This disclosure relates generally to ink printing machines, and, more particularly to ink printing machines that eject ink onto a moving media web.
Liquid ink printers having at least one print head from which droplets of ink are directed towards a recording sheet are well known. The print head in some liquid ink jet printers may contain an internal reservoir of ink as is known in ink jet printers. Other liquid ink printers, known generally as phase change ink printers, may be loaded with solid ink sticks that are delivered to a melter, which heats the solid ink stick to its melting point to produce liquid ink. The melted ink may then be collected in one or more reservoirs and distributed to one or more print heads. Within a print head of a liquid ink printer, ink is drawn into a plurality of channels. Power pulses to ink ejection components, such as piezoelectric ejection components, expel droplets of ink from orifices or nozzles of the print head.
A liquid ink print head may be incorporated into a printer that ejects ink onto a media sheet or a media web. A media sheet printer typically includes a supply drawer that houses a stack of media sheets. A feeder removes a sheet or media from the supply and delivers it into a feed path that directs the sheet past a print head so the print head ejects ink directly onto the sheet. In other types of sheet printers, a media sheet in the feed path is pressed into contact with a rotating intermediate member that bears ink, which has been ejected onto the member by one or more print heads.
Another type of printer is a web printer. In a web printer, a continuous supply of media, typically provided in a media roll, is mounted onto rollers that are driven by motors. A loose end of the media web is passed through a print zone opposite the print head or heads of the printer. Beyond the print zone, the media web is gripped and pulled by mechanical structures so a portion of the media web continuously moves through the print zone. Tension bars or rollers are placed in the feed path of the moving web to remove slack from the web so it remains taut without breaking.
One important aspect of these ink printing machines is the stability of the media sheet or web as it passes in front of a print head, which is ejecting ink onto the media. To improve stability of media passing in front of a print head, some printers incorporate a vacuum source that is coupled to vacuum platen. The vacuum platen includes a plurality of passageways or ports to enable air to be drawn through the platen towards the vacuum source. The vacuum platen is positioned and oriented so it is adjacent the back side of the media being printed by a print head. Thus, the air being pulled through the platen pushes the media against the platen to help stabilize the media while it is being printed.
In some known liquid ink printers that use a vacuum source and platen to help stabilize media being printed, an escort belt is also used to move the media along its feed path. An escort belt is typically provided with apertures. The escort belt is configured so it moves over the platen between the media sheet or web and the platen. The apertures in the belt enable air to be drawn through the belt and the passageways of the platen towards the vacuum source. The belt may be treated with friction-reducing material so the belt slides over the platen as it is pulled towards the platen. The escort belt improves the stability of the sheet or web media because it is flexible and its tautness may be adjusted by tension bars or roller.
While media transport systems using vacuum sources with platens and moving escort belts provide improved media stability during printing, an issue regarding debris in the vicinity of the print heads has been observed. Specifically, the airflow that pushes the media against the belt and platen may also displace debris from the media, especially when the media is fibrous, as is the case with paper. Debris displaced in the vicinity of the print head may clog an orifice or otherwise interfere with the ejection of ink onto the media. Reduction of displaced debris in the vicinity of the print head is therefore desirable in sheet printing and web printing machines.
In web printing machines, registration of the web media in the print zone opposite the print heads is important. While an escort belt and vacuum platen help properly maintain registration of the web media in the print zone, the air flow through the belt and the platen carries particulate debris. This debris may accumulate in the vacuum platen and eventually clog some of the passageways in the platen. Removal of this debris from the print zone without clogging the vacuum platen would be useful.
An escort belt facilitates removal of particulate from a print zone in which media are being printed by a print head in an ink printing machine. The escort belt includes an endless belt having a width between a first and a second edge of the endless belt that is greater than a media sheet carried by the endless belt, a first plurality of apertures arranged in a longitudinal line proximate one of the belt edges, and a second plurality of apertures distributed between the first plurality of apertures and the other belt edge, the apertures of the first plurality having a shape different from that of the second plurality of apertures and the apertures of the first aperture plurality being positioned so the apertures of the first plurality are only partially covered by edges of the media being held to the endless belt by a vacuum source applied to the first and the second pluralities.
The escort belt may be incorporated in an ink jet printing machine to help remove debris from a duplex printing machine while maintaining registration of the media in the print zone. The ink jet printing machine includes a first print head assembly for ejecting ink onto a front surface of media, a second print head assembly for ejecting ink onto a back surface of the media, a first escort belt and a second escort belt, and at least one vacuum generator coupled to the escort belts. Each of the first and the second escort belts have a width between a first and a second edge of an escort belt that is greater than a media sheet carried by the escort belts. Each belt has a first plurality of apertures arranged in a longitudinal line proximate one edge of the escort belt, and a second plurality of apertures distributed between the first plurality of apertures and the other edge of the escort belt. The apertures of the second plurality have a shape different from that of the first plurality. The apertures of the first plurality are also positioned with respect to the second plurality of apertures so the apertures of the first plurality are only partially covered by edges of the media being held to an escort belt by a vacuum source applied to the first and the second aperture pluralities. The second escort belt is driven in a direction opposite the first direction to transport media through a print zone in front of at least one other ink jet print head. One or more vacuum generators are coupled to the apertures of the first and the second pluralities of the first escort belt and the second escort belt for maintaining registration of the media to the first and the second escort belts as the media passes through the two print zones and for removing particulates through the partially covered apertures of the first and the second escort belts.
Like reference numerals refer to like parts throughout the following description and the accompanying drawings.
During printing, a portion of the web 17 is held to the escort belt 12 through a printing zone 18, by an applied vacuum from a first vacuum generator that is coupled to the vacuum platen 20. An inter-document region 21 may be located between the portions of the web that are printed by the printing member 16. Once printed, the web 17 may enter an input slot 22 of a dryer 26. The dryer 26 is attached to a second vacuum generator 28 for further application of a vacuum to the web 17 through the belt 12 as it traverses through the dryer 26 in the process direction indicated by arrow 30. The escort belt enables the use of a single belt for both imaging and drying. A single vacuum applicator may also be used to generate a vacuum in both the imaging region and the dryer 26. Once the web 17 has been dried by the dryer 26, it exits the output slot 24 and may be cut or otherwise processed (not shown). While a dryer 26 is shown in
The prior art escort belt used with the printer shown in
One embodiment of an escort belt that helps remove particulate from a print zone is shown in
With further reference to
As shown in
With the escort belt 50, particulate, such as displaced debris, is pulled from the print zone through the partially covered apertures 60. This collected debris may be exhausted at a port for the vacuum generator or collected in a filter or other particulate receptacle. Because the debris is collected at the edges of the web, the risk of passageways in the vacuum platen in the central area of the platen are reduced. This feature helps ensure proper registration of the web as it passes through the printing zone. A sufficient number of apertures are provided at the edges of the media that all or substantially all of the apertures are unlikely to clog before regular maintenance of the printing machine. Thus, the apertures of the plurality 64 are positioned for holding the media through a print zone and the apertures of the plurality 60 help ensure an air flow that pulls particulate and other debris from the print zone.
While the embodiment shown in
As shown in
As shown in
With further reference to
As the media passes into the print zone between the first print head assembly 80 and the first escort belt 50, the vacuum applied to the plurality of apertures 64 rigidly hold the media to the belt while the vacuum applied to the plurality of apertures 60 generate an air flow that helps pull particulate from the print zone through the partially uncovered apertures 60 for exhaustion or storage elsewhere. The first print head assembly ejects ink onto the media surface facing the print head assembly. As the media enters the second print zone, the vacuum applied to the plurality of apertures 64 pulls the side of the media printed by the first print head assembly to the second escort belt. The second print head assembly ejects ink onto the other side of the media. The vacuum applied to the plurality of apertures 60 pull particulate from the second print zone through the apertures partially covered by the media.
While the various embodiments presented above have been discussed with reference to a page width print head, the belt is equally applicable to printers having an ink-jet print head which forms an image by moving across media periodically in swaths, to printers having staggered arrays of print heads, and to printers having a single print bar. Additionally, while the belt has been discussed as being used with media sheets, similarly configured belts may be used in printers that eject ink onto media webs. Therefore, those skilled in the art will recognize that numerous modifications can be made to the specific implementations described above. Therefore, the following claims are not to be limited to the specific embodiments illustrated and described above. The claims, as originally presented and as they may be amended, encompass variations, alternatives, modifications, improvements, equivalents, and substantial equivalents of the embodiments and teachings disclosed herein, including those that are presently unforeseen or unappreciated, and that, for example, may arise from applicants/patentees and others.
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