The exemplary embodiments are directed to a maintenance system for an imaging device, and a system and a method of maintaining the imaging device.
In an imaging device, such as, for example, an inkjet printing system, intermediate transfer surfaces are used. The intermediate transfer surface is typically employed with a printhead. Nozzles in the printhead eject an ink image onto the intermediate transfer drum. A final receiving surface is brought into contact with the intermediate transfer drum after the image has been placed thereon by the nozzles in the printhead. The image is then transferred to the final receiving surface. A release agent medium is brought into contact with the intermediate transfer drum to prepare the surface of the drum prior to the next image being formed thereon.
A drum maintenance unit of the related art is used as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,805,191, which is incorporated herein by reference, to deliver a release agent onto an intermediate transfer surface of an inkjet printer. The release agent assists in providing an acceptable release of an ink image upon transfer of the image from the intermediate transfer surface to the final receiving surface. Each image transfer consumes a certain amount of release agent so that the drum maintenance unit has to be replaced periodically when the release agent is fully consumed. Further, pixels and debris may collect on the intermediate transfer surface, diminishing print quality and requiring maintenance or earlier replacement of the drum maintenance unit. Still further, the structure of the drum maintenance unit of the related art may result in limiting the speed in which a printer may operate.
Therefore, it would be advantageous to provide a drum maintenance unit with an extended life expectancy that maintains, enhances or improves the quality of prints and the speed of printing. To address or accomplish the above-described advantages, advantages described below, and/or other advantages, a drum maintenance unit of the exemplary embodiments may include a pre-cleaning blade, a metering blade, a release agent reservoir, and an applicator that may be independent from the release agent reservoir. As described in more detail below, the applicator, metering blade and/or pre-cleaning blade may independently engage the intermediate transfer surface of an imaging device to accommodate increased printer speed and/or other advantages.
The exemplary embodiments are described herein with respect to inkjet printers. However, it is envisioned that any imaging device that may incorporate the features of the drum maintenance unit described herein are encompassed by the scope and spirit of the exemplary embodiments.
An example of a related art imaging process is set forth with reference to
As discussed in more detail below, a release agent is applied to the drum 10 to facilitate the transfer of the ink image to the print media 12. That is, as the drum 10 turns in the direction of arrow 5, the release agent is deposited onto a surface 9 of the drum 10 by a drum maintenance unit (DMU) 16. The DMU 16 has a roller 18 acting as an applicator for applying the release agent to the surface 9 of the drum 10. The DMU 16 also has a blade 20 for metering the release agent to a thin film on the drum 10.
After the roller 18 applies the release agent to the surface 9 of the drum 10 and the metering blade 20 meters off excess release agent, and the excess release agent is reclaimed back into the roller 18. The roller 18 is made of foam or felt and is sized so that the roller 18 can hold a certain amount of release agent. For the roller 18 to continuously apply release agent to the drum 10, the roller 18 may need to reabsorb the excess release agent at a rate greater than or equal to the rate of the release agent being applied to the drum 10.
After the drum 10 is coated with the release agent, an inkjet head 22 ejects an ink image 24 onto the surface of the drum 10. The ink image 24 is applied to the drum 10, and then the ink image 24 is transferred to the print media 12. Some of the release agent may be transferred to the print media 12 along with the ink image 24.
More specifically, the ink image is transferred to the print media 12 at a nip 13 formed between the drum 10 and a transfix roller 14. Feed guides 15 and 17 help to feed the print media 12 into the nip 13 formed between the transfix roller 14 and the drum 10. The feed guide 15 heats the print media 12 prior to the print media 12 entering the nip 13. When the print media 12 is passed between the drum 10 and the transfix roller 14, the ink image 24, now in a malleable state, is transferred from the drum 10 onto the print media 12. The ink image 24 is transferred onto the print media 12 to form an image on the print media 12. The final ink image 32 is spread, flattened, adhered, and fused or fixed to the final print media 12, as the print media 12 moves through the nip 13. Stripper fingers 34 may be used to assist in removing the print media 12, having the final ink image 32 formed thereon, to a final receiving tray (not shown).
The above-described related printing apparatus 1 requires the roller 18 to function as a reservoir and an applicator. As the roller 18 is continuously used, its saturation level decreases with each print, which causes the roller 18 to provide less release agent per print. Accordingly, a print image quality of the final print media may decrease. That is, the roller 18 provides less release agent per print as its saturation level decreases, and the roller 18 begins to run dry causing print quality problems. The entire maintenance system, also called the Drum Maintenance System or DMU 16 is typically replaced when the roller 18 is about, for example, 40% saturated (after about every 30,000 prints), even though other mechanical parts that make up the DMU 16 may not need to be replaced. In related art imaging devices, the DMU 16 is typically replaced four or five times during the life of the imaging device.
As described-above, as the roller 18 applies an excessive amount of release agent to the drum 10, the metering blade 20 reduces the mass of release agent to a thin film. The excess release agent on the drum 10 includes pixels that were not transferred from the last print and debris and are scraped off the drum 10 by the metering blade 20. The pixels and debris flow down the metering blade 20 (aided by gravity) to be filtered out of the excess release agent prior to being reabsorbed by the roller 18. Related art reclaim and filter systems, such as, for example, a wick material to filter pixels and debris and reclaim excess release agent, are not able to reclaim all of the pixels and debris prior to the pixels and debris being reabsorbed by the roller 18, when for example, the printer is operated at a sustained high print speed. Over time, the pixels and debris can plug the reclaim and filter system. Thus, over time, excess release agent may build up at the reclaim and filter system, spilling over into other areas of the printing apparatus, and the roller 18 may begin to run dry, severely affecting print quality.
Further, in many cases, the metering blade 20 is not capable of efficiently removing the pixels and debris from the drum 10. For example, when an image requires a higher number of individual pixels, or when the print media 12 is a rough paper, or the like, a number of pixels and debris may not be collected off of the drum 10 by the metering blade 20. Thus, the metering blade 20 of the related art may not be sufficient to efficiently keep the drum 10 clean.
Furthermore, because the roller 18 is in contact with the drum 10 before the metering blade 20 removes the pixels and debris, some of the pixels and debris will transfer directly from the drum 10 to the roller 18. These pixels and debris may plug the porous surface of the roller 18, resulting in a lower rate of delivery of the release agent.
In the above-described related printing apparatus 1, the roller 18 and the metering blade 20 are actuated by a single cam (not shown). That is, the DMU 16 engages the roller 18 and the metering blade 20 in the same motion. Thus, the roller 18 and the metering blade 20 are activated together. Given the inertia of the roller 18 and the speed in which the metering blade 20 will be required to engage and disengage the drum 10, it is unlikely that the actuation of both components, the roller 18 and the metering blade 20, can continue to be performed in the same motion. That is, there is a demand for printers that can print at higher speeds, necessitating much faster and stricter timing requirements on the engagement and disengagement of the applicator and/or metering blade with the drum of the imaging device. Accordingly, the single actuation of both the applicator and metering blade reduces process flexibility, and may not be sufficient for use with some current printers, future printers, and/or other imaging devices.
The above-identified problems and other issues are addressed or resolved by the exemplary embodiments. In particular, the exemplary embodiments provide apparatus, systems and methods to clean an ink print drum; replenish the release agent applicator in the ink drum maintenance system; maintain the applicator saturation level; manage and store non transferred ink and debris and ink on drum (IOD) marks; and apply release agent to the drum and meter a thin, uniform film of the release agent on the drum of the ink printer. The exemplary embodiments increase DMU life, enhance or improve print quality performance over life, increase the printing duty cycle, reduce costs, and/or reduce the rate of human intervention.
Although the exemplary embodiments are described herein with respect to an ink printer, it is envisioned that the exemplary embodiments may be used with any imaging device or non-imaging device that requires the application and metering of an agent onto a surface and the cleaning of excess agent and/or debris from the surface. For example, the exemplary embodiments may encompass printers, copiers, facsimile machines, and the like, and/or may encompass machinery used in factories for the manufacturing of products, recreational vehicles including bicycles, motor vehicles including automobiles, refrigeration devices, or the like.
I. Drum Maintenance Unit or System (DMU)
More specifically, the exemplary embodiments may include a drum maintenance unit or system (DMU) having a reservoir; an applicator that may be independent from the reservoir; a metering blade; a blade that pre-cleans the drum of un-transferred pixels and debris; a single cam or dual cam that provides independent actuation of a metering blade, the applicator and/or the pre-cleaning blade; a pixel and debris collection and storage container; and a pixel and debris filter. Further, the DMU may provide a variable engagement position of the applicator, wherein a timing of the applicator, metering blade, and pre-cleaning blade are optimized for high-speed high-quality print images.
Referring to
II. Applicators
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
The blotter 128 may have an outer layer 144 made of a porous, low coefficient of friction, high abrasion resistant material, such as, for example, flat bond polyester, felt, foams, or the like. Other desirable properties of the outer layer include an ability to wick or transport release agent. However, it is envisioned that the blotter 128 may be made or coated with any material that allows the blotter 128 to apply release agent as described herein. The blotter 128 may have a body including an outer layer 144 and an internal support 137. The outer layer 144 may be composed of felt, foam, or any other porous material. The support 137 or 146 may be composed of an aluminum extrusion, a capacitor plate, or the like.
Referring to
In another embodiment, the capillary energy of the two closely positioned blades, blade 150 and blade 160, may act to draw release agent to the surface 101 of the drum 102. The release agent may be metered into a thin film on the drum 102 using metering properties of the “capillary” blades.
In another embodiment, the blade 150 may act as the applicator 108 and the metering blade 110. Alternatively, the blade 150 may act as the applicator 108 and the second blade 160 may act as the metering blade 110.
Although two blades are shown in the embodiment of
One or a plurality of blade supports 162 may support the blade 150 and the second blade 160. The blade supports 162 may be attached to a shelf tray, a container, or any like collection device 164. The collection device 164 may capture the excess release agent 103 as release agent runs down the blade 150 and/or the second blade 160. The recaptured release agent may be transferred from the collection device 164 to a reservoir 122, and the recaptured release agent may be filtered by a filter 168 before being pumped back to the internal passageway 152 of the blade 150.
III. Reservoirs
The exemplary embodiments include a remote reservoir tank for storing and supplying release agent. For example, in the exemplary embodiments of
As described above, the applicator also acting as the reservoir, the release agent may be pumped to the applicator from the separate and distinct reservoir, as needed. For example, the embodiment of
In the embodiment of
The release agent, and debris mixed with ink coming off the metering blade 110 may be filtered through a filter 168 (as shown in
Alternatively, similar to the embodiments of
The remote reservoir 122 and/or the adjacent reservoir 124 together with the pump system 158 may provide a mechanism for providing fresh release agent to the applicator 108. The embodiment of
Print quality artifacts may result if the release agent applicator is too saturated or too dry. Also, if the system is over-saturated, a person may spill release agent while handling the DMU, for example, when conducting maintenance on the DMU. Thus, the release agent saturation level of the applicator 108 may be maintained within a favorable or optimal operating window by use of the reservoir and pump system described herein with reference to the exemplary embodiments. Print quality may be improved because the applicator, with a saturation level maintained within the favorable or optimal operating window, with respect to the amount of release agent the applicator carries, is neither too saturated nor to dry.
IV. Pump
More specifically, in the embodiment of
In the embodiment of
In the embodiment of
The reservoir 122 may store fresh release agent and/or excess release agent received from, for example, the metering blade 110. The excess release agent may be filtered prior to storing in the reservoir 122. Alternatively, a filter 168, as shown in
In an alternate embodiment, the release agent may be pumped to a device that supplies the applicator 108 with the release agent, for example, as described above with respect to the sled 116 of
It is envisioned that any type of pump or system in which release agent may be transferred from a reservoir or other storage container to the applicator may be used with any of the exemplary embodiments described herein.
V. Drip Bar
In the embodiment of
With reference to
VI. Saturation Sensors
A sensor or other device may be used in order to determine when or if fresh release agent should be provided to the applicator 108. For example, the release agent saturation level of the applicator 108 may be maintained within a favorable or optimal operating window using a closed-loop saturation level-sensing scheme. As the applicator is depleted of release agent, a sensor may monitor its saturation level. A control system may then determine whether the saturation level has dropped below a threshold, and then correspondingly turn on a pump, for example, to provide additional release agent to the applicator.
Alternative to using a sensor, if the release agent consumption versus the number of pixels printed is known, release agent can be delivered to the applicator using an open-loop pixel counting scheme. There is a relationship between release agent removed from the system by the image/media and the ink coverage. For any given solid ink printer, a blank sheet will carry away less release agent than a solid fill image. This relationship has been found to be variable from printer to printer. Much of this variability is due to drum surface differences. However, within a printer, this relationship is quite constant unless there has been excessive wear or damage to the metering blade. Therefore, the printer could compute an average release agent consumption based on how much release agent it has pumped to the roller relative to the number and mix of images. Then, if the average release agent usage is continually computed and monitored, the printer could determine if the blade has been damaged or is worm. Using closed-loop saturation level sensing, the printer could keep track of the amount of release agent added to the system relative to the number of pixels printed. Therefore, a printer, for example, could construct an internal control chart for release agent consumption. Then, as the system ages, the printer could determine when the system is ready for replacement based on a significant change in release agent consumption.
The exemplary embodiments include a capacitive sensor 200 that measures the volume or mass of the release agent currently being held by the applicator 108. With respect to the embodiments of
Referring to the embodiment of
Alternatively, the inner layer 146 of the blotter 128 may act as the capacitor plate 176. A fastener 148, electrically isolated from the inner layer 146, may attach the body of the blotter 128 to a grip 175. The grip 175 may act as the outer capacitor plate 178.
The saturation level of the applicator 108 may be sensed using the capacitance sensors described herein or by other means. For example, dry applicator material has a dielectric constant that is a function of the material and void volume. The release agent, consisting of, for example, oil, has a dielectric constant of about 3 or 4 and air has a dielectric constant of about 1. Therefore, as the void volume in the applicator material is filled with, for example, oil, the dielectric constant will increase. Once the applicator material is fully saturated, the dielectric constant will be enhanced or maximized.
The oil delivery rate to the applicator is set so that the pump rate is greater than or equal to the average release agent depletion rate of the applicator 108, which is either measured by a saturation sensor 200 (see
The exemplary embodiments include a capacitive sensor that measures the volume or mass of the release agent currently being held by the applicator 108. However, it is envisioned that any type of sensor that measures the amount of release agent at the applicator or any other part of the printer may be used.
VII. Metering Blades
The metering blades shown in
Referring to
The filter 168 (
The reservoir 122 may store enough release agent to allow for no or minimal maintenance during the life of the DMU. The reservoir may have at least one input port, one for fresh release agent supply from a reservoir consumable, one for topping-off, and the other for returning filtered release agent from the collection device 164 to the reservoir 122. Furthermore, the reservoir 122 may have at least one output port for release agent supply.
VIII. Pre-Cleaning Blade
To keep the applicator 108, such as, for example, the blotter 128, as well as the metering blade 110 and the reclaim wick clean, the pre-cleaning blade 112 may be engaged against the drum 102 at a specific angle and force while the drum 102 rotates, preferably for at least one revolution: More specifically, the pre-cleaning blade 112 may be positioned at a high attack angle to the drum 102 in a wipe mode (i.e., wiping the surface of the drum), or at a shallow attack angle to the drum 102 in a doctor mode (i.e., chiseling the surface of the drum). The pre-cleaning blade 112 may clean the drum 102 prior to the metering blade 110 and/or the applicator 108 coming into contact with the drum 102. The pre-cleaning blade 112 may collect untransferred ink, debris and excess release agent, on the drum 102.
The pre-cleaning blade 112 may be an elastomer positioned to engage against a “dirty” portion of the drum 102 prior to the applicator 108 or metering blade 110. That is, after an image is fixed onto a print media, the portion of the drum 102 upon which the print media was previously in contact with, is engaged by the pre-cleaning blade 112. The drum 102 will rotate against the pre-cleaning blade 112, and the pre-cleaning blade 112 will remove the untransferred ink and other debris remaining on the drum 102. The debris that is collected will run down the pre-cleaning blade 112, aided by gravity, into a collection area.
The position of the pre-cleaning blade 112, with respect to the drum 102, may be set based on the metering blade 110 and the timing of the print cycles of the imaging device. More specifically, when the metering blade 110 scrapes the excess release agent off of the drum 102 to create a thin film of release agent on the drum 102, an area in front of the metering blade 110 may be created that is full of the release agent. That is, when the metering blade 110 is removed from the drum 102, an excess line of the release agent (i.e., release agent bar or release agent defect) may remain. Accordingly, there is a need to account for the timing of where the media touches the drum 102 relative to the release agent bar.
As the image is being transfixed off of the drum, the release agent bar from the previous DMU cycle will pass in front of the pre-cleaning blade 112. The pre-cleaning blade 112, the applicator 108 and the metering blade 110 may be arranged so that the pre-cleaning blade 112 is either just ahead or just behind the release agent bar. To reduce or minimize the amount of release agent collected in the pixel and debris waste area, engagement of the pre-cleaning blade 112 may occur after the release agent bar is created. As the drum 102 rotates with these three components engaged against the drum 102, the pre-cleaning blade 112 removes un-transferred pixels and debris, the pre-cleaned drum 102 then has release agent applied thereon by the applicator 108, and finally, the metering blade 110 reduces the release agent on the clean section of the drum 102 to a thin, uniform film.
The drum 102 may continue to rotate with the pre-cleaning blade 112, the applicator 108 and metering blade 110 engaged for a specific distance; then the applicator 108 and pre-cleaning blade 112 may be disengaged from the drum. The metering blade 110 may continue to wipe the drum to collect excess release agent into a release agent bar. The metering blade 110 may disengage so the release agent bar is positioned on the drum 102 for the next print. In an exemplary embodiment the applicator 108 and pre-cleaning blade 112 are periodically engaged while rotating the drum 102 without engaging the metering blade 110. This may cause the pre-cleaning blade 112 to be “washed down” with release agent, helping to move pixels and debris further down into the waste collection area.
Additionally, the applicator 108 may be raised on a partial section of the drum 102 so that the “ink on drum” marks (IOD marks) could be printed on a thick layer of release agent. That is, a specific pattern of ink (i.e., IOD marks) may be applied to the drum 102 with a printhead, and a scanner may then be used to scan the pattern of ink to determine if there are any defects in the printhead, such as, for example, a missing jet. These specific head diagnostic print images (IOD marks) can be removed from the drum using the pre-cleaning blade, applicator or metering blade, rather than the normal method of transferring to a piece of paper. This method of removing head diagnostic images from the drum surface with the drum maintenance system rather than with a piece of paper is advantageous because the diagnosis can be done internally without wasting paper. By raising the applicator 108 on the partial section of the drum 102, easier removal of the IOD marks would be enabled. To remove the IOD marks, the pre-cleaning blade 112 may be engaged without engaging the metering blade 110. This will protect the metering blade 110, applicator and reclaim path from clogging up with ink, pixels or the like.
Furthermore, certain types of media jams, for example, present an increased potential for contamination of the DMU with un-transfixed ink. Therefore, when jams in the imaging device occur, a “post-jam drum clean” cycle may be performed. The post-jam drum clean cycle may raise the pre-cleaning blade 112 and the applicator 108 just after the release agent bar; and the metering blade 110 may not be raised. The drum 102 would rotate for a set number of revolutions, cleaning the remainder of the un-transferred ink off the drum 102 that was left behind after the last ink image transfer cycle. The post-jam drum clean cycle may help to further protect the metering blade 110 and reclaim path from clogging up with pixels and may also eliminate the undesirable necessity of having a cleaning sheet processed in the middle of a print cycle to recover from a jam, as occurs in the related art.
Although the exemplary embodiments are directed to a pre-cleaning blade, such as, for example, a blade composed of a rectangular urethane strip that is attached to a sheet metal support, any device that can clean the drum 102 may be used. For example, a brush that is made of, for example, looped fibers, or a device made with a web-type material, or the like device may be used.
IX. Waste Collection Container
In the embodiments of
Alternatively, the container 180 may be remote from the reservoir as shown in
Alternatively, the metering blade 110 and the applicator 108 may be housed in an impermeable container that is intended to keep any free release agent from migrating to other areas of the printer. For example, when the printer is printing at full print speed continuously, the rate of release agent running down the metering blade 110 with each cycle may be greater than the reclaim rate. In this case, free release agent may build up in the system. Further, for example, during a stripper jam, a user may need to remove the DMU 106 to gain access to the jammed media. Therefore, there is a potential for this built up free release agent to spill onto the user, or floor, or housing, or the like. A sensor could be placed in the housing to detect when there is a build up of free release agent. Then, the printer could pause to allow the free release agent to be absorbed back into the applicator or returned to the reservoir, thereby discouraging the build-up of release agent. Alternatively, an alert may be provided to a user to let the user know that the built up free release agent is reaching a specific level, for example, approaching an unacceptable level.
It is envisioned that other parts of the DMU 106 may also be removable and/or interchangeable. For example, the blotter 128 may be held in a replaceable tray 140 (see
X. Actuators
The drum maintenance (“DM”) system of the exemplary embodiments has requirements that are new and unique among imaging devices, such as, for example, solid ink printers. Specifically, the size requirement of the release agent bar, which is created by the metering blade and remains on the drum after a DM cycle, combined with print speed requirements, implicitly constrains the engagement and disengagement timing of the drum maintenance system. The result is that the drum maintenance system must be actuated extremely quickly.
Previous drum maintenance systems could operate at much slower speeds than the DM system of the exemplary embodiments. These systems could actuate the metering blade and applicator with the same motion. The DM system of the exemplary embodiments would not be able to meet the new requirements if the metering blade and the applicator were actuated simultaneously due to the inertia of the combined system. The DM system, however, has the following characteristics that meet the new timing requirements: the inertia of the applicator is significantly greater than the inertia of the metering blade; and the metering blade is what creates the release agent bar.
Decoupling the metering blade and the applicator allows separate, non-overlapping actuation times in which the metering blade (which is low-inertia and is the release agent bar-creating mechanism) can be actuated quickly while the applicator (which is high-inertia and does not affect the release agent bar) is actuated at a reasonably slower pace. The metering blade may be engaged first without moving the applicator. Then, the applicator may be engaged without moving the metering blade. Disengagement may be in the opposite order.
If the disengaged cycle happens at about the same time for each of the metering blade and applicator, then the cleaning blade will disengage too late for the release agent to land in the release agent bar, or to be picked up by the metering blade. Thus, the disengage velocity profile may be varied to disengage the cleaning blade and the applicator, and then to separately disengage the metering blade.
In the embodiments of
Each system has its own set of cam followers, one follower on each end of the system. Metering blade followers 184 are located just outside of applicator followers 186, as shown in
Accordingly, with reference to the embodiments of
As discussed above, the print speed of an imaging device is dependent on how fast all steps of the printing process may be performed. In an exemplary embodiment, the drum 102 is spun at a high rate of speed; this requires that the applicator 108, metering blade 110, and the pre-cleaning blade 112 be quickly and accurately engaged and disengaged with the drum 102, as needed. By providing independent actuation of the applicator 108, the metering blade 110, and the pre-cleaning blade 112, additional flexibility in the process of applying these parts is made available. For example, it may be beneficial for the metering blade 110 to engage the drum 102 after engagement by the applicator 108 so that the metering blade 110 collects excess release agent into the release agent bar, as described above. However, the motor must be able to move fast enough to disengage the metering blade in sufficiently short enough time so as to minimize the size of the release agent bar (i.e., release agent artifact). In addition, the timing between the actuation of the applicator 108 and the metering blade 110 are such that the applicator 108 touches the drum 102 after the metering blade 110 has been engaged, and leaves the drum 102 before the metering blade 110 has been disengaged.
In another exemplary embodiment, variable engagement of the applicator 108 may be desired. For example, the amount of release agent supplied to the surface 101 of the drum 102 by the applicator 108 may depend, in part, on the degree of pressure applied by the applicator 108 against the drum 102, or the degree of contact area of the applicator 108 with the drum 102. The harder the applicator 108 is pressed against the drum 102, the larger the amount of release agent that is applied to the drum 102. The larger the contact area of the applicator 108, the larger the amount of release agent that is applied to the drum 102. Accordingly, the degree of pressure of the applicator 108 against the drum 102, and/or the degree of contact area of the applicator 108 against the drum 102, may vary. The varying degrees of pressure and/or degree of contact area on the drum 102 by the applicator 108 may be accomplished by the variable engagement of the applicator 108. That is, the position of, for example, the cam supporting the applicator 108 may change based on the amount of release agent carried by the applicator 108. Furthermore, as described above, the degree of pressure of the applicator 108, or the contact area of the applicator 108 to the drum 102, based on the engagement of the applicator 108 may be independent of the engagement of the metering blade 110 and/or pre-cleaning blade 112.
For example, the applicator 108 may be attached to, for example, a cam. The amount of engagement of the applicator 108 into the surface 101 of the drum 102 may vary by the rotational position of the cam. Thus, the amount of release agent applied to the drum may be varied with the cam position. Less engagement equals a smaller applicator contact area and less release agent is applied. More engagement provides a larger applicator contact area and more release agent may be applied. In a system where all of the release agent is stored in the applicator, variable applicator engagement could help to increase the life of the system by allowing more release agent to be extracted from the roller, for example, as its saturation level decreases.
In an exemplary embodiment, the pre-cleaning blade 112 may be attached to an actuator 115 (as shown in
As discussed above, related art ink printers have a single set of cams to engage both the metering blade and the applicator. Thus, the system of the related art has less flexibility for independent control of the actuation of the metering blade and applicator. The related art systems are designed such that the metering blade touches the drum first during engagement. The metering blade is engaged anytime the applicator is engaged; and, the metering blade leaves the drum after the applicator is disengaged.
An additional cam would allow the applicator and the pre-cleaning blade to be raised without engaging the metering blade. Furthermore, independent suspension for both the applicator and the pre-cleaning blade may be provided. This would allow, for example, the pre-cleaning blade to be engaged against the drum without the applicator being engaged. This additional process flexibility will allow valuable process variations that would otherwise not be possible. Additionally, separating the actuations of the metering blade and the applicator enable the blade engagement/disengagement to meet strict timing requirements.
Furthermore, it is envisioned that the actuators of the exemplary embodiments may be used in a number of different systems. For example, a system including a scanner adjacent to the drum may scan a print pattern that is on the drum. Accordingly, the DMU must act to clean the system so that non-transferred ink, debris, IOD marks and the like that are on the drum are removed prior to the next print cycle. By having independent actuation of the applicator 108 and the metering blade 110, the applicator 108 may be engaged to create an area on the drum 102 coated with release agent that is not metered into a thin film. Accordingly, the IOD marks may be printed on, for example, a thick oil layer and are therefore easier to remove with the pre-cleaning blade.
It is envisioned that any number of advantages may be achieved by the independent actuation of the applicator 108, metering blade 110 and/or pre-cleaning blade 112 including allowing flexibility for high speed printing, cleaning of IOD marks, increase of an ink to release agent ratio for easier removal of pixels and debris from the drum 102, and other advantages described herein and/or later achieved.
XI. Process of Using the Drum Maintenance System
Referring to
There are at least three variables that can change the amount of release agent delivered by the applicator 108 to the drum 102. These three variables include: the penetration of the applicator 108 into the surface 101 of the drum 102, and the applicator physical properties (compliance and capillary properties). For example, the roller may be disengaged from the drum prior to a full drum revolution. Then the metering blade will spread the release agent already collected over the rest of the drum surface. An engagement motor motion profile is illustrated in
The variable time and penetration is adjusted based on the amount of release agent that needs to be supplied by the applicator 108. To increase the release agent delivery, the penetration of the applicator 108 into the surface 101 of the drum 102 may be increased, and the time from the metering blade engagement and the applicator contact will be shortened.
Referring again to
The drum 102 may continue to rotate with the pre-cleaning blade 112, the applicator 108 and the metering blade 110 engaged for a specific distance; then the applicator 108 and the pre-cleaning blade 112 may be disengaged from the drum, as shown at step S214. The metering blade 110 may continue to wipe the drum to collect excess release agent into a release agent bar, as shown at step S216. The metering blade 110 may disengage so the release agent bar is positioned on the drum 102 for the next print, as shown at step S218.
In an exemplary embodiment the applicator 108 and pre-cleaning blade 112 are periodically engaged while rotating the drum 102 without engaging the metering blade 110, as shown at step S220. This may cause the pre-cleaning blade 112 to be flooded with release agent, helping to move pixels and debris on the pre-cleaning blade 112 further down into the waste collection area, as shown at step S224.
Additionally, in another exemplary embodiment, the applicator 108 may be raised on a partial section of the drum 102 so that the IOD marks can be printed on a thicker layer of release agent, as shown at step S226. This may assist to make the IOD marks, for example, easier to remove. After an image is transferred onto the imaging member, as shown at step S227, the pre-cleaning blade 112 may be engaged without engaging the metering blade 110, as shown at step S228, to remove the untransferred image. This may protect the metering blade 110 and reclaim path from clogging with pixels.
The motor motion profile may disengage the DMU 106, as shown at step S230. The disengagement of the DMU may be initiated by the drum position. Referring again 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, various presently unforeseen or unanticipated alternatives, modifications, variations or improvements therein may be subsequently made by those skilled in the art, and are also intended to be encompassed by the following claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
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