Technical Field
[0001] The present invention relates to a knitting needle driving cam, which is mounted
on a carriage running along a needle bed and drives a knitting needle by guiding a
butt, which protrudes from a needle groove of the needle bed, and also relates to
a flatbed knitting machine.
Background Art
[0002] As is conventional, in a flatbed knitting machine, knitting needles are housed in
needle grooves line upped in parallel on a needle bed, hooks on the head end side
of the knitting needles are advanced and retreated relative to a needle bed gap formed
on the edge side of the needle bed and knitting is performed. The drive to advance
and to retreat knitting needles is done by a knitting needle driving cam mounted to
a bottom board on the bottom surface side of a carriage that reciprocates in the parallel
direction of the line upped needle grooves. The knitting needle driving cam is approximately
in the form of a plate, and a surface formed as if it is cut nearly perpendicularly
from a surface that faces the needle bed when the cam is mounted to the carriage becomes
a cam face. The cam face comes in contact with a butt protruding from the knitting
needle to the carriage side and drives the butt. In a cam layout plan that indicates
a layout of the knitting needle driving cam on the bottom plate of the carriage, the
cam face is shown as a profile line including a section tilting with respect to the
carriage running direction (see Patent Citation 1 and Patent Citation 2).
[0003] Fig. 6 simplifies Fig. 5 of Patent Citation 1 and shows one example of a knitting
needle 1 under the condition of being housed in a needle bed. The knitting needle
1 is a latch needle and a hook 3 on the head end of a needle body 2 is opened and
closed by a latch 4. To the tail end side of the needle body 2, a needle jack 5 is
linked. To one side of the needle body 2, a stitch transferring fin 6 is fixed. To
the needle jack 5, a knitting operation butt 7 is provided in the vicinity of the
intermediate of the whole, and a stitch transferring butt 8 is provided in the vicinity
of the head end. The needle jack 5 has an elastic leg between the knitting operation
butt 7 and the tail end, and the vicinity of the intermediate of the elastic leg is
pressed by a head end of a select jack 9, in the head end of which a selecting butt
10 is provided. On the back side of the selecting butt 10, the head end of a selector
11 comes in contact so as to press up the needle selecting butt to the right side
of Fig. 6. The selector 11 has a lowering butt 12 that lowers the needle selecting
butt to the left side of Fig.6 and the raising butt 13 that raises the needle selecting
butt to the right side, and has a needle selecting butt 14 at the intermediate. The
needle selecting butt 14 is assigned to one of a plurality of positions for each knitting
needle 1.
[0004] The knitting needle 1 is combined with the needle body 2, needle jack 5, select jack
9, and selector 11, and is supported on a needle bed 15 side. In the needle bed 15,
needle plates 17 are vertically arranged with predetermined intervals on a base plate
16, and the knitting needle 1 is housed in a needle groove 18 formed between needle
plates 17. The hook 3 on the head-end side of the knitting needle 1 advances to and
retreats from a needle bed gap 19 by slide-displacement in the lateral direction of
the drawing inside the needle groove 18 and pulls in the knitting yarn supplied on
the needle bed gap 19 into the needle bed 15 side and forms a stitch. In a flatbed
knitting machine with a pair of needle beds 15 provided on both of front and back
sides that hold the needle bed gap 19 in-between, various knitted fabrics are knitted
by the use of one or both needle beds 15 or stitch transfer for transferring stitches
between needle beds 15 is possible, too.
[0005] Incidentally, each needle bed 15 is tilted so as to be higher on the needle bed gap
19 side and so as to be lower on the side departing from the needle bed gap 19, but
for convenience of explanation, one needle bed 15 only is displayed in a horizontal
position. In addition, the moving directions of the knitting needle 1 are described
as follows: the right direction of Fig.6 in which the knitting needle 1 moves to the
needle bed gap 19 side as a rising direction, the left direction of Fig.6 in which
the knitting needle 1 departs away from the needle bed gap 19 as a lowering direction,
and the vertical direction of Fig.6 as a rise and a fall direction, respectively.
In addition, the needle plate 17 has a structure to house a sinker of a fixed type
or of a movable type on the needle bed gap 19 side, but the illustration is omitted.
[0006] Fig. 7 shows a schematic structure of a cam system 20 for driving the knitting needle
1 as shown in Fig. 6 to perform knitting operation and stitch transfer operation.
The cam system 20 is mounted, for example, in two sets, to a carriage that reciprocates
in the direction perpendicular to the paper surface along the needle bed 15 of Fig.
6. The cam system 20 of each set includes a transfer cam for both sending and receiving
21, a fixed needle raising cam 22, a movable needle raising cam 23, stitch cams 24,
a transfer guide cam 25, needle guide cams 26, selector guide cams for clearing 27,
raising selector guide cams 28, and selector raising cams 29. These cams are disposed
on the bottom board 30 of the carriage. The transfer cam for both sending and receiving
21 and the movable needle raising cam 23 have their protruding condition to be changed
over alternately so that when one achieves the condition of protruding from the surface
of the bottom board 30, the other achieves the condition of sinking into the bottom
board 30.
[0007] The cam system 20 disposed on the bottom board 30 includes an action unit for needle
selecting 31, such as needle selecting actuator, etc. The action unit for needle selecting
31 works on the needle selecting butt 14 of the selector 11 of Fig. 6. In the needle
selecting operation, action of the selector guide cam for clearing 27 with respect
to the lowering butt 12 of the selector 11, and operations of selector guide cam for
raising 28 and selector raising cam 29 with respect to the raising butt 13, are involved,
too. In the needle selecting operation, routes of the selecting butt 10 of the selector
jack 9 are changed over. To the route of the selecting butt 10, a presser 32 is disposed.
[0008] Patent Citation 2, etc. discloses flatbed knitting machines having a compound needle
that opens and closes a hook by a slider that slides with respect to the needle body
as a knitting needle instead of a latch needle. In knitting needles of a flatbed knitting
machine, irrespective of needle types, such as latch needles or compound needles,
the knitting needles advance to and retreat from the needle bed gap 19 by a cam to
guide the knitting butt 7 or the stitch transferring butt 8 provided on the needle
jack 5 linked to the needle body 2. When knitted stitches are formed such as knit,
the knitting butt 7 is guided in such a manner that the knitting butt 7 passes through
a groove cam 37 formed as a groove-form route whose top and bottom are held by the
movable needle raising cam 23 with its cam faces. For a sending needle at the time
of stitch transfer, the stitch transferring butt 8 is guided in such a manner that
the stitch transferring butt 8 passes through a groove cam 38 formed between the top
edge of the transfer cam for both sending and receiving 21 and the bottom edge of
the stitch transfer guide cam 25. The groove cams 37, 38 that guide a single butt
are formed in such a manner that the groove width is slightly wider than the width
of the knitting butt 7 or the stitch transferring butt 8. For a receiving needle at
the time of stitch transfer, the knitting butt 7 is guided in such a manner that the
top edge 39a formed inside the fixed needle raising cam 22 serves as a cam face and
pushes up the knitting butt 7, and the stitch transferring butt 8 is guided in such
a manner that the bottom edge 39b of the transfer cam for both sending and receiving
21 serves as a cam face and pushes down the stitch transferring butt 8. These cam
faces are wall faces formed as if they are cut by a sharp edge from the surface of
the plate-like member to the thickness direction, and they are indicated by profile
lines on the cam layout drawing. In a zone where the guiding route of the groove cam
is tilted with respect to the carriage running direction, a cam face on the lower
side mainly guides the butt when the butt is rising and a cam face on the upper side
mainly guides the butt when the butt lowering.
[0009] In addition, when the presser 32 presses the selecting butt 10 from upside of Fig.
6, the head end of the select jack 9 presses the needle jack 5 and sinks the knitting
butt 7 in the needle groove 18. Consequently, even if the knitting butt 7 is guided
by the groove cam 37, changing over to the route where the selecting butt 10 is pressed
by the presser 32 allows the knitting butt 7 to escape from the groove cam 37 and
enables change-over operations from the knit to the tuck and the like.
Patent Citation 1 : International Publication No. WO 07/074944 Pamphlet (Fig. 1 and Fig. 6)
Patent Citation 2 : Japanese Examined Patent Publication No. 2917146 (Fig. 1 and Fig. 33)
Disclosure of the Invention
Technical Problem
[0010] Since the knitting operation butt 7 and the stitch transferring butt 8 which are
guided by groove cams 37, 38 of Fig. 7 or the top edge 39a inside the fixed needle
raising cam 21 or the bottom edge 39b of the transfer cam for both sending and receiving
21 are subject to the operation from the cam face on one side, the force is applied
to the direction in which the butts are tilted. In addition, when the butts begin
to rise or begin to lower, the butts collide when the butts come in contact with the
cam faces from the condition in which the butts are separated from groove cams 37,
38 or cam faces of the top edge 39a or bottom edge 39b. Under these occasions of collision,
force is also applied to the direction in which butts are tilted. In order to increase
the productivity in a flatbed knitting machine, the knitting speed must be increased.
In particular, when knitting is performed at a high speed, the edge of the head end
of the cam face cuts into the falling butt, and a seizure may occur.
[0011] Even if the cam face is lubricated in order to prevent seizure, when a plurality
of butts pass through, the cam face runs short of oil and a seizure may result. Reducing
the cam face angle tilting with respect to the carriage running direction may be able
to reduce the force to tilt the butt and may be able to suppress seizure occurrence,
but the cam and the carriage are enlarging. When the carriage becomes large, the running
stroke necessary to knit the fabric of the same knitting width increases so that it
becomes a trouble that raises the productivity.
[0012] It is an object of the present invention to provide a knitting needle driving cam
and a flatbed knitting machine that can prevent seizure of a knitting needle to a
butt in a simple structure.
Technical Solution
[0013] The present invention relates to a knitting needle driving cam, which is used by
being mounted to a bottom board of a carriage reciprocating along a needle bed of
a flatbed knitting machine, is approximately plate-form, and has a cam face to come
in contact with a butt protruding from a knitting needle housed in a needle groove
of the needle bed, the knitting needle driving cam being formed as if it is cut into
a thickness direction from the plate-form surface,
wherein a zone, where the cam face tilts with respect to the carriage running direction
in such a manner that the cam drives a knitting needle to advance to and retreat from
the needle bed gap, includes a range with a corner edge of a cross-section removed
at a portion where the surface changes from the plate-form surface to the cam face.
[0014] In addition, in the present invention, said butt, with which said cam face comes
in contact, protrudes more than 2 mm from the top edge of the needle groove,
a clearance of 0.2mm is provided between the plate-form surface and the top edge of
the needle groove when the cam is mounted to said carriage, and
said range, in which the corner edge is removed, falls in a section of 0.2 to 0.4
mm away from the plate-form surface.
[0015] In addition, in the present invention, said edge is removed in a range in which the
angle of the cam face tilting with respect to the carriage running direction is not
less than 45 degrees.
[0016] Furthermore, the present invention relates to a flatbed knitting machine, comprising:
a knitting needle driving cam described in above; and
a carriage mounted with the cam.
Advantageous Effects
[0017] According to the present invention, a knitting needle driving cam is mounted to a
bottom board of a carriage reciprocating along the surface of a needle bed. To the
knitting needle driving cam, a cam face, which is driven by colliding with a butt
protruding from a knitting needle housed in a needle groove of the needle bed, is
formed as if it is cut into the thickness direction from the plate-form surface. Since
the zone where the cam face is formed includes a range with a corner edge of a portion
changing from the plate-shape surface to the cam face removed, even if the butt falls
during high-speed knitting, the head end of the cam face is difficult to be cut in.
In addition, a lubricant is easy to be held between the cam face and he butt. In this
way, the knitting needle driving cam of a flatbed knitting machine according to the
present invention can prevent seizure of a knitting needle to the butt in a simple
structure of removing the cam face edge.
[0018] In addition, according to the present invention, the butt, which comes in contact
with the cam face so as to be guided, protrudes more than 2 mm from the top edge of
the needle groove, a clearance of 0.2 mm is provided between the top edge of the needle
groove and the surface of the knitting needle driving cam, and the edge is removed
in a range from 0.2 to 0.4 mm away from the groove cam face. Since the range, in which
the edge removed on the cam face, remains on the root side of the butt protruding
from the top edge of the needle groove, a sufficient latching margin is able to be
secured without increasing the moment for the cam face to turn over the butt, with
which the cam face comes in contact.
[0019] In addition, according to the present invention, since the edge is removed in a range
in which the angle of the cam face tilting with respect to the carriage running direction
is not less than 45 degrees, seizure to the butt is able to be prevented even when
the butt driven by a steeply tilted cam face.
[0020] Furthermore, according to the present invention, it is possible to prevent seizure
of a knitting needle to a butt even when allowing a carriage run at a high speed,
so that productivity of knitting can be increased.
Brief Description of Drawings
[0021]
[Fig. 1] Fig. 1 is a simplified cross-sectional view showing a structure of a primary
portion of a cam member 40 according to one embodiment of the present invention.
[Fig. 2] Fig. 2 is a partial cam layout drawing showing a structure of a cam system
50 to which the concept of the cam member 40 of Fig. 1 is applied to a cam system
20 of Fig. 7.
[Fig. 3] Fig. 3 is a cross-sectional view schematically showing the effect of providing
a chamfering 45 to the side of a cam surface 42 of a cam wall face 43 of a groove
cam 41 of the cam member 40 of Fig. 1.
[Fig. 4] Fig. 4 is a cross-sectional view showing a structure to perform edge removal
at a portion where cam walls 73, 83 are cut from cam wall faces 72, 82 of other cam
members 70, 80 together with chamfering 45 at the cam member 40 of Fig. 1.
[Fig. 5] Fig. 5 is a cross-sectional view showing the effect of oil shortage prevention
by providing the chamfering 45 to the cam member 40 of Fig. 1 in comparison with a
conventional cam member 60 in which no chamfering is provided.
[Fig. 6] Fig. 6 is a side view showing a conventional structure of knitting needle
1.
[Fig. 7] Fig. 7 is a cam layout drawing showing a general struvture of a cam system
20 that drives the knitting needle 1 of Fig. 6 to perform knitting operation and stitch
transfer operation.
Explanation of Reference
[0022]
- 1
- Knitting needle
- 2
- Needle body
- 5
- Needle Jack
- 7
- Knitting operation butt
- 8
- Stitch transferring butt
- 15
- Needle bed
- 17
- Needle plate
- 18
- Needle groove
- 19
- Needle bed gap
- 40, 70, 80
- Cam member
- 41, 57, 58
- Groove cam
- 42
- Cam face
- 43
- Cam wall face
- 45, 51a, 53a, 53b, 55a, 75, 85
- Chamfering
- 46
- Knitting member
- 47
- Butt
- 50
- Cam system
- 51
- Transfer cam for both sending and receiving
- 51 b, 51 c, 52a, 57a, 57b, 58a, 58b
- Tilted section
- 52
- Fixed needle raising cam
- 53
- Movable needle raising cam
- 54
- Stitch cam
- 55
- Transfer guide cam
- 59a
- Top edge
- 50b
- Bottom edge
Best Mode for Carrying Out the Invention
[0023] Fig. 1 (a) and Fig. 1 (b) show a primary portion of the cam member 40, one of the
embodiments of the present invention, as a simplified cross-sectional structure. In
particular, Fig. 1 (a) shows a cross-sectional view taken from a cutting-plate line
a-a in Fig. 1 (b). Incidentally, in the following description, portions that correspond
to portions described in advance are given the same reference characters and redundant
description may be omitted.
[0024] The cam member 40 has a groove cam 41, for example, as in the case of the movable
needle raising cam 23 which is used for the cam system 20 of Fig. 7 and has the grove
cam 37. The cam member 40 has generally a plate-like form and is mounted to a bottom
board on the bottom side of a carriage of a flatbed knitting machine. When the cam
member 40 is mounted on the carriage, its cam surface 42 is opposed to the needle
bed 15 surface with a clearance S provided. The clearance S is, for example, 0.2 mm.
The groove cam 41 has the cam wall face 43 as the cam face, which is formed in the
thickness direction by cutting the cam member 40 perpendicularly from the cam surface
42. In the event that the groove cam 41 is formed in a single cam member, the groove
cam 41 has a cam bottom surface 44. The groove cam 41 is not limited to that provided
in the single cam member 40 but may be a groove cam 38 between the top edge of the
stitch transfer cam for both sending and receiving 21 and the bottom edge of the stitch
transfer guide cam 25 of Fig. 7, or a cam having the top edge 39a formed inside the
fixed needle raising cam 22 and the bottom edge 39b of the stitch transfer cam for
both sending and receiving 21 as cam wall faces 43. In such event, the bottom board
30 corresponds to the cam bottom surface 44. In the groove cam 41, the edge on the
cam surface 42 side of the cam wall face 43 is removed by providing chamfering 45
of a tilted surface that makes an angle of, for example, 45 degrees.
[0025] The edge removal by the chamfering 45 is performed in a range C which is 0.2 to 0.4
mm away from the cam surface 42 of the groove cam 41 in thickness direction of the
cam member 40. The groove cam 41 guides a butt 47 of a knitting member 46, such as
the needle jack 5 in Fig. 6. The knitting member 46 protrudes with a protrusion allowance
H from the top edge of the needle groove 18, which serves as the surface of the needle
bed 15, in the condition in which the knitting member 46 is floating inside the needle
groove 18. Incidentally, the top edge of the needle groove 18 should be formed by
the top edge of the needle plate 17. The protrusion allowance H is about 2 to 3 mm.
The range for removing the edge by the chamfering 45 on the cam wall face 43 which
serves as the cam face remains on the root side of the butt 47 protruding from the
top edge of the needle groove 18, and therefore, a sufficient latch margin is able
to be secured without increasing the moment at which the cam wall face 43 comes in
contact with the butt 47 to turn over it.
[0026] In Fig. 1, the carriage runs in the direction perpendicular to the paper surface
and the cam member 40, mounted to the carriage, also moves. In Fig. 1 (a), the cam
wall face 43 which serves as the cam face of the groove cam 41 is shown as if the
cam wall face 43 is parallel to the running direction and is not tilted, but in the
portion that drives the knitting member 46 to slide right and left of the figure in
the needle groove 18, that is, in the direction in which the knitting member 46 advances
and retreats with respect to the needle bed gap, the cam wall face 43 must be tilted
with respect to the running direction. Even if the cam wall face 43 shown in Fig.
1(a) is tilted with respect to the running direction, chamfering 48 is provided on
the cross-sectional side of the butt 47 and the portion that serves as an edge with
respect to the tilted cam face is removed so that the butt 47 is able to be guided
smoothly.
[0027] Fig. 2 shows a structure of a primary portion of a cam system 50 formed by applying
the concept of the groove cam 41 in the cam member 40 of Fig. 1 to the cam system
20 of Fig. 7. The Cam system 50 includes a stitch transfer cam for both sending and
receiving 51, a fixed needle raising cam 52, a movable needle raising cam 53, stitch
cams 54, a transfer guide cam 55, and needle guide cams 56. Other structure is same
as that of Fig. 7. In the stitch transfer cam for both sending and receiving 51, the
fixed needle raising cam 52, the movable needle raising cam 53, and the stitch transfer
guide cam 55, respective cam faces in the thickness direction perpendicular to the
surface are formed at the groove cams 57, 58, top edge 59a and bottom edge 59b which
correspond to the groove cams 37, 38, top edge 39a and bottom edge 39b. A carriage
to which the cam system 50 is mounted runs right and left of the figure, and therefore,
tilted cam faces used for driving a butt when the carriage is running in each of right
and left directions are disposed in a state of line symmetry. The cam faces including
the tilted section and continuing each other in a state of line symmetry, are removed
edges by forming chamfering 53a, 53b; 55a, 51 a same as the chamfering 45 as in the
case of the cam surface 42 side of the cam member 40 of Fig. 1. In addition, to the
top edge 59a inside the fixed needle raising cam 52 and the bottom edge 59b of the
stitch transfer cam for both sending and receiving 51, chamfering is provided to the
whole.
[0028] The cam faces on both sides of groove cams 57, 58 to which chamfering 53a, 53b; 55a,
51 a is provided must have the cam face working on the knitting operation butt 7 or
stitch transferring butt 8 changed over in accordance with the right and left running
directions of the carriage in the figure. Since the carriage is reciprocated, both
cam faces used for the round trip in the tilted section must be chamfered. For example,
the upper cam face of the groove 57 to which the chamfering 53a is provided includes
a tilted section 57a which makes an angle of about 53 degrees with respect to the
carriage running direction. The lower cam face of the groove 57 to which the chamfering
53b is provided includes a tilted section 57b which makes an angle of about 53 degrees
with respect to the carriage running direction. The cam faces on the upper side and
the lower side of the groove cam 58 to which chamfering 55a, 51a is provided include
tilted sections 58a, 58b, respectively, which make an angle of about 53 degrees with
respect to the running direction. Furthermore, the top edge 59a formed inside the
fixed needle raising cam 52 includes a tilted section 52a which makes an angle of
about 50 degrees with respect to the running direction, too. The bottom edge 59b of
the stitch transfer cam for both sending and receiving 51 which is chamfered all over
includes tilted sections 51 b, 51 c which make an angle of about 50 degrees and about
45 degrees respectively with respect to the running direction. By providing chamfering
at least to the tilted sections 57a, 57b, 58a, 58b, 52a, 51 b, 51 c which tilt no
less than 45 degrees with respect to these running directions, seizure can be prevented.
Even in a horizontal portion that connects these sections, continuous chamfering is
provided for the convenience of processing. Furthermore, to the tilted cam face which
pulls in the knitting needle by a stitch cam 54, a chamfering 54a same as the chamfering
54 of Fig. 1 is also provided and seizure can be prevented.
[0029] Guiding the knitting butt 7 by the groove cam 57 of the movable needle raising cam
53 in the protruded state draws a trajectory 7a between cam faces to which chamfering
53a, 53b is provided. Since the transfer cam for both sending and receiving 51 comes
into the sinking state, the stitch transferring butt 8 draws a trajectory 8a. This
kind of operation corresponds to the knit and the stitch cam 54 also guides the knitting
butt 7. Guiding the stitch transferring butt 8 by the groove cam 58 between the top
edge of the transfer cam both sending and receiving 51 under the protruded state and
the bottom edge of the stitch transfer guide cam 55 draws a trajectory 8b between
cam faces to which chamfering 55a, 51a is provided. The movable needle raising cam
53 enters the sinking state, and therefore, the knitting butt 7 draws a trajectory
7b. This kind of operation corresponds to the sending needle. The operation of the
receiving needle is performed in the combined sections, in one section the top edge
59a formed inside the fixed needle raising cam 52 is used as a cam face to guide the
knitting butt 7, and in the other section stitch transferring butt 8 is guided along
the bottom edge 59b of the transfer cam for both sending and receiving 51, so that
the knitting butt 7 and the stitch transferring butt 8 draw a trajectory 7c and a
trajectory 8c, respectively.
[0030] Fig. 3 schematically shows effects of providing a chamfering 45 to the cam surface
42 side of the cam wall face 43 of the groove cam 41 in the cam member 40 of Fig.
1. As shown on the left side of Fig. 3, when the cam wall face 43 comes in contact
with a butt 47 and guides it, the edge 45a of the contacted section is an obtuse angle
which is larger than 90 degrees, and therefore, even if the butt 47 slightly tilts
and slants, the butt 47 is made difficult to cut into the cam wall face. In a conventional
cam member 60, as shown in the right side of Fig. 3, a cam wall face 63 formed by
being cut from a cam face 62 of a groove cam 61 becomes a sharp edge 65 in which the
boundary with the cam face 62 makes an angle of about 90 degrees. The edge 65 is alleviated
by polishing such as barrel finishing, but is in the area polished sufficiently so
as to be smaller than 0.2 mm. In the cam member 40, providing a chamfering 45 to an
area not less than 0.2 mm makes it difficult to give damage such as a scratch to the
butt 47. Incidentally, by setting the upper limit of the chamfering 45 to 0.4 mm,
the position in which the edge 45a comes in contact with the butt 47 is able to be
kept not so much apart from the surface of the needle bed 17. This can prevent the
moment for overturning the butt 47 from being increased and can maintain the latch
margin that serves as a range practically works on the butt 47 as a cam.
[0031] Fig. 4 shows a cross-sectional structure of other chamfering that performs edge removal
at a portion where cam wall faces 73, 83 are cut from cam faces 72, 82 of cam members
70, 80 in the center drawing and in the right side drawing on equal terms with the
chamfering 45 in the cam member 40 shown on the left side drawing. In the cam member
70, the edge is removed by a chamfering 75 of a curved surface shape. The chamfering
75 of a curved surface shape is able to make it difficult to generate overcutting
at the contacting edge than, for example, the chamfering 45 of a tilted surface form
in the cam member 40 of Fig. 3. A chamfering 85 of the cam member 80 shown on the
right side of Fig. 4 is formed in a stepped form by combining a chamfering 86 of a
tilted surface same as the chamfering 45 of the cam member 40 with the intermediate
groove 87. The chamfering 85 provided with this kind of groove 87 increases particularly
a space for storing the lubricant, and is effective for preventing oil from running
out, which is discussed as follows.
[0032] Fig. 5 shows the effect of preventing oil from running out by providing the chamfering
45 to the cam member 40 in comparison with the conventional cam member 60 to which
no chamfering is provided. Chamfering 75, 85 of cam members 70, 80 of Fig. 4 basically
might have the similar effect, but in the following description, the effect is shown
by allowing the chamfering 45 of the cam member 40 to represent.
[0033] When the butt 47 is brought to slide in contact with and guided to the surface on
which an oil film 91 is formed by lubricating the cam face with a lubricant from a
lubricator 90 simplistically shown by an arrow mark, the oil film 91 is temporarily
removed at the portion which comes in contact with the butt 47. When the chamfering
45 is provided, the chamfering 45 serves as a space for storing the lubricant and
accumulated oil 92 is generated, and at least part of the oil film 91 removed from
the accumulated oil 92 is recovered, and therefore, it is assumed that the oil film
91 may be easy to be restored. As against this, when the oil film 91 is temporarily
removed in the cam member 60 with no chamfering, the oil film 91 is restored from
the lubricator 90 side only. Consequently, it takes time to restore the oil film 91
and when a plurality of butts 47 are continuously guided, seizure of the edge to the
butt 47 may occur. Furthermore, when the butt 47 is tilted as shown in Fig. 3, even
if the oil film 91 is temporarily removed by sliding in contact with the butt 47 in
the vicinity of the edge 45a of the cam member 40, the lubricant accumulates in the
vicinity of the chamfering 45 and the oil film 91 is likely to be recovered after
the butt 47 passes through.
[0034] As described above, by a simple structure to provide a chamfering 45 on the cam surface
42 side of the cam wall face 43 of the groove cam 41 that guides the butt 47 of the
knitting member 46, seizure can be prevented even when the knitting speed increased.
The cam face to which the chamfering 45 is provided must not always be both sides
of the groove cam 41, but may be only one side as in the case of the chamfering 51
b on the bottom edge side of the transfer cam for both sending and receiving 51 of
Fig. 2 or the chamfering 52a on the top edge side of the fixed needle raising cam
52. In addition, the chamfering 54a may be provided on the tilted cam face of the
stitch cam 54.