Techtextil 2017 Exhibitor Preview: 
Mayer & Cie.

ALBSTADT, Germany — April 13, 2017 — Germany-based circular knitting machine manufacturer Mayer & Cie. (MCT) is exhibiting again this year at the Techtextil trade fair in Frankfurt. The focus at the industry event, to be held from May 9-12, 2017, will be on innovative textile applications. Mayer & Cie. will demonstrate at its stand, A06 in Hall 3, that circular knitting machines offer many opportunities in this connection. A number of others could join them in the future thanks to the new spinning and knitting technology the firm is also showcasing in Frankfurt.

Circular knitting beyond the bounds of single and double jersey

Which central property do mattress covers, car headliners and protective clothing have in common? Yes, they can all be manufactured on a circular knitting machine. This production method has grown especially important in the manufacture of mattress covers. Well over half of the covers is made of fabrics produced on circular knitting machines – material that is both elastic and retains its shape.

With its mattress covers Mayer & Cie. is already a force to be reckoned with in home textiles, or Hometech as the sector is known at Techtextil. The machines that make them are members of the OVJA family such as the OVJA 1.6 EM HS or OVJA 1.6 EE.

Another established area in which circular knitting machines are used is to make covers for upholstered furniture of all kinds. That is a speciality of, inter alia, the MCPE 2.4, a machine for coloured all-over plush jacquard fabrics.

The Relanit 0.8 does not use conventional yarns to manufacture textile fabrics. It knits spun steel fibres or copper, steel and silver wire, glass fibre, carbon fibre or carbon – including in combination with cotton and synthetic yarns. Their uses range from protective clothing to horticulture and electrically conductive textiles.

Opportunities now and in the future

No machines will be on show in Frankfurt because “our customers are exhibiting their products here. We are showing existing and prospective customers which machine could manufacture the fabric in question now or in the future,” Thomas Zizmann says. He is the Mayer & Cie. sales manager in charge. “We,” he adds, “are demonstrating everything that circular knitting machines are capable of making.”

Future opportunities are likely to be even more extensive, thanks to Mayer & Cie.’s spinning and knitting technology. Spinitsystems, the technology that combines spinning, cleaning and knitting, is part of the Mayer & Cie. presentation at Techtextil. The Spinit 3.0 E, the first machine to use the technology, processes a composite fibre and not the finished yarn. “That is why the options differ fundamentally from those of circular knitting technology,” says Michael A. Tuschak, in charge of spinitsystems marketing and sales at Mayer & Cie. So far, the machine has only processed cotton, but that is set to change in the near future. Mayer & Cie. has an open mind about new materials and uses. It has traditionally seen itself as an innovation driver and is constantly engaged in working on new solutions. With that in mind, the man in charge of spinitsystems looks forward to the trade fair in a relaxed mood. “I am very much looking forward to the ideas and questions that Techtextil visitors come up with,” Michael A. Tuschak says.

Posted April 13, 2017

Source: Mayer & Cie

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