
The rotary hook or rotating hook is a
bobbin driver Throughout history, lockstitch sewing machines have used a variety of methods to drive their bobbin
A bobbin or spool is a spindle or cylinder, with or without flanges, on which yarn, thread, wire, tape or film is wound. Bobbins are typicall ...
design used in
lockstitch
A lockstitch is the most common mechanical stitch (textile arts), stitch made by a sewing machine. The term "single needle stitching", often found on dress shirt labels, refers to lockstitch.
Structure
The lockstitch uses two Thread (yarn), th ...
sewing machine
Diagram of a modern sewing machine
Animation of a modern sewing machine as it stitches
A sewing machine is a machine used to sew fabric and materials together with thread. Sewing machines were invented during the first Industrial Revolutio ...
s since the 19th century. It triumphed over competing designs because it can run at higher speeds with less vibration. Rotary hooks and oscillating shuttles are the two most common bobbin drivers in use today.
Operation
The rotary hook continuously rotates in place, hooking the upper thread each time its pointed tip passes the 12 o'clock position. Enough upper thread is pulled from above to pass around the bobbin case, which sits loosely inside the hook frame such that loops of thread can pass completely over it. The excess thread, no longer needed, is then pulled back upward by the sewing machine's take-up arm.
This arrangement is mechanically very simple but also introduces a significant limitation. Since the lower bobbin must pass completely through the upper thread, and the upper thread necessary to complete this passage must be completely withdrawn by the take-up arm, the lower bobbin must either be very small or the take-up arm must have a very long stroke.
History
Wilson
The technology was invented by
Allen B. Wilson in 1851, in steps. Wilson had just left an unsatisfactory business relationship in order to partner with
Nathaniel Wheeler, who was impressed by a model of Wilson's
vibrating shuttle machine. Ever since developing the vibrating shuttle, Wilson had been ruminating on a plan for a machine that used a ''rotating'' hook combined with a traditional reciprocating bobbin. For this hybrid machine he received patent , (reissued as RE914 on 28 February 1860).
Knowing that such a machine would surely lead to patent litigation with his former partners who had bought out the patent for the vibrating shuttle, Wilson kept working, and developed a refined design which kept the bobbin ''stationary''. He filed for patent, and the partners built their first production rotary hook machine the same year, selling it for US$35 (US$891 adjusted). The next year patent , was awarded.
The rotary hook design was then called the "Wheeler & Wilson principle" after Wilson's partnership with Wheeler.
Just two years later, in 1853, ''
Scientific American
''Scientific American'', informally abbreviated ''SciAm'' or sometimes ''SA'', is an American popular science magazine. Many scientists, including Albert Einstein and Nikola Tesla, have contributed articles to it, with more than 150 Nobel Pri ...
'' took notice:
:"There are 300 of these machines now in operation in various parts of the country, and the work which they can perform cannot be surpassed.... The time must soon come when every private family that has much sewing to do, will have one of these neat and perfect machines; indeed many private families have them now.... The price of one all complete is $125
SD3184 adjusted every machine is made under the eye of the inventor at the company's machine shop, Watertown, Connecticut, so that every one is warranted ... agreement between Mr. Howe* and Messrs. Wheeler, Wilson & Co., so every customer will be perfectly protected...."
* Mr. Howe is mentioned due to the
patent thicket
A patent thicket is "an overlapping set of patent rights" which requires innovators to reach licensing deals for multiple patents. This concept has negative connotations and has been described as "a dense web of overlapping intellectual property ri ...
that threatened to put the smaller sewing machine companies out of business.
White
Later, once the patents had expired, the
White Sewing Machine Company
The White Sewing Machine Company was a White Sewing Machine, sewing machine company founded in 1858 in Templeton, Massachusetts, by Thomas H. White and based in Cleveland, Ohio, since 1866.
History
Founded as the White Manufacturing Compa ...
used it in the popular
White Family Rotary machine.
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Rotary Hook
American inventions
Sewing
Sewing machines