Sunday, 31 May 2026

Which Fabric Is Cheaper: Low Count Fabric or High Count Fabric?



Which Fabric Is Cheaper: Low Count Fabric or High Count Fabric?

When we buy or cost fabric, one common question comes up again and again: which fabric is cheaper — low count fabric or high count fabric? At first glance, the answer looks simple. Low count yarn is coarser, so it should be cheaper. High count yarn is finer, so it should be more expensive.

But in actual textile costing, this answer is only partly correct. The more accurate answer is that low count yarn is generally cheaper per kg, but low count fabric is not always cheaper per metre. Fabric price depends not only on yarn count, but also on construction, GSM, weave, yarn quality, processing, finishing, width, order quantity, and market conditions.







Visual 1: Low count versus high count yarn and how it affects fabric cost.

Table of Contents

What Does Yarn Count Mean?

In cotton fabrics, yarn count is often expressed in the English count system, written as Ne, s, or simply count. For example, we may say 20s cotton, 40s cotton, 60s cotton, or 80s cotton. In the cotton count system, a higher count means a finer yarn.

So, 40s cotton is finer than 20s cotton. Similarly, 60s cotton is finer than 40s cotton. This is sometimes confusing because in direct systems such as tex or denier, a higher number means a thicker yarn. But in the English cotton count system, the relationship is the opposite.

Simple memory rule: In cotton Ne count, the higher the number, the finer the yarn.

Is Low Count Yarn Cheaper?

Generally, yes. Low count yarns such as 10s, 16s, 20s, or 24s are coarser yarns. They are usually easier to spin than very fine yarns and may not always require the same level of fibre length, fineness, and spinning control needed for fine counts.

Low count yarns are commonly used in heavier or more robust fabrics such as denim, canvas, drill, towels, coarse sheeting, bags, and industrial fabrics. Because of this, low count yarn is usually cheaper per kg than fine count yarn.

High count yarns such as 60s, 80s, 100s, or 120s are finer yarns. They need better fibre, better spinning control, often combing or compact spinning, and better yarn evenness. Their production is more demanding, and therefore they usually cost more per kg.

Why Low Count Fabric May Not Always Be Cheaper

Fabric is not sold only by yarn count. Fabric is sold by construction, weight, quality, width, processing, and finish. A low count yarn is thick. When thick yarn is used in a fabric, the fabric may become heavier and consume more yarn per metre.

This is the important costing trap. Even if the yarn is cheaper per kg, the fabric may use more kg of yarn per metre. That higher material consumption can make the fabric cost higher than expected.

For example, a 10s or 12s denim fabric may use coarse yarn, but it may also have high GSM, indigo dyeing, sizing, weaving, finishing, washing, and process losses. So denim is not automatically cheap just because it uses low count yarn.

Similarly, canvas may use coarse yarn, but because it is dense and heavy, its yarn consumption per metre can be high. Therefore, the better statement is not “low count fabric is cheap.” The better statement is: low count yarn is cheaper per kg, but low count fabric may become costly if it is heavy, dense, or highly processed.

Visual 2: Fabric cost depends on count, EPI, PPI, GSM, weave, yarn quality and finishing.

What Is Fabric Construction?

Fabric construction tells us how the fabric is built. A woven fabric construction is often written like this:

40 × 40 / 120 × 60

This means that the warp yarn count is 40s, the weft yarn count is 40s, the EPI is 120, and the PPI is 60. EPI means ends per inch, which tells us how many warp yarns are present in one inch of fabric width. PPI means picks per inch, which tells us how many weft yarns are inserted in one inch of fabric length.

Part of Construction Meaning Costing Importance
Warp count Fineness or coarseness of warp yarn Affects warp yarn cost, strength and appearance
Weft count Fineness or coarseness of weft yarn Affects weft yarn cost, handle and fabric weight
EPI Ends per inch Higher EPI generally means more warp yarn consumption
PPI Picks per inch Higher PPI generally means more weft yarn consumption

Yarn count tells us the thickness or fineness of yarn, while EPI and PPI tell us how densely those yarns are packed in the fabric. This is where fabric costing becomes practical. A 40s × 40s fabric with low EPI and PPI may be cheaper than a 40s × 40s fabric with high EPI and PPI. Both use the same count, but the second fabric uses more yarn per square metre.

Why GSM Is Important in Fabric Costing

GSM means grams per square metre. It tells us how heavy the fabric is. For costing, GSM is extremely important because it gives an idea of how much material is present in the fabric.

A 100 GSM fabric consumes less material than a 300 GSM fabric, assuming the same fibre and processing level. Low count fabrics are often heavier because the yarns are thicker. High count fabrics are often lighter, but if they are woven very densely, their GSM can also be high.

A commonly used approximate relationship for woven cotton fabric GSM is:

\( \text{Fabric GSM} = \left(\frac{\text{EPI}}{\text{Warp Count}} + \frac{\text{PPI}}{\text{Weft Count}}\right) \times (100 + \text{Crimp \%}) \times 0.2327 \)

This formula shows why count alone is not enough. If EPI and PPI increase, GSM increases. If count becomes coarser, GSM also tends to increase. Therefore, the fabric cost must be judged through the combined effect of yarn count, fabric density and crimp.

How Weave Affects Fabric Price

The weave also affects the fabric price. A plain weave is usually the simplest and most economical weave. It is easier to produce and generally gives better production efficiency.

Twill weave, satin weave, sateen weave, dobby weave, and jacquard weave may add cost because they can require more complex loom settings, lower speed, more design control, or special machinery. At the same yarn count and similar GSM, plain fabric is usually cheaper than dobby or jacquard fabric.

This is why fabric price is not just a yarn question. It is also a construction and manufacturing question. A fabric made with ordinary 40s yarn in plain weave may be much cheaper than another 40s fabric made with dobby design, fine finishing and premium yarn.

Role of Yarn Quality

Two fabrics may both be described as 40s cotton, but their prices may be different. One may use carded yarn and the other may use combed yarn. One may use ordinary ring-spun yarn and the other may use compact yarn. One may use short staple cotton and the other may use better long staple cotton.

Better yarn quality gives better appearance, strength, smoothness, lower hairiness, and better fabric hand feel. But it also increases cost. So when someone says “40s fabric,” the buyer should ask whether it is carded or combed, compact or normal ring-spun, single or ply, ordinary or mercerised, and what fibre quality is being used.

Practical point: Count tells us yarn fineness. It does not fully tell us yarn quality. Two yarns of the same count can differ greatly in fibre quality, evenness, strength, hairiness and price.

Role of Processing and Finishing

Processing can change the cost significantly. Grey fabric is cheaper than processed fabric. Dyed fabric is costlier than grey fabric. Printed fabric may be costlier than dyed fabric depending on the print method, number of colours, chemical use and process losses.

Mercerised cotton is costlier than non-mercerised cotton. Special finishes such as soft finish, wrinkle-free finish, water-repellent finish, peach finish, bio-polish, enzyme wash, calendaring or coating add further cost.

This means a low count fabric with heavy dyeing, washing, coating, or finishing can cost more than a high count grey fabric. Similarly, a high count fabric with premium finishing may become much more expensive than its yarn count alone suggests.

Visual 3: A practical decision matrix for judging whether a fabric is likely to be cheaper or costlier.

Practical Price Direction by Fabric Type

The following table gives a broad direction of fabric pricing logic. It should not be treated as a fixed price list because actual prices change with cotton rates, yarn market, processing charges, order quantity, mill efficiency and location.

Fabric Type Common Count Direction Price Tendency Reason
Coarse plain fabric 10s–20s Lower to medium Coarse yarn and simple weave, if GSM is not too high
Canvas 6s–20s Medium to high Heavy GSM and high yarn consumption
Denim 6s–20s Medium to high Coarse yarn but heavy fabric, indigo dyeing and finishing
Poplin 40s–80s Medium to high Fine yarn and usually denser construction
Cambric 40s–60s Medium Fine yarn, smooth fabric and good finish
Voile or lawn 60s–100s High Fine yarn, better fibre and premium handle
Sateen 40s–100s High Smooth surface, dense weave and better finishing
Dobby or jacquard Varies Higher Design complexity, lower speed and higher loom cost

A Better Way to Ask for Fabric Price

Instead of asking, “What is the price of 40s fabric?”, a better question is: “What is the price of 40s × 40s, 120 × 80, plain weave, 58-inch width, 120 GSM, dyed and finished fabric?”

This second question is much clearer because it includes the variables that actually affect cost. For sourcing and merchandising, the full specification should include fibre content, warp count, weft count, EPI, PPI, fabric width, GSM, weave, yarn type, grey or processed stage, dyeing or printing type, finishing, shrinkage requirement, order quantity and quality standard.

Only then can a supplier give a meaningful price. Without construction and processing details, count alone gives only a partial idea.

Final Conclusion

Low count fabric is usually cheaper only when it is made with simple construction, low to moderate GSM, ordinary yarn and basic finishing. High count fabric is usually more expensive when it uses fine yarn, dense construction, combed or compact yarn, better fibre and premium finishing.

However, a heavy low count fabric like denim or canvas may cost more per metre than a light high count fabric. Similarly, a high count fabric with simple low-density construction may not be as expensive as a dense premium shirting fabric.

Therefore, count is only the starting point of fabric costing. The correct way to judge fabric price is:

\( \text{Fabric Cost} = \text{Yarn Cost} + \text{Yarn Consumption} + \text{Weaving Cost} + \text{Processing Cost} + \text{Finishing Cost} + \text{Overheads} + \text{Margin} \)

In practical terms, this means we must always look at yarn count, construction, GSM, weave, yarn quality, processing and finishing together. Only then can we say whether a fabric is truly cheap or expensive.

Selected Sources

  1. Textile Exchange. Organic Cotton: A Fiber Classification Guide. Textile Exchange, 2017.
  2. National Textile Corporation Ltd. Yarn Price List dated 22.01.2026. NTC, 2026.
  3. Online Clothing Study. How to Calculate GSM of Woven Fabric from Its Construction.
  4. Fibre2Fashion. What is Cotton Yarn: Properties, Varieties, Uses and Global Market, 2025.
  5. Textile Study Center. Fabric Weight Calculation in GSM.

General Disclaimer

This article is for educational and general textile knowledge purposes only. Actual fabric prices vary according to cotton prices, yarn availability, mill source, spinning technology, weaving efficiency, processing charges, finishing quality, fabric width, wastage, order quantity, credit terms, transport, taxes and market conditions.

The price tendencies discussed here should be used as a costing logic, not as a fixed price quotation. Buyers, merchandisers and students should verify current yarn and fabric rates from suppliers before making commercial decisions.

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Controlling Centre-to-Selvedge Colour Variation in Sheet Dyeing of Denim



Controlling Centre-to-Selvedge Colour Variation in Sheet Dyeing of Denim

In denim manufacturing, colour variation is one of the most visible and commercially sensitive problems. A small shade difference that may look harmless on dyed yarn can become very obvious after weaving, garment washing and finishing.

Among the different types of shade variation, one important problem in sheet dyeing or slasher dyeing is centre-to-selvedge colour variation. This happens when the yarns in the centre of the warp sheet dye slightly differently from the yarns near the two selvedges.

After weaving, this may show as darker or lighter bands running lengthwise in the denim fabric. In garment form, it may further become visible as panel-to-panel shade difference, side shading, streakiness or inconsistent washing response.

The problem is not caused by one factor alone. In sheet dyeing, centre-to-selvedge variation is usually born at the intersection of three controls: liquor pick-up, warp-sheet mechanics and indigo bath chemistry.

Central idea: In sheet dyeing, shade is not controlled only by the dye recipe. Shade is controlled by the complete process — yarn preparation, liquor pick-up, nip pressure, tension, oxidation, washing and monitoring.

Table of Contents

  1. What is centre-to-selvedge colour variation?
  2. Why sheet dyeing is sensitive to this problem
  3. Main causes of centre-to-selvedge shade variation
  4. How to control centre-to-selvedge variation
  5. Practical troubleshooting table
  6. A practical control plan for mills
  7. Conclusion
  8. General disclaimer

What is centre-to-selvedge colour variation?

In sheet dyeing, warp yarns are spread side-by-side in open sheet form and pass through dye boxes, squeeze rollers, oxidation zones and sizing units. Ideally, every yarn from the left selvedge to the right selvedge should receive the same dyeing treatment.

In practice, the centre yarns and edge yarns may not behave exactly alike. Centre-to-selvedge variation means that the yarns near the centre of the sheet show a different depth, tone or brightness compared with the yarns near the selvedges.

The difference may be visible immediately after dyeing, but sometimes it becomes clearer only after weaving, finishing or garment washing. This is especially important in denim because washing partly removes and modifies the indigo surface, making earlier shade differences more visible.

Denim is a highly visual fabric. The indigo shade is not only a colour; it is part of the identity of the fabric. Buyers expect a controlled blue, black, grey, sulphur-bottom or topping shade. Any side-to-side difference reduces the acceptability of the fabric.

Why sheet dyeing is sensitive to this problem

In rope dyeing, warp yarns are gathered into ropes, dyed, oxidised and later opened during long-chain beaming. Because the yarns are rearranged during subsequent processing, some shade variation may get distributed.

In sheet dyeing, however, yarns remain in sheet form. The position of the yarn across the width is more directly related to its final position in the fabric. This makes sheet dyeing efficient and compact, but it also makes it more sensitive to width-wise variation.

If the left edge, centre and right edge do not receive the same liquor pick-up, pressure, tension, immersion or oxidation, the variation can directly appear in the woven denim. In simple words, sheet dyeing gives less room to hide width-wise mistakes.

Main causes of centre-to-selvedge shade variation

1. Uneven nip pressure across the width

The padding or squeezing system is one of the most important areas to examine. When yarns come out of the dye box, the squeeze rollers control how much dye liquor remains on the yarn. If nip pressure is not uniform across the full width, liquor pick-up will also not be uniform.

If the centre pressure is higher, the centre yarns may carry less liquor. If the edge pressure is higher, the selvedge yarns may carry less liquor. In both cases, the shade can change across the width.

This may happen because of roller deflection, roller hardness variation, poor roller grinding, incorrect loading, worn bearings, improper alignment or uneven pneumatic or hydraulic pressure. The problem may become more serious on wider machines because roller deflection becomes more difficult to control.

The first rule of centre-to-selvedge control is therefore simple: do not blame the dye before checking the padder or squeeze roller.

2. Variation in liquor pick-up

In indigo sheet dyeing, liquor pick-up determines how much reduced indigo solution is carried by the yarn before oxidation. Any variation in pick-up becomes a variation in available dye.

Liquor pick-up can vary due to nip pressure, yarn absorbency, yarn tension, bath level, viscosity, wetting, foam, contamination or uneven yarn sheet density. Even if the dye bath recipe is correct, poor pick-up control can still produce shade variation.

Liquor pick-up may be expressed as:

\[ \text{Liquor Pick-up \%} = \frac{\text{Wet Weight} - \text{Dry Weight}}{\text{Dry Weight}} \times 100 \]

A practical mill should not depend only on visual judgement. Width-wise pick-up should be checked at the left selvedge, left-middle, centre, right-middle and right selvedge. If the values are not consistent, shade variation is almost expected.

3. Uneven warp tension across the sheet

Warp-sheet tension is another major factor. If some sections of the sheet are tighter than others, the yarns may pass through the bath, squeeze rollers and oxidation zone differently.

Higher tension may flatten the yarn, reduce penetration, alter squeeze-out and change the way the yarn opens during oxidation. Lower tension may allow the yarn to carry more liquor or behave differently at the nip.

Uneven tension can also create small differences in yarn path, contact angle and residence time. Centre-to-selvedge variation should therefore be investigated together with tension variation.

The sheet should enter the dye box evenly and should not show slack edges, tight centre, uneven spreading, crowding or bowing.

4. Uneven wetting and pre-treatment

Before indigo dyeing, cotton warp yarn must be properly prepared. Cotton contains natural waxes, pectins, oils, size residues and other impurities. If these are not removed uniformly, the yarn will not absorb dye liquor uniformly.

Poor wetting is especially dangerous in sheet dyeing. If the centre yarns wet more slowly than the selvedge yarns, or if the selvedge yarns contain more residual wax or size, the dye uptake will differ.

Trapped air in yarns can also reduce liquor contact and create uneven dyeing. Good pre-scouring, wetting-agent control, washing and yarn absorbency testing are therefore essential.

In many mills, the dyeing department tries to correct shade variation that actually started in preparation.

5. Indigo bath instability

Indigo is not applied like many other dyes. It must first be reduced into a soluble leuco form so that it can enter or deposit on the cotton yarn. After dipping, the yarn is exposed to air, where the reduced indigo oxidises back to its insoluble blue form.

Because of this chemistry, the final shade is affected by several variables: indigo concentration, caustic level, reducing-agent level, pH, oxidation-reduction potential, temperature, immersion time, number of dips, oxidation time and wetting agent.

If the bath is unstable, the shade may vary over time. But if bath circulation is poor across the width, or if chemical distribution is not uniform, width-wise variation can also appear.

In a good denim range, indigo bath control should not be based only on recipe addition. The mill should monitor pH, redox condition, temperature, circulation, bath level and concentration at regular intervals.

6. Non-uniform oxidation or skying

After each dip, indigo needs controlled oxidation. Oxidation develops the blue colour and influences brightness, tone and fastness. If oxidation is incomplete or uneven, the shade will vary.

In sheet dyeing, the centre and edge portions of the sheet must receive similar exposure to air. Variation in airflow, sheet spreading, roller path, moisture level or dwell time can create width-wise differences.

If the centre portion remains wetter or less exposed, oxidation may be different from the selvedge portions. Indigo dyeing is not only a dipping process; it is a repeated dip-and-oxidise process.

7. Edge effects and selvedge behaviour

The selvedge side of the warp sheet often behaves differently from the centre. Edge yarns may experience different airflow, drying, tension, guiding pressure or contact with machine elements.

They may also be more exposed to side evaporation, splash, dripping or mechanical disturbance. In some cases, the selvedge becomes lighter because it carries less liquor or oxidises differently.

In other cases, it becomes darker because of higher liquor retention or local accumulation. The exact direction of shade difference depends on the process condition.

Therefore, the question should not be only “Why is the selvedge lighter?” or “Why is the centre darker?” The better question is: Which width-wise process variable is different at that position?

How to control centre-to-selvedge variation

1. Start with width-wise measurement

The first correction is measurement. The mill should build a habit of checking left, centre and right positions. Ideally, five positions should be used: left selvedge, left-middle, centre, right-middle and right selvedge.

At each position, the mill can check shade, liquor pick-up, pH, moisture, tension and yarn appearance. For shade, visual assessment should be supported by spectrophotometer readings wherever possible.

A small colour difference may become commercially significant after garment washing. The colour difference can be expressed using \(\Delta E\), where:

\[ \Delta E = \sqrt{(\Delta L^*)^2 + (\Delta a^*)^2 + (\Delta b^*)^2} \]

Here, \(L^*\) represents lightness, \(a^*\) represents the red-green axis and \(b^*\) represents the yellow-blue axis. Without width-wise data, the discussion remains subjective.

2. Check padder and squeeze roller condition

The padder or squeeze roller system should be checked for uniformity across the width. Important checks include roller hardness, roller surface condition, roller grinding accuracy, nip impression, pressure balance, loading system, bearing condition and roller parallelism.

A simple carbon paper or nip impression test can sometimes reveal what the eye cannot see during running. If the nip is not uniform, the shade cannot be expected to remain uniform.

For wider machines, deflection-controlled or specially designed padders are especially useful because normal rollers may bend under pressure, creating different squeezing behaviour at the centre and edges.

3. Standardise liquor pick-up

Liquor pick-up should be treated as a critical process parameter. It should be measured and recorded, not assumed. If the target pick-up is 70%, the left, centre and right should not show large deviations.

Pick-up control depends on nip pressure, machine speed, yarn absorbency, bath temperature, wetting-agent level, yarn tension, bath level and roller condition. Whenever centre-to-selvedge variation is noticed, pick-up testing should be one of the first diagnostic steps.

4. Maintain uniform warp-sheet tension

The warp sheet should run flat, straight and evenly spread. The machine operator should check whether the sheet is tighter at the centre, looser at the edges, or unstable during running.

Important controls include uniform let-off tension, correct guiding, proper sheet spreading, avoidance of slack selvedges, equal loading across beams, proper alignment of guide rollers and avoidance of yarn crowding or overlapping.

If the sheet itself is mechanically unstable, dyeing uniformity becomes difficult.

5. Improve pre-treatment and wetting

Before dyeing, the yarn should be uniformly absorbent. A simple drop test or absorbency test across width can reveal whether the preparation is consistent.

Good preparation includes removal of wax and impurities, removal or control of previous sizing materials, proper wetting, control of water hardness, effective washing, avoidance of oil or grease contamination and prevention of trapped air.

If yarns do not wet evenly, they cannot dye evenly.

6. Control indigo bath chemistry

The indigo bath should be controlled for concentration, pH, caustic, reducing agent, redox potential, temperature and bath circulation. Operators should avoid large corrections made only after shade variation becomes visible.

A stable bath gives the process a stable base. But stability should mean both length-wise and width-wise stability. The bath should be well circulated, and chemical additions should be properly mixed before they affect the yarn sheet.

Important controls include regular pH checking, ORP monitoring, indigo concentration control, hydrosulphite or reducing-agent control, caustic control, temperature control, foam control, bath level control, filtration and circulation.

7. Ensure uniform oxidation

Oxidation should be uniform across the full sheet width. The yarns should not be crowded, stuck together or unevenly spread during skying. Air movement should not favour one side of the sheet.

Important checks include adequate skying length, uniform airflow, proper yarn separation, consistent machine speed, avoidance of wet patches, no side dripping and stable roller path.

The shade after indigo dyeing is not created inside the dye box alone. It is created by repeated dipping and oxidation. If oxidation is uneven, the shade will also be uneven.

8. Use left-centre-right shade control after washing

Indigo shade should be assessed after proper washing and drying, not only in the wet state. Wet yarns and wet fabric can mislead the eye.

A proper comparison should be done under standard light conditions after the sample reaches a stable state. For better control, mills may maintain a record of left-centre-right shade reading, \(\Delta E\), K/S value, pick-up percentage, bath pH, ORP value, machine speed, nip pressure, oxidation length, lot number and beam number.

Practical troubleshooting table

Observed problem Possible cause What to check first Corrective action
Centre darker than selvedge Higher pick-up at centre or lower squeeze pressure at centre Nip impression and pick-up test Correct roller pressure, alignment or deflection
Selvedge darker than centre Higher pick-up at edges or edge liquor accumulation Edge yarn wetness and squeeze condition Check edge pressure, dripping and guiding
One side darker than the other Left-right pressure imbalance or poor machine alignment Left vs right nip and tension Balance pressure and align rollers
Shade changes after every few hundred metres Bath instability or poor chemical dosing pH, ORP, indigo concentration Stabilise dosing and circulation
Variation increases after washing Uneven ring dyeing or oxidation Oxidation and washing uniformity Improve skying and washing control
Random bands across width Yarn preparation or absorbency variation Width-wise absorbency test Improve scouring and wetting
Thick counts show more variation Poor penetration and higher sensitivity to tension or pick-up Count-wise process settings Adjust dip time, wetting, pressure and speed

A practical control plan for mills

A mill can control centre-to-selvedge variation through a simple but disciplined routine. First, check the machine. The padder, squeeze rollers, guide rollers and tension system should be mechanically sound.

Second, check the yarn sheet. The sheet should run evenly from left to right. There should be no crowding, slack edges, tight centre, broken yarn disturbance or uneven spreading.

Third, check liquor pick-up. Measure it across the width. Do not assume that the centre and selvedge are carrying the same amount of dye liquor.

Fourth, check bath chemistry. Maintain pH, reducing condition, temperature, dye concentration and circulation within the required range.

Fifth, check oxidation. Ensure that the yarn sheet gets uniform exposure to air after every dip.

Sixth, check shade with data. Use left-centre-right readings, \(\Delta E\), K/S values and proper production records.

References and Further Reading

  1. Xin, J. H., Chong, C. L., & Tu, T. M. (2000). Colour variation in the dyeing of denim yarn with indigo. Coloration Technology, 116, 260–265. View source
  2. Cotton Incorporated. Open Width Pad-Batch Dyeing of Cotton Fabrics, Technical Bulletin TRI 3007. View source
  3. EFI Mezzera. Indigo Dyeing and Finishing Ranges / Denim Line Brochure. View source
  4. Textile Commissioner, Government of India. Semi-continuous Openwidth Dyeing Machines. View source
  5. Paul, R. (Ed.). (2015). Denim: Manufacture, Finishing and Applications. Woodhead Publishing / Elsevier. View source

Conclusion

Centre-to-selvedge colour variation in denim sheet dyeing is not a mysterious defect. It is usually the visible result of invisible process differences across the width of the warp sheet.

The most important causes are uneven nip pressure, unequal liquor pick-up, non-uniform tension, poor wetting, unstable indigo chemistry and uneven oxidation. Among these, nip pressure and liquor pick-up deserve special attention because they directly decide how much dye liquor each yarn carries.

In sheet dyeing, the yarns remain spread in open-width form. This gives the process speed, compactness and flexibility, but it also makes width-wise control critical. A well-controlled sheet dyeing range must therefore be managed not only from lot to lot, but also from selvedge to centre to selvedge.

The best approach is not to correct shade variation after it appears, but to prevent it through systematic control of machine condition, yarn preparation, bath chemistry, oxidation and left-centre-right monitoring. In denim, shade is not only a recipe. Shade is a result of the whole process.

General Disclaimer

This article is for educational and general textile knowledge purposes only. Actual denim dyeing results depend on yarn quality, cotton fibre properties, machine design, indigo chemistry, reducing system, process route, water quality, operator skill, maintenance condition, testing method and buyer requirements.

Mills should validate all process changes through laboratory trials, pilot runs and controlled bulk trials before implementing them in commercial production. The author does not accept responsibility for production losses, shade rejections or process failures arising from direct application of this educational material without mill-specific technical verification.

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Monday, 25 May 2026

The Function of Traveller in Ring Spinning



The Function of Traveller in Ring Spinning: A Small Component that Controls Yarn, Twist and Package Quality

In ring spinning, the traveller is one of the smallest visible parts of the machine, yet it performs some of the most important functions in yarn formation. It is a small C-shaped metal component that runs on the ring flange. The yarn passes through the traveller before it is wound on the bobbin, and this simple arrangement allows the machine to twist, tension, guide and wind the yarn in a controlled manner.

A beginner may first notice the spindle, bobbin, drafting rollers, ring rail and yarn balloon. However, the traveller is the small part that connects many of these actions together. It is not merely a guide. It controls yarn tension, supports balloon formation, creates the speed difference needed for winding, helps twist insertion and influences end breaks, hairiness, neps, package hardness and traveller wear.

Table of Contents

1. What Is a Traveller?

The traveller is a small C-shaped metal element fitted loosely on the ring of a ring spinning frame. It is not rigidly attached to the ring. It sits on the ring flange and moves around the ring when pulled by the yarn. The yarn delivered by the front rollers passes through the traveller and then goes to the rotating bobbin.

This loose mounting is very important. If the traveller were fixed, it could not adjust to the changing requirements of winding. If it moved exactly with the spindle, the yarn would not wind properly. The traveller must therefore remain free enough to move, but controlled enough by the ring to create the required friction, tension and winding action.

2. Basic Yarn Path in Ring Spinning

In ring spinning, fibres are drafted by the drafting rollers and emerge as a thin fibre strand from the front rollers. This strand receives twist and becomes yarn. The yarn then travels downward, forms a balloon, passes through the traveller and winds on to the bobbin rotating on the spindle.

The spindle carries the bobbin and rotates at high speed. The ring remains mounted on the ring rail, and the ring rail moves up and down to build the package. The traveller moves around the ring because the yarn pulls it as the bobbin rotates. In this way, the traveller becomes the moving point through which yarn tension, winding and package formation are controlled.

3. Traveller Controls the Build of the Bobbin

The traveller helps guide the yarn on to the bobbin surface. Since the ring is fixed on the ring rail, and the ring rail moves up and down in a planned manner, the traveller also moves vertically with the ring rail. This allows the yarn to be laid on the bobbin in a controlled package shape.

The bobbin does not simply collect yarn in a random manner. It must be built in a form that can be handled, transported and unwound in the next operation. If the package is too soft, too hard, badly shaped or uneven, problems appear later during winding, warping, knitting or weaving. The traveller therefore contributes not only to spinning but also to downstream process performance.

4. Traveller Controls Yarn Tension

The traveller controls yarn tension through friction. As the traveller moves around the ring, it is constantly forced to change direction. Because of this circular movement, it experiences centrifugal force. The ring prevents the traveller from flying outward, and the contact between the ring and traveller creates friction.

This friction acts like a brake. The braking action produces tension in the yarn. The tension is necessary because yarn must be wound firmly on the bobbin. However, the tension must not be excessive. If the spinning tension becomes greater than the strength of the yarn at that moment, the yarn breaks.

The tension generated in the yarn depends on several factors, including traveller weight, spindle speed, ring diameter, yarn count, yarn strength, yarn balloon size, air drag and the frictional condition between ring and traveller. In practical spinning, the correct traveller is the one that controls the balloon and package build without creating unnecessary yarn stress.

5. Traveller Acts as a Speed Differential

One of the most important functions of the traveller is to act as a speed differential. The yarn delivered by the front rollers moves at a much lower linear speed than the surface speed of the rotating bobbin. If the yarn were pulled directly by the bobbin without any regulating element, it would break. The traveller solves this problem by lagging behind the spindle.

The winding action in ring spinning depends on the difference between spindle speed and traveller speed. In simplified form, the winding action may be understood as:

\[ \text{Winding action} \propto \text{Spindle speed} - \text{Traveller speed} \]

This difference is essential. If the traveller moved at exactly the same speed as the spindle, the relative winding action would reduce. If the traveller lagged too much because of excessive friction or wrong weight, yarn tension would rise and end breaks would increase. The traveller must therefore adjust continuously as the package diameter changes during bobbin build.

6. Traveller Helps Insert Twist

The traveller also plays an important role in twist insertion. The spindle rotates the bobbin, while the traveller moves around the ring and lags behind the spindle. This difference between spindle movement and traveller movement allows twist to be inserted into the yarn.

A commonly used simplified relationship for yarn twist is:

\[ \text{Twist per inch} = \frac{\text{Spindle RPM}}{\text{Delivery speed in inches per minute}} \]

This formula gives the broad idea that higher spindle speed or lower delivery speed increases twist. In actual spinning, the traveller is part of the mechanism that makes this twisting and winding possible at the same time. The yarn is not merely being twisted in free space; it is being twisted, tensioned, ballooned and wound continuously.

7. Traveller Controls Yarn Balloon

The yarn between the front rollers and the traveller forms a rotating balloon. The balloon is influenced by yarn tension, spindle speed, yarn count, ring diameter, traveller weight and air resistance. A stable balloon is important because it reduces erratic tension and prevents yarn from rubbing against machine parts.

If the traveller is too light, the yarn balloon may become too large. A large balloon may touch separators or balloon control rings, leading to higher hairiness, more fly, abrasion and end breaks. If the traveller is too heavy, the balloon may become controlled, but yarn tension may become excessive. This may cause breaks, especially when yarn strength is temporarily low.

Thus, the traveller has to perform a delicate balancing act. It must be heavy enough to control the balloon and build a firm package, but light enough to avoid damaging the yarn through excessive tension.

8. Why Traveller Weight Is Important

Traveller weight is one of the most critical parameters in ring spinning. A heavier traveller increases friction between ring and traveller. This increases yarn tension and improves balloon control, but it also increases heat generation, end breaks and wear if the weight is excessive.

A lighter traveller reduces tension, but it may fail to control the balloon. This can produce soft packages, high hairiness, traveller fly-off, yarn contact with separators and unstable spinning. The correct traveller weight is therefore not selected only from theory. It is usually finalised by trials, observation of end-break pattern and yarn quality results.

In practical mill diagnosis, the location and timing of end breaks provide useful clues. If breaks are caused by uncontrolled ballooning, the traveller may be too light. If breaks occur due to excessive tension, especially during difficult phases of package build, the traveller may be too heavy. The correct traveller weight minimises variation in breaks throughout the bobbin build.

9. Traveller Profile and Yarn Clearance

Traveller selection is not only about weight. The shape and profile of the traveller are equally important. Bow height, bow width, toe gap, wire cross-section and the contact area between ring and traveller influence yarn clearance and traveller stability.

Yarn clearance means the space available for the yarn to pass through the traveller without being harshly pressed between the traveller and the top of the ring flange. If clearance is insufficient, the yarn may be abraded, fibres may be damaged and neps may form. If the clearance is excessive, the traveller may become unstable and yarn control may suffer.

Coarse yarns, slub yarns and bulky yarns generally need more clearance. Fine yarns and compact yarns usually need lower clearance and stable traveller running. Compact yarns have fewer protruding fibres and lower hairiness, so traveller lubrication by fibre ends is reduced. This makes correct traveller profile selection especially important in compact spinning.

10. Traveller Speed and Heat Generation

At high spindle speeds, the traveller runs at very high speed around the ring. This produces friction and heat. If the traveller is too heavy, if the ring surface is poor, or if lubrication conditions are unsuitable, heat generation can become excessive. This may lead to traveller burning, accelerated wear and yarn quality deterioration.

Traveller speed may be estimated using the relationship:

\[ A = \frac{D \times \pi \times S}{60 \times 1000} \]

where \(A\) is traveller speed in metres per second, \(D\) is ring inside diameter in millimetres and \(S\) is spindle speed in revolutions per minute. This relationship shows that traveller speed increases when either ring diameter or spindle RPM increases.

This is one reason why high-speed spinning requires good ring surface finish, correct traveller profile, suitable traveller weight and proper environmental control. At high speeds, even a small mismatch between ring, traveller, yarn and process conditions can become a major quality or productivity problem.

11. Effect of Traveller on Yarn Quality

Every inch of yarn produced on a ring frame passes through the traveller. Therefore, the traveller has a direct effect on yarn quality. A wrong traveller can increase end breaks, hairiness, neps, fly generation, fibre damage, weak places and uneven package formation.

If traveller tension is too high, fibres may be damaged and yarn strength may suffer. Excessive tension can also increase end breaks and wear on both ring and traveller. If the traveller is too light, the yarn may run with an uncontrolled balloon, causing higher hairiness, rubbing and soft package formation.

The best traveller is not always the heaviest, the lightest or the fastest-running one. The best traveller is the one that gives stable running, controlled balloon, acceptable tension, good package build, low end breaks and required yarn quality for the specific fibre, count, twist, speed and machine condition.

12. Practical Diagnosis: Light, Heavy and Wrong Traveller

In mill practice, traveller problems often appear as recurring symptoms. If the traveller is too light, the yarn balloon may become too large and unstable. This may create high hairiness, soft bobbins, yarn rubbing against separators and traveller fly-off. The package may look acceptable at first, but unwinding or downstream performance may suffer.

If the traveller is too heavy, yarn tension rises. This may produce excessive end breaks, traveller burning, ring wear and fibre damage. The package may become hard, but the yarn may lose quality. In severe cases, the traveller may show abnormal wear or heat marks.

If the traveller profile is wrong, the issue may not be solved merely by changing the traveller weight. The yarn may not get proper clearance, the contact point may be unsuitable, or the traveller may not run stably on the ring. In such cases, the profile, bow height, wire section and ring-traveller match must be reviewed together.

Practical Summary

Traveller Function Practical Meaning If Incorrect
Guides yarn to bobbin Helps build a controlled yarn package. Poor package shape and unwinding issues.
Controls yarn tension Creates braking action through ring-traveller friction. End breaks, fibre damage or soft package.
Acts as speed differential Allows winding despite different delivery and bobbin speeds. Unstable winding and yarn breakage.
Supports twist insertion Traveller lag helps convert spindle rotation into twist and winding. Poor spinning stability and yarn quality variation.
Controls yarn balloon Keeps balloon within safe limits. Hairiness, fly, rubbing and separator contact.

Conclusion

The traveller is small, but its function in ring spinning is central. It guides the yarn, controls tension, creates the speed differential required for winding, supports twist insertion, controls the balloon and affects yarn quality. A wrong traveller can disturb the entire balance of spinning, while a correct traveller helps produce stable yarn with fewer end breaks and better package formation.

For a spinning technologist, the traveller should not be treated as a minor consumable. It is a precision control element. Its weight, shape, profile, clearance, finish and compatibility with the ring must be selected according to fibre type, yarn count, twist, spindle speed, ring condition and required yarn quality.

Sources

  1. A.B. Carter India Pvt. Ltd. Rings & Ring Travellers Hand Book. Sections on flange traveller function, traveller selection, traveller weight, yarn clearance, traveller speed and troubleshooting.
  2. Klein, W. The Technology of Short-staple Spinning. The Textile Institute, Manchester.
  3. Lawrence, C. A. Fundamentals of Spun Yarn Technology. CRC Press.
  4. Lord, P. R. Handbook of Yarn Production: Technology, Science and Economics. Woodhead Publishing.

General Disclaimer

This article is intended for educational and technical understanding of ring spinning. Traveller selection in an actual spinning mill depends on machine make, ring condition, spindle speed, fibre type, yarn count, twist level, humidity, end-break pattern and quality requirements. The explanations and formulae given here should be used as learning aids and not as a substitute for mill trials, supplier recommendations or expert technical evaluation.

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Sunday, 24 May 2026

A Mathematical Approach to Loom Interference



How Many Looms Should One Weaver Handle? A Mathematical Approach to Loom Interference

In a weaving shed, one of the most practical industrial engineering questions is deceptively simple: how many looms should be allotted to one weaver? The answer cannot be decided only by tradition, habit, or a fixed rule such as six looms, eight looms, or twelve looms per weaver. The correct allocation depends on stoppage frequency, service time, loom speed, fabric difficulty, weaver skill, layout, labour cost, and the value of lost production.

The heart of the problem is loom interference. When one weaver attends several looms, a stopped loom may have to wait because the weaver is already correcting another stopped loom. This waiting time is not caused by the technical fault itself. It is caused by the fact that the human attendant is temporarily unavailable. Therefore, loom interference is a man-machine allocation problem.

Central question: Should the mill assign more looms to one weaver to reduce labour cost, or fewer looms to one weaver to reduce loom waiting time and improve production?

Table of Contents

  1. Why Loom Allocation Needs Mathematics
  2. Basic Variables Used in Loom Interference Study
  3. Service Loss and Interference Loss
  4. Loom Efficiency from Interference
  5. Worked Example 1: Efficiency Loss Due to Interference
  6. How Many Looms Should Be Allocated to One Weaver?
  7. Worked Example 2: Adding One More Weaver
  8. Converting Efficiency Gain into Production Gain
  9. Economic Decision: Is the Extra Weaver Worth It?
  10. Optimum Loom Allocation Table
  11. Practical Interpretation for a Weaving Shed
  12. Related Reading
  13. References
  14. General Disclaimer

1. Why Loom Allocation Needs Mathematics

In many mills, loom allocation is decided by experience. An experienced manager may know that a certain fabric can be run at eight looms per weaver, while another difficult fabric needs only four or six looms per weaver. This practical judgment is valuable, but it becomes stronger when supported by measurement.

The difficulty is that two types of efficiency are involved. First, there is weaver utilisation. If fewer looms are assigned, the weaver may spend more time waiting for a loom to stop. Second, there is loom efficiency. If too many looms are assigned, several stopped looms may wait unattended, and production is lost.

The industrial engineering problem is therefore not merely to keep the weaver busy. It is to find the allocation at which the combined cost of labour and lost loom production is minimum.

\[ \text{Best Allocation} \neq \text{Maximum Weaver Busy Time} \] \[ \text{Best Allocation} = \text{Minimum Combined Cost of Labour and Lost Production} \]
Mathematical Framework for Loom Interference
Visual 1: Framework showing how stoppage frequency, service time, interference waiting time and loom allocation combine to determine loom efficiency.

2. Basic Variables Used in Loom Interference Study

To study loom interference mathematically, we first define the basic variables. These variables convert a practical weaving-shed situation into a measurable industrial engineering problem.

Symbol Meaning Practical Interpretation
\(N\) Number of looms assigned to one weaver For example, 6, 8, 10 or 12 looms per weaver
\(T\) Shift time For example, 480 minutes in an 8-hour shift
\(r\) Average running time between loom stoppages How long a loom runs before stopping again
\(s\) Average service time per stoppage How long the weaver takes to correct the stoppage
\(\lambda\) Stoppage rate per loom Number of stoppages expected per unit time
\(\mu\) Service rate of the weaver Number of stoppages the weaver can correct per unit time

In simple terms, the mathematical treatment asks three questions. How often does each loom stop? How long does each stoppage take to correct? How many looms are competing for the attention of one weaver?

\[ \lambda = \frac{1}{r} \] \[ \mu = \frac{1}{s} \]

If the average running time between stops is low, the loom stops frequently. If the service time is high, the weaver remains occupied for longer. When frequent stops and long service times are combined with a high number of looms per weaver, interference rises sharply.

3. Service Loss and Interference Loss

A stopped loom loses time in two different ways. The first is service loss, which is the time actually required to correct the problem. The second is interference loss, which is the time the loom waits before the weaver can begin correcting it.

\[ \text{Total Lost Time} = \text{Service Loss} + \text{Interference Loss} \]

This distinction is extremely important. Service loss is linked to the nature of the stoppage. For example, a warp break, weft break, selvedge problem, or mechanical fault may require a certain correction time. Interference loss, however, is linked to the allocation system. It arises because the weaver is already busy somewhere else.

Loss Type Cause How It Can Be Reduced
Service loss The actual technical correction takes time. Better yarn quality, maintenance, training, correct loom settings.
Interference loss The loom waits because the weaver is attending another loom. Better loom allocation, improved layout, lower stoppage frequency, faster response.

4. Loom Efficiency from Interference

Loom efficiency measures the proportion of available loom time that is actually used for running production. If a loom is stopped because of service time or interference waiting time, that time is lost from production.

\[ \text{Loom Efficiency} = \left[ 1 - \frac{\text{Service Loss}+\text{Interference Loss}} {N \times T} \right] \times 100 \]

Here, \(N \times T\) represents total available loom-minutes for the group of looms attended by one weaver. For example, if one weaver attends 8 looms in a 480-minute shift, the total available loom time is:

\[ 8 \times 480 = 3840 \text{ loom-minutes} \]

The lost time must also be expressed in loom-minutes. If one loom waits for 5 minutes, that is 5 loom-minutes lost. If three looms each wait for 5 minutes, that is 15 loom-minutes lost.

5. Worked Example 1: Efficiency Loss Due to Interference

Let us take a simple example. Suppose one weaver is attending 8 looms in one shift. The shift duration is 480 minutes. During the shift, the total service or repair time across all 8 looms is 120 loom-minutes. In addition, the total interference waiting time is 60 loom-minutes.

Item Value
Number of looms \(N = 8\)
Shift time \(T = 480\) minutes
Total available loom time \(8 \times 480 = 3840\) loom-minutes
Service loss 120 loom-minutes
Interference loss 60 loom-minutes
Total loss 180 loom-minutes

The loom efficiency is:

\[ \text{Loom Efficiency} = \left[ 1 - \frac{120+60}{3840} \right] \times 100 \] \[ = \left[ 1 - \frac{180}{3840} \right] \times 100 \] \[ = 95.31\% \]

Now let us calculate what the efficiency would have been if there were no interference waiting time. In that case, only the service loss of 120 loom-minutes would be counted.

\[ \text{Efficiency without Interference} = \left[ 1 - \frac{120}{3840} \right] \times 100 = 96.88\% \]

Therefore, the efficiency loss caused specifically by interference is:

\[ 96.88\% - 95.31\% = 1.57 \text{ percentage points} \]

This example shows the hidden nature of loom interference. The loom does not lose time only when the weaver is physically correcting the fault. It also loses time while waiting for the weaver to become available.

Service Loss and Interference Loss Calculation Example
Visual 2: Worked example showing available loom-minutes, service loss, interference loss and final loom efficiency.

6. How Many Looms Should Be Allocated to One Weaver?

The number of looms per weaver should be decided by comparing different allocation options. The mill should not only ask whether the weaver can manage the looms physically. It should ask whether the additional loom allocation improves total economics.

Suppose a weaving shed has 24 looms. One option is to use 3 weavers, giving 8 looms per weaver. Another option is to use 4 weavers, giving 6 looms per weaver.

Option Total Looms Number of Weavers Looms per Weaver
Option A 24 3 8
Option B 24 4 6

At first glance, Option A appears better because fewer weavers are needed. However, if eight looms per weaver cause high interference waiting time, the saving in labour may be offset by loss of production. Option B uses one extra weaver, but if it improves loom efficiency enough, it may be economically better.

7. Worked Example 2: Adding One More Weaver

Let us continue with the 24-loom example. Assume the shift time is 480 minutes. Each loom runs for an average of 30 minutes between stoppages, and the average service time per stoppage is 2 minutes.

\[ \text{Stoppages per Loom per Shift} = \frac{480}{30} = 16 \]

If each stoppage takes 2 minutes to correct, the unavoidable service loss per loom is:

\[ 16 \times 2 = 32 \text{ minutes per loom per shift} \]

This 32 minutes is the basic service loss. Even if the weaver attends every stoppage immediately, this time will still be lost because the loom must be corrected and restarted.

Now suppose time study shows the following interference waiting times:

Allocation Looms per Weaver Service Loss per Loom Interference Loss per Loom Total Loss per Loom
Option A 8 32 minutes 18 minutes 50 minutes
Option B 6 32 minutes 9 minutes 41 minutes

For 8 looms per weaver, the loom efficiency is:

\[ \text{Efficiency} = \left[ 1 - \frac{50}{480} \right] \times 100 = 89.58\% \]

For 6 looms per weaver, the loom efficiency is:

\[ \text{Efficiency} = \left[ 1 - \frac{41}{480} \right] \times 100 = 91.46\% \]

Therefore, adding one more weaver improves efficiency by:

\[ 91.46\% - 89.58\% = 1.88 \text{ percentage points} \]

This is a very important way to express the improvement. The efficiency has not merely improved by a vague “about two percent.” It has moved from 89.58% to 91.46%, which is a gain of 1.88 percentage points.

8. Converting Efficiency Gain into Production Gain

Efficiency percentage becomes useful only when it is converted into production. Suppose each loom produces 10 metres per hour when running. There are 24 looms, and the shift is 8 hours.

\[ \text{Production} = \text{Number of Looms} \times \text{Output per Loom per Hour} \times \text{Shift Hours} \times \text{Loom Efficiency} \]

For Option A, with 3 weavers and 8 looms per weaver:

\[ 24 \times 10 \times 8 \times 0.8958 = 1720 \text{ metres approximately} \]

For Option B, with 4 weavers and 6 looms per weaver:

\[ 24 \times 10 \times 8 \times 0.9146 = 1756 \text{ metres approximately} \]

The additional production obtained by adding one more weaver is:

\[ 1756 - 1720 = 36 \text{ metres per shift} \]

Therefore, in this example, one extra weaver gives 36 additional metres per shift by reducing loom interference. Whether this is worthwhile depends on the value of those 36 metres and the cost of the additional weaver.

9. Economic Decision: Is the Extra Weaver Worth It?

The final decision should be economic, not emotional. A production manager may feel that more workers will reduce stoppages. A cost manager may feel that fewer workers will reduce labour cost. Industrial engineering reconciles these two views by comparing extra production value with extra labour cost.

\[ \text{Extra Production Value} = \text{Extra Metres Produced} \times \text{Contribution per Metre} \]

Suppose the contribution margin is ₹25 per metre. The extra production value is:

\[ 36 \times 25 = \text{₹900} \]

If the extra weaver costs ₹800 per shift, the net gain is:

\[ \text{₹900 - ₹800 = ₹100} \]

In this case, adding the fourth weaver is economically justified, although the benefit is small. But if the contribution margin is only ₹15 per metre, the extra production value becomes:

\[ 36 \times 15 = \text{₹540} \]

If the extra weaver still costs ₹800 per shift, the decision changes:

\[ \text{₹540 - ₹800 = -₹260} \]

In this second case, adding the fourth weaver is not justified. The same efficiency improvement produces different decisions depending on the fabric value, contribution margin, and labour cost.

Economic Decision Chart for Adding One More Weaver
Visual 3: Decision chart comparing extra production value with extra labour cost when one more weaver is added.

10. Optimum Loom Allocation Table

A useful industrial engineering practice is to prepare an allocation table. Instead of arguing whether 6, 8 or 10 looms per weaver is correct, the mill can compare different alternatives in terms of expected efficiency, production, labour cost, and net contribution.

Number of Weavers Looms per Weaver Estimated Loom Efficiency Production per Shift Labour Cost Net Contribution
2 12 85.0% 1632 m ₹1600 ₹39,200
3 8 89.6% 1720 m ₹2400 ₹40,600
4 6 91.5% 1756 m ₹3200 ₹40,700
5 4.8 92.5% 1776 m ₹4000 ₹40,400

In this illustration, the fourth weaver gives the best net contribution. The fifth weaver improves efficiency and production slightly, but the additional labour cost is higher than the value of the extra production. Therefore, 4 weavers for 24 looms may be the optimum point in this particular example.

Practical lesson: The optimum allocation is not necessarily the allocation with the highest loom efficiency. It is the allocation with the best economic result.

11. Practical Interpretation for a Weaving Shed

The mathematical treatment of loom interference gives a disciplined way to think about loom allocation. A higher number of looms per weaver reduces labour cost per loom, but increases the probability of waiting. A lower number of looms per weaver reduces waiting, but increases labour cost.

The best allocation depends on the actual mill situation. For high-speed looms, high-value fabric, frequent stoppages, difficult yarns, complicated weave structures, sarees with borders, jacquards, dobby fabrics, or sensitive filament fabrics, fewer looms per weaver may be justified. For stable simple fabrics with good yarn preparation and low breakage, more looms per weaver may be economical.

The following practical rule can be used:

Condition Likely Allocation Decision
High stoppage frequency Reduce looms per weaver
Long service time per stoppage Reduce looms per weaver
High loom speed or high fabric value Reduce looms per weaver because every stopped minute is costly
Low stoppage frequency and simple fabric More looms per weaver may be possible
High labour cost and low production value More looms per weaver may be economically necessary

The IE department should ideally collect three timestamps for every stoppage: when the loom stopped, when the weaver began attending, and when the loom restarted. This separates interference time from service time.

\[ \text{Interference Time} = \text{Time Attendance Begins} - \text{Time Loom Stops} \]
\[ \text{Service Time} = \text{Time Loom Restarts} - \text{Time Attendance Begins} \]

Once these two times are separated, the mill can judge whether the problem is technical, organisational, or both. If service time is high, training, maintenance, yarn quality, sizing, or loom settings may need improvement. If interference time is high, loom allocation, layout, signal visibility, and manpower planning need review.

References

  1. Kuo, C. F. J., & Tsai, C. Y. “Impact of Loom Interference on Productivity.” Textile Research Journal, 2000.
  2. Alwerfalli, D. R. A Study of Models for Optimum Assignment of Manpower to Weaving Machines. Georgia Institute of Technology, 1978. Available at: https://repository.gatech.edu/bitstreams/721783bb-5910-4164-aa13-499ce92a9b08/download
  3. “A New Approach of the Machine Interference Problem.” WSEAS Conference Paper, 2006. Available at: https://www.wseas.us/e-library/conferences/2006lisbon/papers/517-577.pdf
  4. Jaiswal, N. K. “Finite-Source Queuing Models.” Case Western Reserve University, 1966. Available at: https://commons.case.edu/wsom-ops-reports/210/
  5. “Efficiency Losses of a Modern Loom with Respect to Weft and Warp Breakages.” SAS Publishers, 2022. Available at: https://www.saspublishers.com/article/11351/download/

General Disclaimer

This article is intended for educational understanding of loom interference, loom allocation and industrial engineering calculations in weaving. The numerical examples are simplified illustrations. Actual values in a weaving shed will depend on loom type, fabric construction, yarn quality, stoppage frequency, service time, layout, weaver skill, maintenance condition, labour cost and contribution per metre.

The formulas and examples should not be treated as universal standards for all mills. Before changing loom allocation, a mill should conduct proper time study, collect reliable stoppage data, separate service time from interference waiting time, and evaluate the economic impact under its own production conditions.

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