Wheel

What is a double drive spinning wheel?


Double drive spinning wheels Double drive wheels have one drive band wound around twice, or two drive bands: Both the flyer and the bobbin are spun by the band, using whorls (pulleys). The whorl size can be changed to adjust the speed of the flyer and bobbin.

What is the difference between a single and double drive spinning wheel?

The wheel drives the bobbin and the brake is on the flyer. Double drive wheels also use one drive band but it goes around the wheel twice (you make a double loop of the drive band to do this).

What does double drive mean?

Another common drive system is called “double drive.” In double drive, a single long string is looped twice around the drive wheel; one of the loops goes around a whorl on the flyer, and one of them goes around a smaller whorl on the bobbin.

What does double drive mean?

Another common drive system is called “double drive.” In double drive, a single long string is looped twice around the drive wheel; one of the loops goes around a whorl on the flyer, and one of them goes around a smaller whorl on the bobbin.

What is the advantage of a double drive spinning wheel?

Double drive spinning wheels Smaller whorls mean faster spinning (see “ratios” section below). For double drive, the bobbin spins faster (has a smaller whorl) than the flyer to take up yarn.

What is Irish tension on a spinning wheel?

Irish tension is a single-drive tension system often referred to as bobbin lead. “Bobbin lead” means that the bobbin turns faster than the flyer as the yarn winds on. The drive band wraps around the drive wheel and the bobbin with its built-in whorl, rotating the bobbin.

What is double drive time California?

The Double Drive Time Law (DDT), passed by the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC), requires California based moving companies to double the amount of time it takes to get from the origin point to the destination point at the agreed upon hourly rate.

What is the modern spinning wheel?

Most modern wheels make use of a flyer-and-bobbin system which twists the yarn and winds it onto a reel simultaneously. These wheels can be of single or double-treadle; which is a matter of liking and does not affect the operation of the wheel. The flax wheel is a good illustration of a double drive wheel.

What do spinning wheel ratios mean?

Ratios are expressed as a pair of numbers, such as 5:1 and 10:1. This means that for every 1 revolution of the large drive wheel, the flyer or bobbin turns 5 or 10 times, respectively. The higher the first number is, the more revolutions the flyer takes for each turn of the drive wheel.

What is the difference between Scotch tension and Irish tension?

Scotch Tension has the drive belt on the flyer, and a tension band on the bobbin makes the bobbin spin slower than the flyer which adds twist. Irish Tension has the drive belt on the bobbin, and a tension band on the flyer makes the flyer spin slower than the bobbin which adds twist.

What is Irish tension on a spinning wheel?

Irish tension is a single-drive tension system often referred to as bobbin lead. “Bobbin lead” means that the bobbin turns faster than the flyer as the yarn winds on. The drive band wraps around the drive wheel and the bobbin with its built-in whorl, rotating the bobbin.

What does double drive mean?

Another common drive system is called “double drive.” In double drive, a single long string is looped twice around the drive wheel; one of the loops goes around a whorl on the flyer, and one of them goes around a smaller whorl on the bobbin.

What is the fastest spinning wheel?

Scientists have created a microscopic sphere and set it awhirl at a blistering 600 million rotations per minute. The sphere, which rotates 500,000 times faster than the average washing machine, is the fastest-spinning object ever made.

What is the difference between Irish and Scotch tension?

Scotch Tension has the drive belt on the flyer, and a tension band on the bobbin makes the bobbin spin slower than the flyer which adds twist. Irish Tension has the drive belt on the bobbin, and a tension band on the flyer makes the flyer spin slower than the bobbin which adds twist.

What is a flyer on a spinning wheel?

Flyer wheels. Flyer wheels (also called flyer-and-bobbin wheels) allow continuous spinning: the spinner does not have to stop drafting for the newly created yarn to wind onto the bobbin. For this to happen, the flyer needs to rotate more quickly or more slowly than the bobbin.

What is a Saxony spinning wheel?

Saxony Wheel. When most people think of spinning wheel, the saxony style is the most familiar. It is often referred to as the “Cinderella” wheel. The elements of a saxony wheel are arranged horizontally, with a large wheel at one end and the flyer at the other, and normally have three legs.

Do people still use spinning wheels?

Today, spinning wheels are carved and turned of hardwood and used only by craftspeople for handspun yarns. Spinning wheels are entirely obsolete as large manufacturers use industrial spinners to produce millions of yards of thread or yarn each day.

What replaced the spinning jenny?

It continued in common use in the cotton and fustian industry until about 1810. The spinning jenny was superseded by the spinning mule.

Is the spinning mule still used today?

At its peak there were 50,000,000 mule spindles in Lancashire alone. Modern versions are still in niche production and are used to spin woollen yarns from noble fibres such as cashmere, ultra-fine merino and alpaca for the knitware market.

What is the loading wheel called?

The loading wheel on a computer is called a ‘throbber’.

What is the fastest spinning wheel?

Scientists have created a microscopic sphere and set it awhirl at a blistering 600 million rotations per minute. The sphere, which rotates 500,000 times faster than the average washing machine, is the fastest-spinning object ever made.

What is a flyer LED spinning wheel?

Flyer wheels. Flyer wheels (also called flyer-and-bobbin wheels) allow continuous spinning: the spinner does not have to stop drafting for the newly created yarn to wind onto the bobbin. For this to happen, the flyer needs to rotate more quickly or more slowly than the bobbin.

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