Automatic power flat knitting
241
The outside shoulder of the slide is designed to retain a loop whilst another loop
is inside the hook. Separate control of the two loops enables certain stitches to be
knitted that were previously impracticable.
The slide needle has a thinner hook and a larger inside hook area, thus provid-
ing space for thicker yarns. The thinner hook is made possible because the hook
does not receive the potentially damaging blows from a pivoting latch.
Shima
has
three needle/needle bed arrangements designated small, medium and large. Small
has fine needles and a small gap between the needle beds; medium has thicker
needles but the same gap between the beds; and large has the same needles as
medium but a larger gap between the beds.
In addition, there are four ranges of gauge based on
needle pitch
(the distance in
millimetres between two adjacent needles in the same bed). ‘3.6’ provides a gauge
range up to E 7, ‘2.1’ is the most popular giving a gauge range from E 6 to E 12,
‘1.8’ provides a range up to E 14, and ‘1.4’ provides the finest range up to E 18.
Three needle bed widths are available – 126 cm, 156 cm and 180 cm (50, 60 and
70 inches respectively). The short bed has 2 knitting cam systems; the other widths
have 3 or 4.
Contra sinkers
, moving in opposition to the needle movement, provide a knock-
over surface and reduce the needle movement. The resulting lower yarn tension
enables different sizes of loops to be drawn.
Above the V-bed are two horizontally-mounted beds containing ancillary ele-
ments. The upper front bed carries loop transfer jacks and is split into two sections
that can be racked outwards for widening and inwards for narrowing to take place
simultaneously at the selvedges, without the need for empty traverses and separate
left and right racking of the transfer jack bed.
The upper rear bed holds special loop pressers that press down on selected indi-
vidual loops in the front or back needle beds. With this arrangement it is possible
to press an inlay yarn behind a non-knitting needle.
Conventionally, yarn carriers are moved into position by the cam-carriage. After
a course of intarsia or integral knitting, the carriage must use an empty course to
move the yarn carrier out of the way in order to knit the next course. The
Shima
FIRST
machine has a motor-driven yarn carrier system that automatically ‘
kicks-
back
’ the yarn carrier into its field of knitting and out of the way of the carriage,
thus eliminating the need for empty traverses.
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