The present invention relates exclusively to the field of mail handling, and it relates more particularly to a device for conveying and guiding mail items, such as documents, envelopes, other types of cover, or labels, under an ink jet print head of a postage meter or “franking machine”.
With ink jet technology, in the field of postal franking, a critical problem that arises is the problem of maintaining at a constant value the spacing between the ejection faces of the nozzles and the top face of the mail item that is to receive the postal imprint. In the postal field, such an imprint, which constitutes a monetary value must present printing quality that is as high as possible, in particular since, with the new postal standards currently applicable, the indicia present in the postal imprint are increasingly numerous (incorporating service data, advertising data, etc.) and complex (presence of two-dimensional codes).
In Patent Application FR 2 742 693, the Applicant has proposed a guide device that significantly improves the printing quality of ink-jet postage meters. However, in certain special cases, e.g. when envelopes enclose documents or inserts that are of uneven profiles, it appears, as shown in
An object of the present invention is to provide a conveyor and guide device that removes the drawbacks of prior devices. Another object of the invention is to provide a device that is capable of handling envelopes regardless of their thicknesses or of their sizes. Yet another object of the invention is to propose a device that avoids the impacts and jolts that occur in conveying envelopes in prior art devices.
These objects are achieved by a device for conveying and guiding mail items in a postage meter provided with an inkjet print head, in which postage meter each mail item, which has a top face and a bottom face, passes under the print head between a top reference surface defined by the bottom surface of a stationary guide plate and a bottom reference surface, said device having at least two drive assemblies mounted transversely side-by-side and to move vertically independently from each other, so that the top surfaces of the mail items remain continuously pressed against said stationary guide plate regardless of the thickness of the mail item, and in particular when said thickness varies over the width of the mail item.
Thus, by means of this special structure, it is possible to accommodate the variations in thickness that can exist over the same envelope.
Preferably, each of said drive assemblies has a belt whose top surface forms said bottom reference surface and which is mounted over a set of pulleys, only one of which is driven, the other pulleys being left free and being rotated merely by said belt which connects them to said driven pulley. The driven pulleys of the drive assemblies are connected to a common drive shaft driven in rotation by a single motor.
Advantageously, each of said pulley assemblies forms a parallelogram system whose arms interconnect the axles of the various pulleys forming each drive assembly and which acts in opposition to resilient means, so that the belts remain continuously in contact with the bottom face of the mail item throughout the movement of said mail item through the postage meter.
In order to convey the mail items through the postage meter, said belts co-operate with backing rollers that face them, that are mounted to be free to rotate about their respective axes of rotation, and that come through to just beneath said bottom surface of the stationary guide plate.
In an advantageous embodiment, one of said arms of each of said parallelogram systems is connected to a drive shaft so as to enable each of said belts to move vertically in controlled manner.
Other characteristics and advantages of the present invention appear more clearly from the following description given by way of non-limiting indication and with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
As is known, below a stationary guide plate 16 (which is secured to the body of the postage meter) serving as a top reference surface for said mail items, this device has a plurality of drive assemblies disposed in planes parallel to the direction D in which the mail items move through the postage meter, which plurality of drive assemblies comprise at least a first drive assembly 20 and a second drive assembly 22, each preferably formed by a belt 200, 220 mounted on a set of pulleys and forming a bottom reference surface for said mail items.
The two drive assemblies are spaced apart by a space corresponding substantially to the width of a postal imprint. Naturally, it is possible, with the device of the invention, to add one or more drive assemblies similar to the above-mentioned drive assemblies, as a function of the type of postage meter or for holding more securely mail items of large dimensions, e.g. of A4 format.
For a given drive assembly 20 or 22, only one pulley 202 or 222 of the four pulleys that exist is a driven pulley (preferably the pulley that is furthest upstream relative to the direction of movement of the mail items) and connected to a common drive shaft 24 that is driven in rotation by a single motor 26. The other three pulleys 204, 206, 208, or 224, 226, 228 which are not secured to the drive shaft are left free and are caused to rotate merely by the belt 200 or 220 that connects them to the driven pulley. Tensioner rollers 28A, 28B are also provided as is known so as to guarantee that the tension of each of the belts remains constant.
In order to convey the mail items, each of the two belts of the drive assemblies co-operates with a set of backing rollers 30A, 30B, 32 disposed upstream and downstream from the print head 14, above said belts while passing locally through the stationary guide plate 16 (they come through to just beneath said plate, in order to enable the mail item to be driven). Since these backing rollers are free to rotate about their respective axes, they are driven freely in rotation as the mail items advance, which mail items are themselves driven in translation by the two belts.
In accordance with the invention, in order to accommodate as well as possible the differences in thickness that can exist in the same mail item, the first and second drive assemblies are moved vertically independently from each other by means of a parallelogram system 38, 40 whose arms interconnect the axles of the various pulleys of each drive assembly. The parallelogram system also makes it possible to guarantee that the surfaces of the belts always remain parallel to the guide plate. Each parallelogram system acts in opposition to resilient means (not shown) so that the belts can remain continuously in contact with the bottom face of the mail item throughout the movement of said mail item along the guide path.
Operation of said device can be described very simply as follows with reference to
Consideration is given below to a mail item 12 coming from a feeder module (not shown) situated upstream from the device 10. This mail item, e.g. formed of an envelope enclosing a bundle of documents of constant thickness, is about to enter a guide and conveyor path formed between the top surfaces of the belts 200, 220 of the drive assemblies and the bottom surface of the stationary guide plate 16. Under the action of these belts, which are motor-driven via the common drive shaft 24 actuated by the motor 26, the envelope is driven in the direction D of movement and shifts the belts away from their initial high positions by a distance corresponding to the thickness of the envelope. Then, under continued propulsion from the belts, the envelope passes under the print head 14, and once printing has been performed, is removed to a sending module (not shown).
Throughout the conveying, the distance between the ejection surfaces of the nozzles of the print head and the top surface of the conveyed envelope is kept constant, at a predetermined optimum value that is dependent on the characteristics of the head, regardless of the thickness of said envelope, due to the action of the parallelogram system which exerts continuous stress on the bottom surface of the envelope, under the effect of resilient means (return springs that are not shown), and due to the action of the stationary guide plate that acts as a reference abutment for the top surface of said envelope.
When the envelope inserted into the device of the invention has a thickness that is not constant over its entire width, the first and second drive assemblies move vertically to mutually different extents for conveying said envelope to the print zone and for then removing it therefrom. In the example shown in
It should also be noted that in order to avoid impacts between the leading edges of the envelopes and the pulleys 204, 224 as said envelopes arrive, provision is made for the drive assemblies to be driven vertically by separate motors 34, 36 designed to cause the belts to be moved vertically individually in controlled manner. For this purpose, it suffices to open up the guide path by lowering the belts by a distance corresponding at the most (so as to avoid any slippage) to the maximum thickness of the envelope as determined previously upstream, e.g. at the device for selecting said envelopes.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0650334 | Jan 2006 | FR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4821049 | Eckl | Apr 1989 | A |
6484475 | Neagle et al. | Nov 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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1 431 925 | Jun 2004 | EP |
2 742 693 | Jun 1997 | FR |
2 788 506 | Jul 2000 | FR |
2 790 997 | Sep 2000 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20070208675 A1 | Sep 2007 | US |