Multi-Needle Quilting Machine Product
Overview
A multi-needle quilting machine stitches three webs — a decorative top fabric, a thick wadding (batting) and a backing cloth — into a single quilted material. It is the production machine behind mattress panels, bedcovers, quilted jackets, moving blankets and insulated liners. Where a domestic or longarm quilter moves one sewing head over a stationary quilt, the industrial multi-needle machine inverts the arrangement: a bar carrying up to a hundred needles spans the full web width, the fabric sandwich feeds continuously through the machine, and the needle bar itself shuttles sideways so that the combination of the two motions draws the pattern. Every needle traces the same path simultaneously, so one pass quilts the entire width with the pattern repeated across it.
Two stitch families exist. Chainstitch machines are simpler — no bobbins — but the stitch can unravel. Lockstitch machines like the one described here form ISO type 301 stitches with a rotary hook and bobbin under every needle, the same stitch as a household sewing machine, secure but requiring periodic bobbin changes. Lockstitch dominates mattress panel production because the stitch survives flange cutting.
How it works
The three webs pay off their Supply Cradle rolls, pass over Spreader Bar guides that flatten each layer, and merge just ahead of the needles. The Fabric Feed indexes the sandwich forward with its spiked Feed Roller pair — but only while the needles are out of the fabric.
Stitching is the classic lockstitch cycle scaled across the width. The Main Stitch Drive strokes the Needle Bar Assembly down so every Quilting Needle pierces all three layers and descends through its hole in the Needle Plate. As each needle starts back up, the thread on its grooved side balloons into a loop; the point of the Rotary Hook beneath, spinning at twice needle frequency, picks up that loop and carries it completely around the Bobbin & Case case, interlacing top and bottom threads in the middle of the wadding. The Take-Up Spring and take-up motion then snap the stitch tight while the Stripper Plate strips the fabric off the rising needles.
Between penetrations — roughly a third of each revolution — the controller executes the next pattern increment: the X axis (fabric feed) advances up to a stitch length and the Y axis (Needle Bar Shuttle Drive) shifts the whole needle bar carriage sideways on its Linear Guide rails via servo and Ball Screw. A sequence of such X-Y increments, one per stitch, traces any continuous curve: waves, scrolls, diamonds, clamshells. Because all needles move together, the pattern repeat across the width equals the needle spacing, and operators drop needles out of their Needle Clamp positions to coarsen the repeat or run plain channel quilting.
Thread handling
Each needle draws from its own cone on the Thread Creel, through a Thread Tensioner set to give a balanced stitch with the knot buried in the wadding. A Thread Break Sensor per thread watches for motion; on a break the machine stops, the display shows which needle failed, and after rethreading the controller can step the pattern backward so the repair overlaps the last good stitches. Bobbin life is the practical limit on uptime — at 1,200 stitches per minute a bobbin lasts on the order of 20 minutes, so machines are designed for fast hook access, and some high-end models monitor remaining bobbin thread photoelectrically.
Control
The Pattern Controller holds the pattern library as polyline data and interpolates it against the main-shaft Encoder angle, ensuring fabric and bar never move while a needle is buried. Patterns are limited only by axis travel and acceleration: tight curvature forces shorter stitches or slower main-shaft speed, which the controller manages automatically. Modern controllers also handle border programs for mattress panels — switching patterns mid-panel — and tie-off cycles that lock stitch ends before panel cutting at the Exit Roller.
Applications
Mattress manufacturing consumes most multi-needle quilting capacity, quilting panel and border material that is then cut and flanged. Bedding plants run wider machines for comforters and bedspreads; apparel quilting (jacket linings) uses narrower, faster machines with thin waddings. Output for a 2.4 m machine running a medium-complexity pattern is typically 400–600 linear metres per shift, replacing roughly forty single-needle operators.
Build & assembly graph
expand / collapse · shared sub-assemblies converge · links to related products · est. labourTap an assembly to expand/collapse · tap a part to open it · use “Open page” for any node · drag to pan, scroll to zoom.
Bill of materials
10 top-level lines · 70 rows shown · 1,111 parts total · indented to 3 levels| # | Item / sub-assembly | Part no. | Qty/assy | Ext. qty | Parts | Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Needle Bar Assembly 6 parts | quilting-machine-needle-bar | 1× | 1 | 207 | assembly |
| 1.1 | Quilting Needle | quilting-machine-needle | 96× | 96 | — | part |
| 1.2 | Needle Clamp | quilting-machine-needle-clamp | 96× | 96 | — | part |
| 1.3 | Needle Bar Beam | quilting-machine-bar-beam | 2× | 2 | — | part |
| 1.4 | Stroke Eccentric | quilting-machine-bar-eccentric | 4× | 4 | — | part |
| 1.5 | Stripper Plate | quilting-machine-presser-plate | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 1.6 | Ball Bearing | ball-bearing | 8× | 8 | — | part |
| 2 | Rotary Hook Bed 7 parts | quilting-machine-hook-bed | 1× | 1 | 213 | assembly |
| 2.1 | Rotary Hook | quilting-machine-rotary-hook | 96× | 96 | — | part |
| 2.2 | Bobbin & Case | quilting-machine-bobbin | 96× | 96 | — | part |
| 2.3 | Hook Shaft | quilting-machine-hook-shaft | 2× | 2 | — | part |
| 2.4 | Helical Gear Pair | gear-pair | 2× | 2 | — | part |
| 2.5 | Needle Plate | quilting-machine-needle-plate | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 2.6 | Ball Bearing | ball-bearing | 12× | 12 | — | part |
| 2.7 | Oil Seal | oil-seal | 4× | 4 | — | part |
| 3 | Thread Management 5 parts | quilting-machine-thread-system | 1× | 1 | 293 | assembly |
| 3.1 | Thread Creel | quilting-machine-creel | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 3.2 | Thread Tensioner | quilting-machine-tensioner | 96× | 96 | — | part |
| 3.3 | Take-Up Spring | quilting-machine-takeup-spring | 96× | 96 | — | part |
| 3.4 | Thread Break Sensor | quilting-machine-thread-sensor | 96× | 96 | — | part |
| 3.5 | Thread Guide Rail | quilting-machine-thread-rail | 4× | 4 | — | part |
| 4 | Fabric Feed 6 parts | quilting-machine-fabric-feed | 1× | 1 | 34 | assembly |
| 4.1 | Supply Cradle | quilting-machine-supply-cradle | 3× | 3 | — | part |
| 4.2 | Feed Roller | quilting-machine-feed-roller | 2× | 2 | — | part |
| 4.3 | Spreader Bar | quilting-machine-spreader-bar | 3× | 3 | — | part |
| 4.4 | Servo Motor 4 parts | servo-motor | 1× | 1 | 24 | assembly |
| 4.4.1 | Stator Assembly 3 parts + deeper › | stator-assembly | 1× | 1 | 3 | assembly |
| 4.4.2 | Rotor Assembly 4 parts + deeper › | rotor-assembly | 1× | 1 | 19 | assembly |
| 4.4.3 | Encoder | encoder | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 4.4.4 | Motor Housing | motor-housing | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 4.5 | Helical Gear Pair | gear-pair | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 4.6 | Exit Roller | quilting-machine-exit-roller | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 5 | Needle Bar Shuttle Drive 5 parts | quilting-machine-lateral-drive | 1× | 1 | 30 | assembly |
| 5.1 | Servo Motor 4 parts | servo-motor | 1× | 1 | 24 | assembly |
| 5.1.1 | Stator Assembly 3 parts + deeper › | stator-assembly | 1× | 1 | 3 | assembly |
| 5.1.2 | Rotor Assembly 4 parts + deeper › | rotor-assembly | 1× | 1 | 19 | assembly |
| 5.1.3 | Encoder | encoder | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 5.1.4 | Motor Housing | motor-housing | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 5.2 | Ball Screw | ball-screw | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 5.3 | Linear Guide | quilting-machine-linear-guide | 2× | 2 | — | part |
| 5.4 | Encoder | encoder | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 5.5 | Ball Bearing | ball-bearing | 2× | 2 | — | part |
| 6 | Main Stitch Drive 5 parts | quilting-machine-main-drive | 1× | 1 | 34 | assembly |
| 6.1 | Servo Motor 4 parts | servo-motor | 1× | 1 | 24 | assembly |
| 6.1.1 | Stator Assembly 3 parts + deeper › | stator-assembly | 1× | 1 | 3 | assembly |
| 6.1.2 | Rotor Assembly 4 parts + deeper › | rotor-assembly | 1× | 1 | 19 | assembly |
| 6.1.3 | Encoder | encoder | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 6.1.4 | Motor Housing | motor-housing | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 6.2 | Main Shaft | quilting-machine-main-shaft | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 6.3 | Drive Belt | drive-belt | 2× | 2 | — | part |
| 6.4 | Encoder | encoder | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 6.5 | Ball Bearing | ball-bearing | 6× | 6 | — | part |
| 7 | Pattern Controller 5 parts | quilting-machine-control | 1× | 1 | 280 | assembly |
| 7.1 | Motion Control Board 5 parts | quilting-machine-control-board | 1× | 1 | 273 | assembly |
| 7.1.1 | Bare PCB | pcb-bare | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 7.1.2 | Compute SoC Module | soc-module | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 7.1.3 | Microcontroller | mcu | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 7.1.4 | SMD Passive (R/C/L) | smd-passives | 260× | 260 | — | part |
| 7.1.5 | Connector | connector | 10× | 10 | — | part |
| 7.2 | LCD Panel | lcd-panel | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 7.3 | Touch Digitizer | touch-digitizer | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 7.4 | Power Supply | power-supply | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 7.5 | Relay | relay | 4× | 4 | — | part |
| 8 | Machine Frame 4 parts | quilting-machine-frame | 1× | 1 | 12 | assembly |
| 8.1 | Side Frame | quilting-machine-side-frame | 2× | 2 | — | part |
| 8.2 | Gantry Beam | quilting-machine-gantry-beam | 2× | 2 | — | part |
| 8.3 | Sheet Metal Panel | sheet-panel | 6× | 6 | — | part |
| 8.4 | Fastener Set | fastener-set | 2× | 2 | — | part |
| 9 | Wire Bundle | wire-bundle | 3× | 3 | — | part |
| 10 | Fastener Set | fastener-set | 5× | 5 | — | part |
Sourcing — likely vendors
Companies that make this · indicative price $10k–$1M · MOQ & lead are typical| Vendor | HQ | Specialty | MOQ | Lead time |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🇨🇭Rieter rieter.com ↗ | Winterthur, CH | Spinning machinery | 10 units | 14–24 wks |
| truetzschler.com ↗ | Mönchengladbach, DE | Textile machinery | 10 units | 14–24 wks |
| 🇧🇪Picanol picanol.be ↗ | Ypres, BE | Weaving machines | 10 units | 14–24 wks |
| karlmayer.com ↗ | Obertshausen, DE | Warp knitting machines | 10 units | 14–24 wks |
| 🇨🇭Saurer saurer.com ↗ | Arbon, CH | Spinning & embroidery | 10 units | 14–24 wks |
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