1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a driving method of an ink jet printer and its driving apparatus.
2. Description of the Related Art
Where a printer head as shown in
Generally, in a serial printer, a printing is made in one line with the use of a plurality of nozzles and, by doing so, the printer is driven in a fashion less prominent in “print drops” and less “banding” resulting from a head-caused print variation. Here, the “banding” means a nonuniform concentration caused by a white line emerging on a recording medium due to the non-jetting of an ink from some nozzle as well as by the misdirection caused by some nozzle. In this case, it is known that, in the prior art technique, a printing is made by alternately using one half number of nozzles for each column and, by doing so, a printing is made a plurality of numbers as shown in
In
As shown in
This printing is made in a sequential order of groups A, B, C for each column in a state to jet an ink from those nozzles belonging to the group. For the n−2 column, a printing is made at A1 belonging to group A, with no ink jetted from B2 due to no print data involved under group B, a printing is made at C1 under group C. And no ink is jetted at A2 due to no print data involved under group A and a printing is made at Bl under group B and no ink is jetted at C2 due to no print data under group C.
For the n−1 column, a printing is made at B11 under group B, at A12 under group A and at C12 under group C. In the n−1 column, a printing is made at B11 under group B, at A12 under group A and at C12 under group C. In the n−1 column, no ink is jetted from the rest due to no print data involved.
In this case, a printing was done using the relative speed of the head and recording medium as a predetermined speed. Since no half number of nozzles are not used for each column, it may be said that no effective use can be expected for the head.
Where a printing is effected at a coarse pitch with the above-mentioned relative speed increased from the state of
In one aspect of the present invention, there is provided a printing head driving method using a printer head configured to effect a three time division so as not to simultaneously print an adjacent channel and means for receiving print data corresponding to each time division and printing it, the printer head being so constructed that, with the respective time division groups given as A, B, C, the head and printing medium are moved at predetermined speeds and, with the sequential drive order given as A, B, C, a printing result emerges as one row in a nozzle direction at a predetermined pitch to a relative moving direction of the head and printing medium, the method comprising a step of effecting a driving in a sequential drive order including C, B, A with the relative driving speed of the head and printing medium set double its speed and a step of receiving print data corresponding to each division and making a printing so that a printing result in a relative moving direction emerges at a pitch double that predetermined pitch and a printing result of the group A, C nozzles and B nozzles emerges in a state displace by a predetermined pitch.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of the specification, illustrate embodiments of the invention, and together with the general description given above and the detailed description of the embodiments given below, serve to explain the principles of the invention.
With reference to the drawing an explanation will be made below about one embodiment of the present invention.
In
Under the control of the controller 23, the carriage 22 is moved in right and left directions as indicated by an arrow a and a printing medium 24, while being conveyed in a direction (arrow b) perpendicular to the operation direction of the carriage 22, is printed so that an image is formed on it.
With reference to
The controller 23 comprises a CPU 41, a memory 42, a FIFO memory 43 and a GA (gate array) 44. From the FIFO memory 43 and GA 44, a head control signal and print data are sent to a head driving circuit 45. The head driving circuit 45 is provided in the controller 23. A detailed arrangement of the head driving circuit 45 is shown in
With reference to
Before a printing is started, the print data written into the memory 42 is converted to a form shown in
That is, (n+1)st line data is stored for the group A data, (n)th line data for the group B data, and (n−1)th line data for the group C data (See
It is to be noted that the print data, which is output from the FIFO memory 43, as shown in
Then after the inputting of the latch signal, a first timing signal (
Then, a second timing signal is input to the output control circuit 53. When the second timing signal (
Finally, a third timing signal is input to an output control circuit 53. When the third timing signal (
In this way, the jetting of the ink from the nozzles of the groups A, B, C is completed. By repeating these operations, a printing is done.
For a printing example as shown in
From such a state, with the relative speed of the printing medium 24 and printing head 21 given as a double speed (32 ips), an ink is jet-driven in the sequential order of group C nozzle→group B nozzle→group A nozzle.
And with the group A nozzle-group B nozzle and group B nozzle-group C nozzle intervals given as 1/900 inch (⅓ of 1/300 inch) image resolution, a printer is driven at 4800×14400 Hz at the respective group nozzle intervals and, by doing so, respective dots are deposited on a 300 dpi grid array.
That is, under the control of the following procedure with the use of the printing head 21 it is possible to, while moving the printing head 21 at a speed double its relative speed normally using all the nozzles, construct one line with a plurality of nozzles and to realize an accurate printing with a desired printing image resolution.
It is given that the printer is driven at a reverse order of the groups C→B→A instead of the order of A→B→C.
By driving the printer in this way, the printing interval between respective nozzles of the groups A, B, C becomes 150 dpi and a printing is made with the groups A and B and the groups C and B displaced 300 dpi in a moving direction.
In this case, for the groups A, B, C, a printing needs be effected at different columns and their corresponding print data may be transmitted to the head drive circuit 45.
An explanation will now be made in more detail while paying attention to a restricted area 51. A printing is effected in a sequence of a dot C10 at the group C nozzle, a dot B30 at the group B nozzle and a dot A40 at the group A nozzle.
A printing is made with a group B nozzle dot B20 at an n−1 column, and a group A nozzle dot A10 and group C nozzle dot C10 at the n−1 column.
By the above-mentioned control, it is possible to make a printing as shown in
That is, one line can be comprised of different nozzles.
In this way, a 100% nozzle use efficiency can be achieved on the head and there is no unavailable area when compared with that of
Further, it is possible to set the moving speed of the head double its speed and to effect an accurate printing on a grid array of a desired image resolution and to construct one line with a plurality of nozzles. It is thus possible to obtain a better printing result compared to that of
Although, in the above-mentioned embodiment, an explanation has been made about a shared mode system, the present invention is not restricted to this system. If, for example, nozzles are arranged in a displaced fashion as shown in
Additional advantages and modifications will readily occur to those skilled in the art. Therefore, the invention in its broader aspects is not limited to the specific details and representative embodiments shown and described herein. Accordingly, various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the general inventive concept as defined by the appended claims and their equivalents.
This is a Continuation-in-Part application of U.S. Pat. No. 1,126,9407, filed Nov. 8, 2005, now abandoned, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 11269407 | Nov 2005 | US |
Child | 11362676 | Feb 2006 | US |