Rieter

Waste collecting chambers under the grid

Index

Impurities and fibers fall through the grid gaps and accumulate in large quantities in the chamber under the grid. Waste used to be periodically removed manually, but pneumatic removal systems are used today. As far as the cleaning effect is concerned, modern waste chambers are passive elements, without influence on the operation. In older designs they sometimes participated actively, and afforded the possibility of exerting a significant influence on events by permitting some of the transport air for forwarding the tufts (the so-called secondary air) to enter through the waste chamber and the grid. Such systems enabled the interaction of airflow and beating power to be exploited. Heavy particles could drop out, against the airflow through the grid gaps, because of their high ratio of mass to volume. However, fibers were taken up again with the airflow because of their low ratio of mass to volume. Today, this principle cannot be exploited because of the small size of the foreign matter, which would now be carried back along with the fibers. Accordingly, a so-called dead chamber is now used; none of the transport air now passes through the grid gaps.