Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Lecture 13 Single Knit Machines (plain).

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Lecture 13 Single Knit Machines (plain)."— Presentation transcript:

1 Lecture 13 Single Knit Machines (plain)

2 Main Products Single Jersey Pique Locast Honey comb Pique fleece
Two thread fleece Feed stripes

3 Single Knit Machine Working
Single bed of needle Only cylinders Needles and sinkers High speed Wider width Most common Easy to handle

4 Double Knit Machines Cylinder and Dial Two bed of needles No sinker
Double side knitting

5 Sub types Interlock Rib Double jersey (interchangeable)

6 Interlock Highly flexible fabric Can adopt any body shape
Used for under garments Soft hand feel

7 Lecture 13 Knitting Accessories
Compressed air Lubricants Air conditioned Yarn storage Fabric Storage

8 Compressed Air For Cleaning Oiling Fluff removing

9 Parameters of Compressed Air
Cool Dry Required pressure Required quantity

10 Sources Compressors Piston based Screw Base

11 Cooling Process Refrigerator technology Cooling towers
Best is refrigerator technology

12 Lubricants Main purpose is lubrication to reduce friction between parts of machines, particular between needles and cams

13 Parameters of Lubricants
High lubrication Easy wash during wet processing No smell No stain Normally called white oil Supplied by all big companies Some chemical manufacturers add some auxiliaries in it

14 Air Conditioning of the hall
Main objectives: Low temperature to keep machines cool Control of fluff Healthy environment Strength consistency of yarn Smooth running of machines Less wear and tear of machine High speed of machines Less breakage of needle and sinkers

15 Storage To avoid mixing Better look after
Less wastage in transportation Easy to locate Controlled inventory

16 Lect 14 Knitting Calculations

17 Lecture 15 Fleece Fabric A fabric made by sheep wool, soft warm
A fabric soft , warm bulky Generally used to: Protection from cold Sweat absorption (sweat shirt) Baby clothes

18 Fleece --- A fabric knitted with two types of yarn. Fine yarn is on front side and course yarn on back side. In most of cases fine yarn is 100% cotton while course yarn is P/C 50:50 Normal combination and fiber ratio: 30/16, 20/10, 26/12 etc PC/C, C/PC

19 Types of Fleece Two thread fleece Three Thread Fleece

20 Two thread Fleece Very rare
Was popular when three thread fleece were not common Generally not liked due to impassion of course yarn on front side Low quality product

21 Conti--- Made on single jersey machines
Maximum medium weight, since very course yarn difficult to use Long loop is difficult

22 Cam Arrangement On Fleece fabric.docthree needle track machine:

23 CHARACTERISTICS OF TWO THEAD FLEECE
Light to medium weight Double impact on front side, particularly in case of different fibers No good brushing possible due to short length of loop

24 Three Thread Fleece Made on fleece machines
High grammage is possible( 500 GSM) High brushing due to long loop on back side Maximum course yarn is possible ( up to 10 count) on back side Very common in use Fleece machine guage is 16 or 18

25 Yarn C/PC PC/C 30/16, 22/12/ 20/10

26 Cam Arrangement

27 Fiber Percentage Calculation Method Example: Front yarn 30s
100% cotton Back yarn 16 s 50:50 P/C Consumption ratio Front Two kgs Back one kg

28 Conti--- Total consumption three kgs Calculation:
front yarn 2 kgs 100 % cotton Back yarn 1 kg ( ½ Kg polyester and ½ kg cotton Total Cotton consumed =2.5 Kgs Total polyester consumed ½ kg Ratio: cotton= 2.5/3*100= 83.33% Polyester= 0.53*100=16.66% Such ratio is normally called 80:20 Fleece

29 Main characteristics of Three Thread Fleece
Highly absorbent High weight is possible Can use entirely different yarn on both sides( even dyed yarn) Pattern is possible ( diagonal stripes etc) Very common in use

30 Fleece problems and their remedies
Uneven loop – control yarn supply Loop stretch– control cam tension Needle line on front side Wales thickness variation on front side due to fluff contamination between the needles, needs regular cleaning, more cleaning is required due to course yarn

31 C-- Poor brushing–due to high TPI yarn– use low TPI
Dyeing variation due to different percentage of yarn… calculate exact % by using Skelton test Steak problem after dyeing due to heavy weight fabric--- use anti creasing agents in dyeing

32 C--- High shrinkage --- use compactor or tumble dryers

33 Other types of fleece Sherpa fleece --- brushed and washed to get balls Polar fleece ---- loops on both sides also brushed on both side

34 Loop knits Terry fabric to knitted terry towel

35 Good luck, May Almighty bless you

36 Knitting Costing Objectives of the session:
To make participants familiar with the basic terms of costing To create an understanding about the costing methods To develop a skill to do costing in a Knitting department

37 Basic Cost Terms and Concepts
Different Costs for Different Purposes Fixed and Variable cost Cost Drivers Direct and Indirect Cost Controlled and Uncontrolled cost Direct material Direct Labour

38 Continue… Manufacturing Overhead Indirect material Indirect labour
Other Manufacturing Cost Service department Overtime Premium Idle Time Conversion Cost

39 Cost Flow in a Manufacturing Company
Direct Material Direct Labour Manufacturing Overhead

40 Economic Characteristics of Cost
Opportunity Cost Out of Pocket Cost Sunk Cost Differential Cost Incremental Cost Margin Cost Average Cost

41 Cost and Benefit Information

42 Job Oriented Cost System
Product Costing

43 Types of Product Costing
Job-Order Costing System Process Costing System

44 Activity Based Costing (ABC)
Stage One Overhead Costs are assigned to activities Overhead Cost are assigned to production job

45 Knitting Cost Process Cost Job-Order Cost

46 Process Cost Material Labour

47 Material Direct Yarn Lubricants Machine Accessories Needles Energy

48 Continue… Indirect Engineering Department Other Service department

49 Labour Direct labour Worker Technical people Managers Accounts

50 Indirect labour Marketing people Accounts People Finance People Others

51 Overhead Administration Financial Cost Marketing Cost

52 Knitting Department Costing is based on Process and as well as on Job Order Process Based Costing Knitting is main process

53 Continue… Material Main Cost is of yarn Yarn Consumption Yarn wastages
Yarn Running Properties Yarn Package sizes

54 Continue… Other material Machine Accessories
Needle s--- Breakage depends upon yarn quality Lubrication depends upon yarn quality

55 Labour Different Production for Different yarn and fabric qualities
Different production for different customers Different Production in different seasons Requirement of number of workers is different

56 One Practical Example Labour Cost Department of 20 machines Staff
One Knitting Manager and one assistant along with three shift in charges Three Shift production 5000 kgs per day @ 145 per kg

57 Continue… Salary Bill KM 30000 Assistant 15000 Shift In charges 30000
Labour Other Staff Total

58 Material Consumption Yarn 5600 Kgs Yarn price 125 per kg
Needles 100 per day Needles per six month Sinker per six month Machine oil 10 kg per day Parts 200,000 per annum

59 Prices Needles Rs. 35 per needle Sinker Rs. 20 per needle Oil Rs 120 per kg Machine Price Rs. 2.5 million per machine Depreciation 10 % straight Financial cost 7.5 % per annum Total project cost 85 Million

60 Calculate: Cost per kg with the current data Fixed and variable cost
Break Even point in Rs and in Kgs Project pay back period BE( pcs) F/P-V BE $ F/1-V/P

61 Time Cost Concept Per hour factory cost Per month factory cost

62 Cost improvement strategy
Minimum fixed cost Less wastage High efficiency Low idle time Maximum utilisation of machines

63 Role of Knitting in Dimensional stability of Knitted Fabrics
Resistance to change in area

64 May be negative or positive
Change in the Area May be negative or positive

65 Textile Raw Material Spinning Knitting Wet Processing Stitching
Reason: Textile Raw Material Spinning Knitting Wet Processing Stitching

66 Change Wanted? Unwanted? Wanted in case of bandages
Some time in fitted garments Unwanted in case of garments

67 Can We Have Zero Shrinkage Garments
Yes…but with many ifs and buts Normally Cannot Have to live with tolerance

68 Tolerance Limits: Depends upon: Textile raw material Yarn Count
Knitting Structure

69 Mechanisms of Shrinkage
Swelling of fibers If there is no swelling then there is no shrinkage ??????? Elongation of fibers No elongation no shrinkage????? Recoverable Elongation High Recoverable Elongation no shrinkage ?????

70 Shrinkage Concept needs some clarification
--- due to swelling--- needs more lengthy path to travel ---kept in stretched form ---needs to be in natural form ---kept in pressed form ---needs to be in natural form

71 Other Factors--- ---space between loops and wales to move
---high tension during feeding --- residual energy ---mixture of fine and course yarns

72 How knitting department can help in shrink controlling?
Yarn Twist Yarn Tension Knitting structure--- is not in the control of knitter, it depends upon designer Proper combination of yarn count and machine guage Uniform yarn feeder tension Uniform and appropriate fabric take up tension

73 Total Productivity Management
What is productivity? Doing more with less Productivity is an approach, a mindset, and a way of thinking to do more with less

74 Why productivity? Increase output increase productivity
 Profit and productivity are synonymous Cutting cost improve productivity Profit today and tomorrow are possible Partial productivity improvement is worthwhile Productivity only applies to production

75 When Productivity? v    High competition, survival is based upon the right balance between price quality and delivery v    Manufacturing industry has been redistributed to include the third world. v    The economic and social well being of people, and in turn the peace of the world, depends organisation of all kinds making effective use of the limited resources. v    There is a huge need of funds for education, health and other services. It is the duty of the business organisations to mange their productivity more effectively to fulfil these needs. The undesirable effects of inflation can be reduced by the efficient production

76 Conti… Productivity becomes a crucial issue when there is a scarcity of resources.

77 TPM and Knitting Resource utilization Minimum wastage Maximum output
Invention in methods Controlling and preventions Improve contributing factors

78 Inputs in knitting Yarn Machines Machine spare parts
Machine accessories Labour hours Financial cost Department per hour cost

79 Outputs: Knitted fabric Revenue from knitted fabric Profit= Rev-cost

80 TMP CYCLE Measure Evaluate Plan Implement

81 How it is measured? Documentation Calculation Monitoring

82 How it is evaluated? Compare With? Competitors Industry Sellers claims
Previous records

83 How to plan it? SWOT analysis Trend analysis By regression analysis
Think new ways Involve every one Group responsibility Incentives Celebrate the minor success plot on graphs

84 Implement? With full confidence of positive results

85 Achievements High production Low knitting faults
Low consumption of accessories Low wear and tear cost Less down time In time deliveries more profit More employment

86 Benefits of High productivity
Only one way of survival

87 Quality control in knitting

88 Before Knitting Yarn Machine Needles Sinkers Oil

89 Yarn Before knitting Count Weight Winding Cone shapes Packing

90 After Making samples Yarn variation Patta (Barrenness)
Thick and thin places Dead cotton Knots Strength Cotton color

91 Machine Gauge Working condition Automation Safety measures Spare parts

92 Needles and sinkers Quantity Quality Spare Working conditions

93 Quality of knitted fabric
Knitting is a irreversible phenomenon Checking can only intimate and no repair is possible Only it can help in prevention

94 Checking Method 100% checking of knitted fabric Report is made
Report is presented to managers Action is taken Pass fail decisions are made

95 Point system Four point system is used, which is not useful
Rather checking should be on number of faults Strong coordination is required between quality and production people


Download ppt "Lecture 13 Single Knit Machines (plain)."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google