Operating Draper Looms
                                                    and Other Textile Machinery

                                                              by Mike Cyr

              

I found your comments about not knowing a lot about Draper Products interesting. We all grew up the fact that Draper’s was the “Worlds Largest Producer of Automatic Looms."  It’s amazing how much impact  As a kid who had not intention of working at “The Shop," I had no clue of what the textile industry and textile machines were about. I do remember working on a Textile Merit Badge back in 1968. I think Eldon Biggs was the merit badge counselor. And I remember I was at his house when the news that Martin Luther King had been shot.

My exposure to Looms and other Textile Machinery actually came four years later.  I was able to get a job with a large Textile Company named Albany Felt Company. I worked there for a few years and then after an extended lay off got a job with a similar company called Huyck (pronounced Hike) Felt Company. Between the two companies, I got a REAL education in textile manufacturing and the machines used to produce various fabrics and yarns.

At Albany Felt, my first position was “Wool Sorter and Blender”. In addition to that job, I also was a Roving Carding Machine Operator, a Weaver, a Web Card Operator and Needle Loom Operator.

I soon learned first hand that getting to that finished woven and non-woven products involved many steps that, involved the Machinery produced by many companies from Massachusetts. These Included Draper Looms.

The process starts with making the Threads or Yarn as it’s called in the textile industry.

For my job as a blender, I would mix batches of wool and synthetic (nylon- rayon-dacron) and processed it through a machine that blew the wool through tubes to the Card Room. I would also bale mixtures for other uses.

In the Card Room they processed my wool blends into “roving” a very weak and fluffy “yarn” – The machines? Davis & Furber Carding Machines made in North Andover. From there the yarn was put on spools and sent the spinning department where several ply of the yarn would be sent through spinning rings and put on to bobbins. The “Spinning Frame”? Made by Whitin Machine works! Now at this point the threads were sent to “Rewinding” which was prepping for the Weaving Dept.

You may recall in General Draper’s book how patent law suites were the Bain of his career. I think I remember one that involved Spinning Rings and how fast there’s could spin without a vibration. Every Department had it’s own sound. When you walked through the spinning department it was like the whoosh of the wind. The yarn was being taken for individual weak yarns into strong multi-ply “threads."

Some of the threads (actually still called yarn) was either put on to small bobbins or were wound like you would wind rope around your elbow and thumb/index finger area of your hand. These two types of rewind were for the 2 different types of Shuttles that were used in the weave room these were referred to as “Filling Yarns."

The other rewind was putting the yarn on to the “Beam." This would become the “Warp” Yarn. It was therefore called the Warp Beam. Some of these terms may sound familiar and when we get to the weaving room will become clear.

From Rewinding Dept the yarn was steamed. This was to relax the yarn so it would not produce knots during the weave. Now the Yarn either on the Beam or on Bobbins was sent to the Weave Room.

Now I did mention that both these companies had the word “Felt” in their name. We were not making the Felt most people know – like hats or pool tables or the stuff on the base of your lamps. That’s a “Pressed” Felt - - at both plants, the main business was manufacturing custom made “Papermakers” Felts (and this is a fascinating procedure).

Albany Felt specialized in “Dryer” Felts while Huyck specialized in “Pickup” Felts. But both companies would make both. Huyck Felt had another product line making the green & gray fuzzy Tennis Ball Covers – That will be where Diamond D will come in to my story.

Down in the Weave Room, the “Beams” arrived – these were large round metal tubes that had gears on either end and depending on the size there might be one in the middle. The beam with very long and continuous yarn is installed onto the back of the loom.  The process of setting the loom up in itself was fascinating.

This is where a team of ladies jump into the framework of the loom. What an amazing bunch of women. Their job was to draw the yarn from the beam through the eyelets of the heddle. The heddle has a wooden frame with thousands of thin wires with eyelets. The frames are suspended by leather straps that are hitched cables going through pulleys on the top of the loom’s frame. The cables were attached to cams. The cams would raise and lower the heddles in certain orders and would ultimately determine the actual weaving pattern. Now depending on the design of the weave there could be anywhere from 2-6 heddles. Now the ladies worked in pairs. One would have a crochet hook and put the hook through the eyelet and the other would loop the yarn around the hook. The lady with the hook would pull or “draw” the yarn through the eyelet and that’s how they got their job description of “Drawing In." They couldn’t cross any of the yarn. So you can imagine how complex a job this could be. And they worked lightning fast. The final step for the Drawing In phase was to draw the yarn through a “Reed." The Reed is a piece of the Loom that looks basically like teeth of comb framed on all sides.

Next was the guy called the Warp Dresser. His job was to finish setting the loom up and making it ready for the Weaver. This step involved changing cams for the heddles, and gears on the warp beam and adjusting the tension of the “Take-up” roll. Where the warp beam was on the back with individual yarns being fed into the loom, the Take-up roll was the same type of roll, but it was on the front of the loom and was rolling up the woven fabric. Once the loom was set up, the “Filling” Yarn would be delivered to the loom in large canvas baskets like at the Post Office. These would be used by the weaver to fill the “Shuttle." Once the machine was set up and a few feet of fabric was woven, then the process was turned over to the Weaver.

As I had mentioned earlier, the primary process was the making of Papermaker’s Felt. Now this fabric is custom designed to fit onto a machine in a papermill. It’s job it to either Pick up Pulp or Dry (or wring out the water from pulp) and finish the paper. As such we were weaving huge pieces of fabric. The felt could be 25’ wide and Hundreds of feet long. We are not talking tee shirt weaving here.

So it was not a little Draper Loom I was operating. The manufacturer of these very long looms was Crompton and Knolles out of Worcester.

As a Weaver, it was my job to run any where from 2-4 Looms and make sure the shuttles did not run out of yarn. Now the shuttle is like a double pointed torpedo. The center is hollow and depending on the design, it would have a small metal rod which a bobbin would slide over. If completely hollow, then that yarn that I described as being wound like a rope around your elbow & hand was used.

The shuttles are shot back and forth over a “shuttle runway” on either end of the runway were two “shuttle boxes” that would catch and shoot the shuttles. So now all in unison the Heddles are moving up and down to arrange the Warp Yarns in different up & down patterns, making a small canopy for the shuttle to transverse back and forth with Filling Yarn and the Reed moves forward and back pushing the filling yarn into the last filling yarn.

I was required to keep the machines running by anticipating when a shuttle would run out of yarn. The trip switch was an electric eye. The shuttles had a little reflective dot in them. When the yarn ran low, the loom would shut down. In addition to reloading the shuttles, I had to inspect the weave & make sure there were no machine malfunctions.

When my weave was done, it would go to Burling & Joining where defects were repaired and the fabric was joined into one continuous “Belt." This was done by a roomful of Ukrainian women who were extremely talented with a crochet hook.

From there it went to the Needle Room which had yet different Looms called you guessed it, “Needle Looms." These Looms were monsters! All of these machines were manufactured in Germany.

There was a bottom metal “Bed Plate” with holes and a top plate called a “Needle Board” with needles made by The Torrington Needle Co in Torrington, CT. There are three basic types of needle looms. They are: 1) The Felting Loom 2) The Structuring Loom and 3) The Random Velour Loom.

At this juncture for Felting, the woven base fabric is installed on the loom between the Bed Plate and Needle Board. A light fluffy web fabric will be placed on to of the woven base. The fabric is then run through the needle loom while the needle boards go up & down needling or punching the web into the base fabric. Once finished here, it was trimmed, washed and shipped.

It was at Huyck Felt that Hopedale History and I met. I was assigned to a special weave room that was not making papermaker felts but tennis ball covers. For this the monster looms were not required.

This weaving was quite different than that for the felts. In the Felt Manufacturing, each Felt was a customized order worth several thousands of dollars in 1970’s Dollars. The further along the process you were, the more costly the mistake. So while the work pace was brisk, quality and zero mistakes were the order of the day.

In tennis ball cover department, we had about 100 small, automatic looms. About 2/3’s were Draper looms while the other 1/3 were Crompton & Knolles. Instead of 2-4 Looms I had 10-15 and just kept loading the bobbin drums. And kept those Diamond “D’s” running. We didn’t need to worry that much about short term mistakes in the weave since the area of a tennis ball was not that big.

Sometimes I have to smile about how ironic it is that my family made a living making Draper Looms and I grew up to make a living running them. Maybe I'm the only person from Hopedale to run them in a full production environment.

Alas, just like Draper’s both Huyck and Albany Felt are gone. Outside of some Carpet Mills in GA & SC, all of the Textile Industry is gone as are the Textile Machine Companies and the Steel Mills. Soon the Car Companies…. About the only thing we make in American now are excuses.

P.S
Here’s a little I found about Albany Felt – Now Albany International.
http://ww3.albint.com/about/Pages/history.aspx

Couldn’t find a good Huyck Felt link. But an interesting piece of trivia. They had a mill in Aliceville, AL which was a big German POW camp during WWII.

               
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