Carpet | How It's Made
  
    Knowing how carpet is made can be very advantageous. Knowing
    the different materials that make up various carpets also helps
    you understand and evaluate their performance aspects: why
    certain carpets are easier to install, why some wear better,
    longer, and why others are easier to care for and clean. It can
    also make you a smarter shopper.
  
  
    Selections:
  
  
    - thicker is not always better
    
- tight twist in each yarn is better than loose and frayed
    
- firm and dense pile means quality
    
- the more backing seen, the less dense and durable
    
- high traffic areas need lower profiles to avoid matting and
    crushing
    
    Step 1: Fiber
  
  
    - basic material of makeup
    
- 90% is synthetic fiber
    
- rest is natural fiber, mostly wool
    
    Synthetic Fibers
  
  
    - made up of 1 of 3 materials: nylon, polypropylene or
    polyester
    
- created by chemical processes from oil and natural gas
    
    Nylon
  
  
    - 75% is made of nylon
    
- performs the best overall
    
- leader in: appearance retention, fade and heat resistance,
    soil and stain resistance, color and styling
    
- highest performance nylon is Type 6.6 for more resistant to
    stain penetration
    
    Polypropylene
  
  
    - next most common material is polypropylene
    
- introduced in the late 1950's in Italy
    
- BCF represents more than 35% of all fibers
    
- not as resilient or resistant to abrasion as nylon
    
- naturally stain and fade resistant
    
- naturally resistance to moisture
    
- more limited range of color options
    
- most often used in loop pile constructions
    
    Polyester
  
  
    - third type of material is polyester
    
- introduced to the carpet industry in the mid 1960's
    
- well accepted for bulkiness, color clarity, and good stain
    and fade resistance
    
- not as resilient as nylon
    
- can be a good performer
    
    PET
  
  
    - Mohawk makes from plastic bottles
    
- plastic is collected, separated by color, and then ground
    and melted
    
- used to manufacture the PET carpet fiber
    
- carpets made by Mohawk of PET staple fiber made from 100%
    recycled material
    
- great color clarity, stain resistance, durability
    
- keeps over 3 billion bottles out of landfills
    
    SmartStrand
  
  
    - made with DuPont Sonora polymer
    
- DuPont and Mohawk make this fiber into carpet
    
- SmartStrand with DuPont Sorona is continuous filament fiber
    
- eliminates shedding
    
- highly stain resistant and durable
    
- 40% of the fiber made from corn by products
    
    Wool
  
  
    - The above three materials make up the majority of synthetic
    fibers.
    
- The other type of fiber used in carpet construction is
    staple fiber.
    
- While some synthetics are used in the creation of staple
    fibers, the original staple fiber used in the making of carpet
    is wool.
    
- The wool used in today's carpet comes primarily from New
    Zealand, Argentina, and the United Kingdom.
    
- Since wool is a natural fiber, it ranges
    in color from off-white to black, with many earthen tones
    between.
    
- Wool doesn't stand up to abrasion and moisture as well as
    synthetics, it cleans well and is known to age
    gracefully.
    
- Wool is the most expensive carpet fiber, and represents
    less than one percent of the U.S. carpet market.
    
    Berber
  
  
    - considered a type of carpet construction
    
- actually comes from the name of a group of North African
    sheepherders called the Berbers
    
- Berbers produced coarse wool, with color flecks in their
    yarns
    
    Carpet is made in a 3-part process.
  
  
    #1 Tufting
  
  
    - begins with weaving the synthetic or staple fiber into a
    primary backing material
    
- usually made of woven polypropylene
    
- main value is to provide a base cloth to hold the yarn
    while tufting happens
    
- tufting machine has 800 to 2000 needles like a sewing
    machine to pull the yarn through the primary backing material
    
- tufting machine is 12 feet wide, its needles penetrate the
    backing and a small hook (looper) grabs the yarn and holds it
    in place
    
    Loop pile construction
  
  
    - holds appearance well
    
- no exposed yarn tips
    
- only sides of the yarn are exposed to wear and stress
    
- known to hold up the best
    
    Alternative step
  
  
    - sometimes the looper cuts small loops creating a cut
    pile
    
- length of these pieces called pile height, or
    distance between the looper and primary backing
    
- cuts are controlled by a computer, and can be programmed to
    cut only some of the loops
    
- this cutting is called cut and loop construction and
    creates pattern on the surface
    
    #2 Application of dye
  
  
    Two dyeing processes
  
  
    - yarn dyeing / pre-dyeing - color is applied to the yarn
    prior to tufting
    
- advantages are good side-by-side color consistency, large
    lot sizes, uniformity
    
- carpet dyeing - applying color to the yarn after
    tufting
    
- benefits - greater color flexibility
    
    Carpet dyeing methods
  
  
    - Beck / batch dyeing - stitching the ends together, then
    running the tufted carpet loop through large vats of dye and
    water for several hours.
    
- Beck process ideal for small runs, heavier face weight
    products
    
- continuous dyeing - similar to Beck dyeing - carpet is also
    run through processes other than dyeing
    
- continuous dyeing - applies color to the face by spraying
    or printing, also to create multicolor or patterned effects
    
- screen printing - color is applied through anywhere from
    1-8 silk-screens.
    
    #3 Manufacturing the carpet
  
  
    - finishing process- single production line that completes
    the final construction stages
      
        - coating of latex applied to dyed carpet's primary and
        secondary backing
        
 
- 
      
        - secondary backing - made of woven synthetic
        polypropylene
        
- two parts are squeezed together in a large heated press
        and held firmly to preserve shape
        
 
- shearing- removing loose ends and projecting fibers created
    during the tufting process
    
- also helps the yarn's tip definition
    
- inspection - for color uniformity and defects before it is
    rolled, wrapped, and shipped
    
    Terms and construction variables
  
  
    Pile height, or nap
  
  
    - length of the tuft measured from the primary backing to the
    yarn tips
    
- shown as a fraction, or decimal equivalent
    
- shorter pile is more durable than longer pile
    
- stitch rate - measure of how close the yarns are together
    
- stitch rate is measured in penetrations, or tufts, in a
    given length of carpet, usually an inch.
    
- stitch rate is controlled by the speed the carpet is moved
    through the tufting machine
    
- good number is seven to eight tufts per inch
    
- face weight-actual amount of fiber per square yard,
    measured in ounces
    
- typical carpet may have a face weight of 35 to 45 oz
    
- density- how tightly the yarn is stitched into the primary
    backing
    
- higher density will wear better than low density