Carriage position during inkjet printing may affect print quality. As such, maintaining accurate carriage position may benefit print quality in some applications. Determining carriage position, however, in some configurations, may be time consuming and cumbersome.
In some embodiments, the medium 110 is positioned on a platen 116 during printing. Pursuant to the illustrated embodiment, the platen 116 comprises a rotating drum (
Encoder strips 132, 134 (
The carriage 104 also includes a sensor 120. The sensor 120 may comprise one or more image or light sensors on the carriage 104 and is configured to sense light reflected from the medium 110, the platen 116, or other structure beneath the carriage 108. In some embodiments, the sensor 120 comprises a set of color sensors. In other embodiments the sensor 120 may comprise a CCD sensor. Other suitable sensors may alternatively be employed.
A controller 160 controls operation of the device 100. The controller 160 controls positioning of the carriages 102, 104 via motors (not shown). The controller 160 also controls operation of the pens 108. In operation, the controller 160 uses information collected by sensors 142, 152 to position the carriages 102, 102, respectively. As shown, the controller 160 includes a non-volatile memory 166 for storing and reading position information for the carriages 102, 104, as described in more detail below.
The encoder strip 132 also includes marking 182. The marking 182 includes a light-to-dark transition 192 and end thereof. The marking 182 has a width that is more than 100 times the width of one of the markings 172. The sensor 152 is configured to detect the light-to-dark transition 192 as movement of the carriage 102 causes the sensor 152 to pass the light-to-dark transition 192. The controller 160 is configured to receive output from the sensor 152 such that the controller 160 receives a signal from the sensor 152 indicative of the sensor 152 passing the light-to-dark transition 192.
The encoder strip 134 of
With reference to
Print quality may be affected by the relative positions of the swaths 186 and 188. In some applications, print quality is satisfactory when an inner edge 187 of the swath 188 is within a threshold distance from an inner edge 185 of the swath 186.
A suitable alignment procedure may be used to position the carriages 102, 104 such that the distance between the inner edges 185, 187 is sufficiently small, or within the threshold distance. These positions of the carriages 102, 104 are relative to a home or first position for each carriage. The home position 103 for carriage 102 is shown in dashed lines. Likewise, the home position 105 for carriage 104 is also shown in dashed lines.
One example alignment procedure is a print/scan procedure wherein the pens 108 of the carriages print alignment marks on a print medium. The sensor 120 then scans the print medium. Based on output from the sensor 120, the controller 160 determines alignment information for the carriages 102, 104 so as to ensure the distance between edges 185, 187 is less than the threshold distance.
When the controller 160 is power cycled, according to some embodiments, the controller 160 loses current position information for the carriages 102, 104. As such, after a power cycle, the controller 160 may determine the current positions of the carriages 102, 104. To avoid repeating the print/scan procedure described above, the carriages 102, 104 configured to have same or substantially same home positions as before the power cycle.
In general, and according to some example embodiments, the controller 160 initially determines a home position for each of the carriages 102, 104. The controller 160 then stores values associated with the home positions for the carriages 102, 104 in the non-volatile memory 166. The controller 160 then performs an alignment procedure to determine proper printing positions for the carriages 102, 104. This alignment procedure may be done by printing a test image or pattern on the medium 110 and then using the sensor 120 and the encoder strips 132, 134 to determine the relative positions of the inner edges 185, 187 of the swaths 186, 188. After a power cycle, the controller 160 determines home positions for the carriages 102, 104 and compares values associated with these home positions with the values stored in non-volatile memory. The difference between these values is added to the values of the newly-determined home positions so that the home positions after the power cycle and the home positions before the power cycle are close or identical.
For purposes of this disclosure “power cycle” means powering off the system 100 and then powering the system back on again. A power cycle may occur, for example, when a user turns off the system 100 and then turns the system on again. A power cycle may also occur, for example, when the system is disconnected from a supply of power, such as through an electrical outlet.
Initially, pursuant to block 402, the controller 160 (
Pursuant to some embodiments, the controller 160 determines that a carriage is in the hard stop position by moving the carriage 102 toward the surface 500 and then detecting a motor stall or otherwise detecting stoppage of the carriage 102. In
Next, pursuant to block 404 of
As the carriage 102 moves from the hard stop position shown in
The method described above and illustrates in
According to some embodiments, the controller 160 performs a print/scan alignment procedure to align the carriages 102, 104 based on the home positions of the carriages 102, 104. This print/scan alignment procedure may be performed after block 406 of
After a power cycle, or at other times, the system 100 (
Next, pursuant to block 704, the controller 160 moves the carriage 102 away from the hard stop position until detecting the light-to-dark transition 192 (
As the carriage 102 moves from the hard stop position shown in
At block 706, the controller 160 compares the value indicative of the position of the carriage 102 with the value stored in non-volatile memory for the carriage 102 and determines a difference between these two values. At block 708, the controller 160 adds this difference to the value indicative of the position of the carriage 102. The resultant value is then stored as the home position for carriage 102, pursuant to block 710.
This process may also be performed for the carriage 104 to obtain a new home position for the carriage 104.
In this manner the controller 160 can accurately position the carriages 102, 104 at home positions that are acceptably close to the home positions determined before the power cycle in an efficient manner.
Although the present disclosure has been described with reference to example embodiments, workers skilled in the art will recognize that changes may be made in form and detail without departing from the spirit and scope of the claimed subject matter. For example, although different example embodiments may have been described as including one or more features providing one or more benefits, it is contemplated that the described features may be interchanged with one another or alternatively be combined with one another in the described example embodiments or in other alternative embodiments. The present disclosure described with reference to the example embodiments and set forth in the following claims is manifestly intended to be as broad as possible. For example, unless specifically otherwise noted, the claims reciting a single particular element also encompass a plurality of such particular elements.
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