The present application relates to a booklet maker or sheet folding apparatus, as would be used in conjunction with a printing or copying apparatus.
Booklet makers and sheet folders are well-known devices for forming folded booklets or folded sheet sets. It is becoming common to include booklet makers and sheet folders in conjunction with office-range copiers and printers (as used herein, a “copier” will be considered a type of “printer”). In basic form, a booklet maker/sheet folder includes a slot for accumulating signature sheets, as would be produced by a printer. In booklet mode, the accumulated sheets, forming the pages of a booklet, are positioned within the stack so that a stapler mechanism and complementary anvil can staple the stack precisely along the intended crease line. In one embodiment, the creased and stapled sheet sets are then pushed, by a blade, completely through crease rolls, to form the final main fold in the finished booklet. The basic hardware of a booklet maker, such as including the crease rolls, can be controlled to provided C- or Z-folds to sheets or sets of sheets as well. The finished booklets or sheets are then accumulated in a tray downstream of the crease rolls.
Whether the final product of a booklet maker is a multi-page booklet, or a folded sheet or set of sheets, if it is desired to mail the product without an envelope, it is known to place a sticker on an edge of the product to prevent the booklet or folded sheet from opening or unfolding in the mail.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,980,676 discloses a finishing device for a copier or digital printer which places tapes along the edges of output sheet sets.
According to one embodiment, there is provided an apparatus for processing sheets, comprising a roller pair forming a main nip therebetween, the roller pair being operable to move at least one sheet through the main nip in a process direction and a reverse direction opposite the process direction. A sticker applicator is operatively disposed upstream of the main nip along the process direction. A control system, operative of the roller pair and the main nip, causes the roller pair to move a sheet in the reverse direction to receive a sticker from the sticker applicator, and then to move the sheet through the main nip in the process direction.
Booklet maker 110 defines a slot 112. Slot 112 accumulates signature sheets (sheets each having typically four page images thereon, for eventual folding into pages of the booklet) from the printer 99. Each sheet is held within slot 112 at a level where a stapler 114 can staple the sheets along a midline of the signatures, the midline corresponding to the eventual crease of the finished booklet. In order to hold sheets of a given size at the desired level relative to the stapler 114, there is provided at the bottom of slot 112 an elevator 116, which forms the “floor” of the slot 112 on which the edges of the accumulating sheets rest before they are stapled. The elevator 116 is placed at different locations along slot 112 depending on the size of the incoming sheets.
As printed signature sheets are output from printer 99, they accumulate in slot 112. When all of the necessary sheets to form a desired booklet are accumulated in slot 112, elevator 116 is moved from its first position to a second position where the midpoint of the sheets are adjacent the stapler 114. Stapler 114 is activated to place one or more staples along the midpoint of the sheets, where the booklet will eventually be folded.
After the stapling, elevator 116 is moved from its second position to a third position, where the midpoint of the sheets are adjacent a blade 14 and crease rolls 10 and 12, which form a crease nip 16. The action of blade 14 and crease rolls 10 and 12 performs the final folding, and sharp creasing, of the sheets into the finished booklet. Blade 14 contacts the sheet set along the stapled midpoint thereof, and bends the sheet set toward the nip of crease rolls 10 and 12, which draw all the sheets in and form a sharp crease. The creased and stapled sheet sets are then drawn, by the rotation of crease rolls 10 and 12, completely through the nip, to form the final main fold in the finished booklet. The finished booklets are then conducted along path 122 and collected in a tray 124.
The basic hardware of a finisher as shown in
In
Disposed between crease rolls 10, 12 and roller pair 20, 22 is what can generally be called a sticker applicator 30. The applicator 30 provides stickers (such as small pieces of paper or tape, having adhesive on one side thereof) and applies the stickers to the trailing edge (relative to process direction P) of a sheet S held in main nip 24.
The sticker applicator 30 in this embodiment includes a dispenser having a supply spool 32 for retaining a supply of stickers on substrate such as backing tape, and take-up spool 34 for taking up the tape as sticker are removed. As shown, the sticker-bearing tape is threaded around a pin 36, which causes a sharp turn in the motion of the backing tape BT; as the backing tape BT makes the sharp turn, a single sticker ST is effectively peeled from the backing tape and disposed along the path of a sheet S. The backing tape BT would typically be pulled by a friction roller nip (not shown) associated with take-up spool 34. Because of the large variation in diameter of the take-up spool 34 over the course of its use, it is preferably over-driven with a slipping drive. The main body of sticker applicator 30 can be in the form of an easily replaceable cartridge, so that a spent roll of backing tape on take-up spool 34 can be quickly replaced with a new roll of backing tape on supply spool 32.
Because a sticker ST must be placed on a trailing edge of a sheet passing mainly through the process direction, the roller pair 20, 22 is controlled to momentarily “back up” the sheet S so that the trailing edge of the sheet S is pushed against the sticky (toward the right in the Figure) side of the sticker ST. At an appropriate moment, the applicator interposes a sticker ST in a path of a folded sheet S moving in the reverse direction. In one embodiment, the sheet S can be backed up to such an extent that the sticker ST is placed on the trailing edge and the trailing edge is backed up into crease nip 16, where the sticker ST is folded down by the crease nip 16 over the trailing edge of sheet S. In this embodiment, the crease rolls 10, 12 function both to perform a main fold in the sheet S as it moves in the process direction and fold the sticker ST when the sheet moves in the reverse direction. Once the sticker ST is placed on and folded over the trailing edge of sheet S, the direction of roller pair 20, 22 is again reversed to push the sheet through the process direction (to the right in the Figure) and to an output tray as desired.
In a practical application of the apparatus in
The claims, as originally presented and as they may be amended, encompass variations, alternatives, modifications, improvements, equivalents, and substantial equivalents of the embodiments and teachings disclosed herein, including those that are presently unforeseen or unappreciated, and that, for example, may arise from applicants/patentees and others.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4004962 | Kleid | Jan 1977 | A |
4160687 | Spear | Jul 1979 | A |
5118375 | Malachowski et al. | Jun 1992 | A |
5279698 | Davis | Jan 1994 | A |
5376217 | Janssen et al. | Dec 1994 | A |
5711846 | Alicea | Jan 1998 | A |
5980676 | Meetze | Nov 1999 | A |
6273411 | Vijuk | Aug 2001 | B1 |
6435245 | Sette et al. | Aug 2002 | B1 |
6769675 | Vijuk | Aug 2004 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
44 07 254 | Sep 1995 | DE |
0 547 788 | Jun 1993 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20050155716 A1 | Jul 2005 | US |