1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a printing apparatus that performs printing on a continuous sheet.
2. Description of the Related Art
A continuous sheet roll is used in printing a large number of prints, such as in lab printing. When producing a continuous sheet roll, from the viewpoint of improving manufacturing yield, a roll having a required length may be formed by joining ends of a plurality of continuous sheets whose lengths are less than the required length to each other with a joining material such as a splicing tape (hereafter referred to as “tape”). In the continuous sheet roll, splices (joints) joined to each other with a tape are randomly provided at more than one location.
In an apparatus discussed in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2001-239715, control is performed so that printing is not performed on an area including the splice, that is, an unrecordable area, by detecting the position of the splice by detecting a tape using an optical sensor.
When printing, for example, a high-quality photographic image, a slight difference between the characteristics of sheets used (such as, sheet type, sheet quality, and sheet thickness) is manifested as a difference between print qualities. Therefore, if the characteristics of a leading sheet and a following sheet that are joined to each other at a splice of a continuous sheet differ from each other, images in front of and behind the splice have different qualities, such as different tones, gradations, and contrasts. A difference between print qualities of a plurality of pages of one printed material, such as a photographic album, causes a person to look at the printed material with an improper color tone, etc. Therefore, it is desirable for the print qualities of images which are successively printed on a continuous sheet be the same. Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2001-239715 does not acknowledge the existence of such a problem and does not discuss anything about a method of overcoming such a problem.
The present invention is carried out on the basis of an acknowledgement of the existence of the above-described problem. The present invention provides a technique of reducing differences between print qualities at portions in front of and behind a splice in performing printing on a continuous sheet having splices.
According to the present invention, there is provided an apparatus including a sheet feeding unit configured to feed a continuous sheet along a path; a print head of an inkjet-type configured to print images on the continuous sheet fed from the sheet feeding unit; and a detecting unit that detects a splice of the continuous sheet at a position between the sheet feeding unit and a printing unit in the path, wherein, if the splice is detected by the detecting unit, image-quality adjustment is performed using an area of the sheet that follows the splice.
Further features of the present invention will become apparent from the following description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached drawings.
An inkjet printing apparatus according to an embodiment of the present invention will hereunder be described. The printing apparatus according to the embodiment is a high-speed line printer that uses a long continuous sheet (that is longer than a print unit (such as one page or a unit image) that is repeated in a conveying direction), and that can perform one-side printing and two-side printing. For example, the inkjet printing apparatus is suitable in the field of printing a large number of prints in, for example, a print lab.
A sheet held by the sheet feeding unit 2 is wound into the form of a roll if it is a continuous sheet. For example, it is possible to fold at each perforation a continuous sheet that is perforated with every unit length, stack the folded sheets upon each other, and accommodate the stacked sheets in the sheet feeding unit 2.
As shown in
In
A scanner apparatus 19 (reading unit) is positioned downstream from the downstream conveying roller pair (pinch roller 14). It is used to read a test image or an image-quality adjustment image printed on a continuous sheet using the print head unit 30. As shown in
A detecting unit 31 for optically detecting a splice (tape 25) of the continuous sheet from above a sheet surface by a non-contact method is provided upstream from the upstream conveying roller pair (pinch roller 12). The detecting unit 31 includes a light-emitting unit and an array sensor. The light-emitting unit obliquely illuminates the sheet surface with light. The array sensor detects reflected light. The leading sheet 26 and the following sheet 27 are both white, so that they both are glossy and have high reflectivity. In contrast, the surface of the tape 25 is black and is subjected to mat processing, so that it has low light reflectivity. Making use of the difference between the reflectivities, the detecting unit 31 detects that the tape 25 at the splice has passed a sensor detection position. The detecting unit 31 can also detect the height of the sheet surface by determining which of the two or more photodetectors that the array sensor is provided with primarily receives the reflected light. Two guide roller pairs 29 are provided, one on the upstream side and one on the downstream side of the detecting unit 31. When the position of the detecting unit 31 in a sheet height direction at the detection position is stabilized, the detection precision is stabilized.
In Step S103, the printing of unit images is continued, and as many unit images as possible are printed until the detected splice moves to a print position of the upstreammost yellow head 9 of the print head unit 30. The length of the conveying path from the detection position of the detecting unit 31 to the print position of the upstreammost yellow head 9 is detected in terms of design. Therefore, whether or not several unit images can be printed in an area of this length can be calculated from the length of a unit image in the conveying direction.
In Step S104, an area including a splice is set as a print prohibition area. This area is skipped and not subjected to printing when it passes the print position. Therefore, the print prohibition area is a blank without ink being applied thereto.
In Step S105, after the splice passes the print position, an area of the following sheet that follows the splice is used to perform image quality adjustment of the print head unit 30. One example of the image quality adjustment is color shading adjustment. “Color shading” refers to a phenomenon in which, for example, a color tone changes in accordance with the characteristics of a sheet to which ink is applied. If the sheet characteristics of the leading sheet 26 and the following sheet 27 are not the same, a user recognizes the difference between the sheet characteristics as different color tones. “Color shading adjustment” refers to data processing for performing printing using the actual color tone by proper correction in accordance with the sheet characteristics. Using the print heads of the respective colors, adjustment patterns for the color shading adjustment are printed on a leading area of the following sheet that follows the splice. The scanner apparatus 19 reads the printed adjustment patterns, and the controlling unit corrects driving of the print heads of the respective colors on the basis of read results.
Returning to
The image-quality adjustment performed in Step S105 may be an adjustment that is different from the color shading adjustment. For example, it may be a gap adjustment in which the distance between the sheet and the nozzle row of each print head is adjusted. If the sheet thickness of the leading sheet 26 and that of the following sheet 27 differ from each other, and, if the position of the head is constant, the gaps between the head and respective sheets differ. If the gaps differ, the distance that the ink discharged from the nozzle falls until it lands on a sheet surface (that is, the time taken for the ink discharged from the nozzle to land on the sheet surface) changes. As a result, the precision with which the ink drops on a landing position also changes. Therefore, the image quality of the leading sheet 26 and that of the following sheet 27 may differ from each other. As mentioned above, not only can the detecting unit 31 detect a splice, but it can also detect the thickness of a sheet. Even if, in accordance with a detected sheet thickness, the head holder 10 holding the print head unit 30 is moved in the direction of arrow B, and the thicknesses of the leading sheet 26 and the following sheet 27 are different from each other, control is performed so that a constant gap is maintained. That is, this exemplary image-quality adjustment is an operation in which the gap is kept constant regardless of the difference between the sheet thicknesses.
Another example of the image-quality adjustment performed in Step S105 is a color registration adjustment of a plurality of print heads. If the friction coefficient of a sheet surface or a sheet thickness changes, a feed amount of the sheet by the conveying rollers changes slightly. Therefore, at the plurality of print heads, print positions for respective colors are shifted relative to each other, thereby reducing the precision with which inks of the respective colors that differ from each other overlap each other. This influences the image quality of a print. This is corrected by performing the color registration adjustment. More specifically, using the print heads for the respective colors, adjustment patterns for performing the color registration adjustment are printed separately on a leading area of the following sheet that follows a splice. The scanner apparatus 19 reads the relative positions in a sheet conveying direction between the printed adjustment patterns of the respective colors. On the basis of read results, the controlling unit 6 corrects discharge timings of the inks of the respective colors, and causes the inks of the respective colors to land precisely on their landing positions. Even if the characteristics of the leading sheet 26 and those of the following sheet 27 are different from each other, color misregistration of the respective colors with respect to the following sheet 27 is automatically corrected, so that an image quality of the following sheet 27 is maintained as high as that of the leading sheet 27.
Although three examples of image-quality adjustment are described, any of these may be used in combination to perform a plurality of adjustments. Sheet consumption can be reduced when the area of the following sheet that is subjected to the image-quality adjustment is closer to a splice. However, it need not be a leading area that immediately follows the leading sheet.
Although, in the above-described embodiment, the sheet information of the following sheet 27 is obtained by the detecting unit 31, the sheet information may be obtained by other methods. For example, it is possible to provide the sheet information of the following sheet 27 on a sheet itself, and to read the sheet information to perform the image-quality adjustment.
According to the embodiment, the image-quality adjustment is performed on a leading area of the following sheet that follows a splice of the continuous sheet. Therefore, even if the sheet characteristics in front of and behind the splice are different from each other, it is possible to continue printing with the same print image quality that does not cause a user to look at a print with an improper color tone, etc.
While the present invention has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed exemplary embodiments. The scope of the following claims is to be accorded the broadest interpretation so as to encompass all such modifications and equivalent structures and functions.
This application claims the benefit of Japanese Patent Application No. 2010-111533 filed May 13, 2010, which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2010-111533 | May 2010 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6523921 | Codos | Feb 2003 | B2 |
20050099439 | Folkins | May 2005 | A1 |
20050237548 | Suzuki | Oct 2005 | A1 |
20060279624 | Tsuchiya et al. | Dec 2006 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2001-239715 | Sep 2001 | JP |
2001239715 | Sep 2001 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20110279509 A1 | Nov 2011 | US |