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Drying wetcleaned suede and leather
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The objective of the drying cycle in the
Royaltone process for wetcleaning suede, leather and trimmed
cloth garments is to remove the residual moisture left after
extraction without causing the skins to stiffen, harden or
shrink as a result of the drying process.
Drying methods and equipment
Leather garments must be dried without
heat and must be thoroughly dry before any pressing or
finishing is attempted.
Drying may be accomplished by hanging the
wet garments and allowing them to air dry at ambient air
temperature or by employing various types of equipment to
accelerate drying.
After they have been thoroughly air
dried, tumbling suedes and leathers for two to three minutes at
under 120°F will further soften the skins and will fluff up
the suede nap.
Using tumbling blocks in the dryer on
this final step will also brush up the suede nap during the
tumbling process.
Hanging to air dry
If the volume of suedes and leathers
bring processed is small, the hanging space available is
usually adequate, so that air drying is not a problem.
As the volume of suedes and leathers
increases, hanging space may not be sufficient to handle the
volume. In that case, more space must be found or some type of
drying equipment must be made available or be acquired to speed
up the drying time.
Drying equipment options
One piece of equipment that may be
readily available is a laundry dryer. Suedes and leathers can
be tumbled in the dryer at a temperature of 100°F or less.
The flow of air over the tumbling items
will accelerate the drying time. If more than one dryer is
available, more garments can be dried.
Another way of moving air over wet
hanging suedes and leathers is to have a fan or blower blow
ambient temperature air over and through the wet garments to
speed up evaporation.
Fans and blowers can be used in
conjunction with a conveyor loaded with hanging wet suedes and
leathers.
As the conveyor keeps moving the garments
around through the ambient air, the movement will promote
drying. With fans and blowers blowing ambient air over and
through the wet, moving garments, drying will be still faster.
The more fans, blowers and conveyors, the
more garments can be dried per unit of time.
The ultimate machine for drying suedes
and leathers is the specially designed dryer made for
controlled drying of wetcleaned garments.
These dryers provide precise electronic
microprocessor control of moisture content and temperature of
the garments during the drying cycle to ensure that the right
amount of moisture (10 to 12 percent) is left in garments after
drying.
This controlled drying is critical to
prevent the shrinkage and stiffening of the skins that would
otherwise occur in the drying process.
Summary of drying methods
Hanging wet suedes and leathers to air
dry at ambient temperature is the least expensive but slowest
method of safely drying the skins. Tumbling in a cool dryer at
under 100°F or blowing ambient air over hanging wet suedes
and leathers is safe and faster but more costly. Drying in a
microprocessor controlled dryer is safe and fast but requires a
significant investment in the special equipment.
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