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pro vyhledávání: '"J F P James"'
Autor:
J. F. P. James
Publikováno v:
Journal of the Textile Institute Transactions. 54:T420-T432
Merino, Corriedale, and Lincoln wools for use in basic research have been grown by the C.S.I.R.O. Sheep Biology Laboratory in Australia under conditions designed to produce wools which are as uniform as possible in physical and chemical properties. T
Publikováno v:
Journal of the Textile Institute Transactions. 51:T935-T948
The origin, frequency of occurrence, and appraisal of tenderness in fleece wool in Australia are examined. Five out of ten buyers penalized Average Spinners wools for tenderness when the strength of the staples had fallen to about 30% of that of comp
Autor:
J. F. P. James, A. McD. Richardson
Publikováno v:
Journal of the Textile Institute. 60:223-248
The tensions in steel ties around compressed Australian-wool export bales vary with the type and weight of wool, the amount of compression, and the tightness of application of the ties. A cube law relating the tie tension and the clean-wool shipping
Publikováno v:
British Journal of Applied Physics. 12:230-237
The dynamic modulus of nylon fibres has been measured over a wide frequency range at different temperatures and humidities, and also the life under load. The measured life times were of the same order as the periods used in the dynamic experiments. T
Autor:
J. F. P. James, H. G. David
Publikováno v:
Journal of the Textile Institute. 59:585-592
Differences between the results obtained for the fineness of wool tops measured by air-flow and projection-microscope methods can arise because the coefficient of variation of the measured top is different from that of the tops used to calibrate the
Autor:
J. F. P. James
Publikováno v:
The Journal of The Textile Institute. 62:172-174
(1971). The Calibration of Air-flow Apparatus for the Determination of the Fibre Diameter of Wool. The Journal of The Textile Institute: Vol. 62, No. 3, pp. 172-174.
Autor:
J. F. P. James, D. J. Ward
Publikováno v:
Nature. 206:956-957
ALTHOUGH ‘doggy’ wool constitutes only 0.8 per cent of the Australian wool clip, its incidence has increased by 50 per cent in some fine-wool growing areas over the past three years1. ‘Doggy’ wool can be spun and woven into cloth on conventio
Autor:
J. F. P. James
Publikováno v:
Nature. 198:1112-1112
THE occurrence of irregularities in the shape of the cross-section of wool fibres along their length is well known. The variations are in the area and ellipticity of the cross-section as well as the inclination of the major axis of the ellipse. Effor