The present disclosure relates to digital photocopying and printing on print media sheets and particularly such processes in which the media sheets are fed serially from at least one tray or feeder and may traverse any of several chosen paths through one or a multiplicity of marking engines. In such photocopying and printing, the media sheets typically pass through a myriad of nip rollers and gates where the transport speed may be varied and the sheets are directed around numerous bends and the sheets may also be inverted for duplex printing or printing on both sides of the media sheet.
Heretofore, in digital photocopying/printing and particularly with electrostatic photocopiers, the media sheet path is chosen by the electronic programmer once the user has inputted the print job requirements. The sheets are fed and transported through the marking engine(s) with occasional or very limited sheet position readings by sensors located along the sheet path for providing a basis for correcting the timing of the media sheet feed into the marking engine(s) and the progress of the media sheets through the marking engine(s). The progression of media sheets through the marking engine(s) has thus essentially been accomplished by open loop control.
Where media sheets progress through a complicated transport path of multiple nip rollers, bends, and gates, variations in the path length due to varying properties of the print sheet media such as varying length, variations in the velocity on the surface of the nip rollers, variations in the bends through which the sheet traverses have allowed sheet positioning errors to compound thereby resulting in collisions, mis-registrations and jamming. Problems of this sort have been particularly acute in arrangements where large documents are to be printed at high speed in parallel paths through multiple marking engines. The combination of high sheet velocity and extended complex sheet paths are intolerant of substantial variations in the timing of the sheet position along the path in order to prevent collisions, mis-registration and jamming.
Thus, it has been desired to provide a way or means of improving the media sheet control and transport through marking engines in digital printing in a manner which eliminates or minimizes mis-registration and jamming.
The present disclosure describes a method of controlling print sheet media traverse through complex or multiple paths in digital marking engines. The progression of the sheets through the path established by the electronic controller, for the particular user requested print job, provides for each of the nip rollers to be driven by individual variable speed motors; and, sheet position sensors are disposed at each of the bends and gates in the path to provide information to the controller upon the arrival of a sheet at that sensor station. The controller then applies a correction algorithm to generate a control signal for the motor drive of the proximate nip rollers to correct for any errors in the sheet position with respect to the planned program through the chosen media path in order to prevent mis-registration and jamming. Thus, the individual variable speed drive to each of the nip rollers enables the controller to correct for mis-positioning of the sheets irrespective of the location of the positioning error within the marking engine thereby providing essentially closed loop control within the system and particularly the media path.
Referring to
Each of the marking engines 12, 14, 16, 18 have intermediate paths therein determined by a plurality of pairs of nip rollers 26 and sensors 28 located therealong for defining and monitoring the movement of sheet media along a given path determined by the controller for the print job as will hereinafter be described in greater detail.
Referring to
The sheet reference trajectory generators 38 provide an output along line 52 to the sheet controllers 32 of the reference sheet positions xd and an output along line 54 of the reference sheet velocities vd to the sheet controllers 32.
Referring to
The sheet observer 40 provides an output along line 56 to the sheet controllers 32 of the estimated sheet positions xhat. The sheet controllers 32 provide an input along line 58 of the desired sheet velocities vd,sheet to the nip selector 34 which provides an output along line 60 of the desired nip velocities sd to the nip controllers 36.
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
With reference to
Referring to
In the media path shown in
sd1=sd2=vd3
sd3=sd4=sd5=sd6=vd2
sd7=sd8=vd1
The assignment of the nip velocities for the empty nip rollers of the desired sheet velocity of the upstream or incoming sheet thus reduces the possibility of skewing, jamming or tearing of the sheet when entering each pair of nip rollers.
Referring to
The sheet observer 40 generates estimates of the positions and velocities xhat and vhat of all sheets in the media path using a model based estimator and utilizing all control signals such as motor voltages, motor current, step motor pulses, gate actuation signals, and all sensor signals including encoder, tachometer, and sheet sensor signals from optical or mechanical point sensors or array sensors.
The sheet controllers 32 generate control signals for desired sheet velocities vd,sheet to insure that all the sheets stay on track and follow their respective reference trajectories. Control is determined as a function of the reference trajectories and the actual sheet positions and velocities as determined by the sheet observer 40. The system may utilize proportional control with velocity feed-forward for enhanced stability, zero-state tracking error and ease of tuning.
Referring to
The system then proceeds to step 88 and computes the desired sheet velocity according to the algorithm
v
d sheet=Kp(xd−xhat)+vd
where Kp is a controller proportional gain constant, xd is the current reference trajectory position, xhat is the current estimated sheet position, and vd is the current reference trajectory velocity.
The system then proceeds to step 90 and maps the desired sheet velocities vd,sheet to desired nip velocities sd for each nip roller pair in the selected media path.
Utilizing the desired nip velocities from step 90, and the actual or estimated nip velocity from the nip motor sensors or step motor pulses, each nip controller 36 generates a nip motor control signal u which may include voltage, current or step motor pulses to insure that the nip velocity s tracks the desired nip velocity sd. The system then proceeds to step 92 and enquires as to whether all sheets present in the media path have been processed; and, if the answer is affirmative, the system proceeds to step 94 where, for each nip in the media path, proceeds to assign its desired velocity to be the upstream nip velocity if the nip is empty at step 96, for each gate in the media path, proceeds to generate an actuation voltage/step motor pulses to actuate the gate to the desired position in anticipation for the next sheet to reach it so that the sheet is diverted into the correct part of the media path.
The system then proceeds to step 98 and calculates the desired control signal for the actuator such as one of the nip motors 29 or one of the gate solenoids 27-1, 27-2 at step 100.
However, if the determination at step 92 is negative, the system recycles to step 82.
The system then proceeds to step 102 and enquires as to whether all nips in the path have been processed; and, if the determination at step 102 is affirmative, the system proceeds to step 104 and enquires if there are sheets still in the path or more arriving into the path. If the determination at step 102 is negative, the system recycles to step 96.
If the determination at step 104 is affirmative, the system recycles to step 74; however, if the determination at step 104 is negative, the print job is considered complete at step 106.
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to Table 1, the data for the three print jobs performed for comparison purposes is given for the sensor locations 128, 228, 328, 428, 528, and 628 for the module of
Referring to
Referring to
It will be appreciated that various of the above-disclosed and other features and functions, or alternatives thereof, may be desirably combined into many other different systems or applications. Also that various presently unforeseen or unanticipated alternatives, modifications, variations or improvements therein may be subsequently made by those skilled in the art which are also intended to be encompassed by the following claims.