said fabric.

2. The fabric of claim 1 wherein said substrate is all synthetic yarn.

3. The fabric of claim 2 wherein said synthetic yarn is polyester.

4. The fabric of claim 1 wherein an additional warp yarn is laid in the wale direction of the rear side of said substrate fabric.

5. The fabric of claim 4 wherein said additional warp yarn is polyester.

6. The fabric of claim 4 wherein said additional warp is laid in a 0-0/2-2 stich.

7. The fabric of claim 6 wherein all of the yarns in said substrate fabric are synthetic.

8. The fabric of claim 7 wherein all of said yarns are polyester.
Description: This invention relates generally to a coating substrate fabric for use in an article such as an athletic tape and inparticular to a polyester filament fabric in which the interstices between the yarns therein are filled to provide supporting structure for an adhesive placed thereon.

Prior to this invention, it was difficult to provide a substrate fabric of low construction, i.e. few ends and picks, which would allow coating thereof without strike through of the adhesive material resulting in an uneven layer of adhesivematerial. This type of adhesive coated fabric is unacceptable for applications which require uniform adhesion and good tearability.

Therefore, it is an object of the invention to provide a unique substrate fabric which will provide uniform adhesion with little strike through when calendar coated.

Other objects and advantages of the invention will become readilyapparent as the specification proceeds to describe the invention with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:

FIG. 1 is a side schematic view of the machine to produce the new substrate fabric;

FIG. 2 is a blown up view of the operating mechanism of the knitting machine shown in FIG. 1;

FIG. 3 is a technical face or top view of the substrate fabric produced on the machines of FIGS. 1 and 2;

FIG. 4 is a technical rear or bottom view of the fabric shown in FIG. 3;

FIG. 5 is a schematic adhesive coating range for the novel substrate fabric;

FIG. 6 is a cross-section taken on line 6--6 of FIG. 3 showing the top of the substrate coated with a desired adhesive; and

FIG. 7 is a modification of the substrate shown in FIG. 4.

FIGS. 1 and 2 schematically represent a warp knit, weft inserting knitting machine 10 which is employed to provide the substrate fabric 12 shown in FIGS. 3 and 4. To this end,the knitting yarn 10 supplied from the warp beam 16 through the guide bars 18 of the machine 12 to the needles 20 is a 40 denier, 34 filament DuPont type 56 polyester. The lay-in filling yarn 22 supplied from side mounted creels (not shown) to therotating screw type member 23 is a 150 denier, 34 filament, DuPont type polyester yarn which extends across the wales of the fabric, Inserted over the fill lay-in yarn 22 is a polyester non-woven web sheet 30 of 15-18 grams/square yard. As shown in FIG.2, the polyester or rayon non-woven web 30 is supplied over the fill yarns 22 as the needles 20, guide bars 18 and sinker 31 co-act in conventional manner to knit the yarn 14 in a chain stitch to lock in the lay-in fill yarns 22 on the face or top sideof the substrate with the non-woven web 30 being located thereunder and taken up on roll 24. As shown in FIGS. 3, 4 and 6, the knit yarn 14 secures the fill yarn 22 in position to stitch through and lock the non-woven web material 30 in a fixed positionin the substrate.

As discussed briefly before, the non-woven web 30 allows the even distribution of a coating of a natural rubber latex compound adhesive for the purpose of making an adhesively coated athletic support tape fabric. The disclosed substrate fabricis particularly adapted for the production of an athletic tape fabric since the coating bridges the interstices between the knit warp yarns and the layed in fill yarns thereby providing even distribution without strike through of the adhesive coatingmaterial resulting in uniform adhesion of the adhesive material during calendar coating.

The adhesive coating 32 can be applied in any suitable manner as illustrated in FIG. 5 wherein the adhesive material 36 is calendar coated by calendar rolls 38 and 39 onto the face of the substrate 12 delivered from the roll 24. From thecalendar rolls 38 and 39 the coated fabric will normally be delivered to the take-up roll 44 by roll 46. FIG. 5 illustrates a single pass unit to obtain an adhesive coating on the top of the substrate so that the adhesive coating will be located facingtowards the interior of the roll to provide a non-sticky exterior. FIG. 5 is only illustrative since other coating systems such as (1) a doctor blade, or (2) knife over roll can be employed, if desired.

It can be seen that a substrate has been provided that has strength due to its construction, but also provides a structure which tends to alleviate strike through problems when the fabric is coated with an adhesive material. Also the use ofpolyester filament yarn allows the manufacture of a substrate which is strong and which can be produced at lower raw material cost resulting in cost savings to the coater as well as the ultimate customer of the coated material.

FIG. 7 is a rear view of a modified substrate material 47 in that a 40 denier, polyester warp yarn 48 is laid in using a 0-0/2-2 stitch to help prevent the transfer of the non-woven web material 30 to the adhesive of the tape after the tape isrolled up in completed form.

The invention provides an economical warp knitted, weft insertion fabric stitched through a light weight (15-18 gm/sq. yd.) non-woven web. The web provides the cover needed to prevent strike through of the adhesive during calendar coating. Thewarp stitching yarn adds strength to the web to allow for coating and strength for the end use as a compressive adhesive coated athletic tape. The filling yarn acts to receive the adhesive coating and, after coating, prevents slippage of the looped warpyarn laterally when the tape is torn. This prevents bunching of the warp yarns and make the tearing properties desirable. This stitch through weft insertion warp knit fabric must be coated on the side with the filling yarn on the surface to obtainadequate tearability. The warp yarn is stitched with an open chain stitch 12 courses/inch. Use of this polyester knit/stitching yarn gives good conformability to an irregular surface because of the elongation of the filament yarn and its spacing(18/inch) versus the low elongation of cotton spun yarns used in the high pick sheeting.

Although the preferred embodiments have been described in detail, it is contemplated that many changes may be made without departing from the scope or spirit of the invention and therefore, I desire to be limited only by the claims.

* * * * *
 
 
  Recently Added Patents
Electrical power contacts and connectors comprising same
Cancerous disease modifying antibodies
Thermostat with handicap access mode
Protective handwear
Geographic location determination including inspection of network address
Dynamically adjustable fold-mirror assembly for projection device
Vehicle wheel assembly with transition ring member
  Randomly Featured Patents
Apparatus for applying surgical clips
Methyl substituted oxobicyclo-4,4,0-decane derivatives, process for preparing same and organoleptic uses thereof
Key controlling system, key controlling apparatus, information encrypting apparatus, information decrypting apparatus and storage media for storing programs
Method to stabilize TDMAC heparin coating
Hydroponic cultivation apparatus and method
Methods to make bimorph MEMS devices
Variable gain differential amplifier circuit
Carboxylic acid amides and their derivatives
Storage system having a plurality of controllers
Canister for liquid medication and water