Power loom

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Image:Finlayson & Co - Plevna 1877.jpg
Some of the 1200 power looms at the Plevna factory building, completed in 1877 , at the Finlayson & Co cotton mills in Tampere, Finland

The power loom was designed in 1784 by Edmund Cartwright and first built in 1785 . When it was first built, it wasn't the best loom on the market and needed additional development. Eventually, William Horrocks would perfect the power loom. It was a mechanized loom that was driven by driving shafts. By 1850, Cartwright's designs were in full effect in England, with over 250,000 machines in use.

It was one of the key inventions of the Industrial Revolution, though it did not achieve its full potential for another 25 years after its invention. It was initially limited by its reliance on water power, which required workshops equipped with power looms to be located near a source of running water. By the start of the 19th century, however, the advanced steam engines of James Watt and others enabled the use of power looms anywhere that steam power could be installed. Cartwright himself profited greatly from this, selling hundreds of his looms to Manchester firms. The power loom allowed large amounts of cloth to be made in a shorter time than a human could do it. The first use of power looms in the woolen industry of America were at Uxbridge, Massachusetts,[1] in the Blackstone Valley, where Samuel Slater had established the first American Cotton Mill in 1793 at Pawtucket, Rhode Island. The power looms begun at Uxbridge were made by a Cumberland, Rhode Island Machine Shop, and were the first ever constructed in America.[1]

Originally, power looms were shuttle-operated but in the early part of the 20th century the faster and more efficient shuttleless loom came into use. Today, advances in technology have produced a variety of looms designed to maximize production for specific types of material. The most common of these are air-jet looms and water-jet looms. Computer-driven looms are now also available to individual home (non-factory) weavers. Industrial looms can weave at speeds of six rows per second and faster. After the flying shuttle the power loom was a common product in most factories.

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[edit] References

  1. ^ a b [http://www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc/mhcpdf/Town%20reports/Cent-Mass/uxb.pdf ”MHC Reconnaissance Survey Town Report: Uxbridge; Report Date: 1984 Associated Regional Report: Central Massachusetts;”]. Massachusetts Historical Commission; (1984). Retrieved on 2007-11-20.
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