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Ready to unload |
You may remember that last year we able to acquire the huge
loom built by the late Dennis Weston, back in the late '90s. It is so big that as it
stands it will not pass through a standard doorway in any orientation. In fact,
as it stands, it will not fit in Sue’s Volvo estate!
The loom has not been run in more than a dozen years so the
first thing to do was to turn it over manually, identifying tight points
and remedying any timing issues. After several attempts of trying to understand
how it should work we finally got it to turn over and fire the huge shuttle at
the correct time.
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The original motor and drive band |
Now it is time to decide exactly what we are going to do
with it! Over the past few months we have considered all sorts of options
including a complete rebuild. Until now the favourite option was to build a
clone of the frame and rebuild all the working parts from the original into
that. The idea being we could get each mechanism to work independently of the
rest and re-assemble the entire loom in a new frame. Although this method
seemed to make sense from a practical point of view, it would mean that the
finished loom would be largely a copy of the original.
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Trial motor - works fine! |
Today we had another session of loom restoration and cured the last of the
timing issues. The final problem to address was how to power it. The motor
fitted to the loom is an ex-sewing machine, mains voltage motor. The drive band
has seen better days and was slipping. We could find another belt but we
decided to replace the huge Singer motor with a modern, low voltage motor.
First attempts are encouraging. A single 12V DC motor drives the whole
mechanism with ease even though there is still some stiffness in places
probably due to a build up of fluff, solidified grease and oil.
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The huge shuttle |
The loom now runs, throws the huge shuttle through the warp
without catching, selects the heald frames correctly and maintains tension in
the warp threads. The trouble is I have just noticed that woven cloth is being
pulled back onto the tensioning roller. A bit of undoing of grub screws
released the tension and the cloth was pulled back allowing the warp to go
slack. Now all we have to do is to rewind the thread back onto spools – all 120
of ‘em!
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The shuttle on its way |
Once we have sorted all that out, it will be a case of smoothing out all the
stiff bits and load the shuttle with the weft so that we can start weaving…
Ralph.
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