Bark Removal in Textile Processing

C.L. Simpson and C.K. Bragg


 
ABSTRACT

Typical cottons grown in the Texas High Plains and harvested commercially with brush strippers were used to determine if bark particles, sometimes present in stripped cottons, can be removed more effectively by modern textile mill cleaning equipment than by typical mill cleaning equipment. End breakage in spinning was recorded to allow for comparison of processing efficiency of the two cleaning systems. Yarn was visually examined at each break to determine if it was caused by bark.



Reprinted from 1990 Proceedings: Beltwide Cotton Production Research Conferences pp. 568 - 570
©National Cotton Council, Memphis TN

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Document last modified Sunday, Dec 6 1998