Vaucanson's Automatic Loom: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
[[image:JD 2019 Vaucanson Loom 4.JPG|thumb|2019. Showing the cams which operate the treadles]] | [[image:JD 2019 Vaucanson Loom 4.JPG|thumb|2019. Showing the cams which operate the treadles]] | ||
[[image:JD 2019 Vaucanson Loom 8.JPG|thumb|2019. The punched controlling drum is visible here]] | [[image:JD 2019 Vaucanson Loom 8.JPG|thumb|2019. The punched controlling drum is visible here]] | ||
[[image:JD 2019 Vaucanson Loom | [[image:JD 2019 Vaucanson Loom 9.JPG|thumb|2019. The crank handle which provides the entire motive power is visible here]] | ||
Métier à tisser les étoffes façonnées de Vaucanson. | Métier à tisser les étoffes façonnées de Vaucanson. | ||
Revision as of 21:35, 30 October 2024
Métier à tisser les étoffes façonnées de Vaucanson.
In 1745-48 the brilliant French inventor and engineer Jacques de Vaucanson designed a loom intended to partially automate the work of the drawman and the weaver. The mechanism, the shuttle and the beater were driven by cams while the fabric was regularly wound on. It did not find commercial application.
The photographs show a reconstruction of the machine displayed at the Musée des Arts et Métiers in Paris. See also Museum webpage here.
It is not clear how much of the machine is original.
The museum also have a scale model of the loom, made by Jean Marin in 1855. It is not on display, Photo here. Museum's listing here.
The machine was illustrated and described in detail in the Bulletin de la Société d'Encouragement pour l'Industrie Nationale in 1853.[1]