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
Looppile 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