This invention relates to finisher stations and, more specifically, to a stacker assembly used in said stations.
While the present invention can be effectively used in a plurality of paper or sheet-handling systems, it will be described for clarity as used in electrostatic marking systems, such as electrophotography. In an electrostatographic reproducing apparatus commonly used today, a photoconductive insulating member may be charged to a negative potential, thereafter exposed to a light image of an original document to be reproduced. The exposure discharges the photoconductive insulating surface in exposed or background areas and creates an electrostatic latent image on the member which corresponds to the image areas contained within the original document. Subsequently, the electrostatic latent image on the photoconductive insulating surface is made visible by developing the image with a developing powder referred to in the art as toner. During development, the toner particles are attracted from the carrier particles by the charge pattern of the image areas on the photoconductive insulating area to form a powder image on the photoconductive insulating area. This image may be subsequently transferred or marked onto a support surface such as copy paper to which it may be permanently affixed by heating or by the application of pressure. Following transfer of the toner image or marking, the copy paper may be removed from the system by a user or may be automatically forwarded to a finishing station where the copies may be collected, compiled and stapled and formed into books, pamphlets or other sets.
As above noted, there are many systems that transport paper or other sheet media after the media is marked or treated. These marking systems could include electrostatic marking systems, non-electrostatic marking systems and printers or any other system where paper or other flexible sheet media or receiving sheets are transported internally to an output device such as a finisher and compiler station or stations.
These electrostatic marking systems have finisher and compilers located at a site after the receiving sheets (paper) have been marked. The stacker tray assembly in these compilers usually comprises a stacker tray, controller sensors and height stack switches. Sheet stacker assemblies are well known in the art such as disclosed in Xerox U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,188,353; 5,261,655; 5,409,202; 5,476,256; 5,570,172; 5,842,695; 6,443,450 and 6,575,461. The disclosures of these Xerox patents are incorporated by reference into this disclosure.
Today, there is no reliable effective and inexpensive cut sheet stacking elevator systems that are capable of continuously measuring the position and direction of the elevator that supports the paper stack.
In some current finishing devices and feeders of printing systems, paper elevator position control generally involves stack height switches, corner sensors, and comb brackets with multiple transmissive sensors/algorithms to determine elevator position and direction.
These methods require an elevator to initialize (home) at some position which is usually at the top or bottom of travel. They measure position in the middle of travel by counting from the home position using stepper motor steps or sensor steps using a linear encoder. Often this process requires the elevator to travel to the bottom (or top) of its range to home, and then to move to the desired intermediate position during printer cycle up. This method takes a long time and several sensors are needed to identify elevator location (limited capability) and elevator motion. None of these designs allow for identifying stacker/elevator location and motion/direction in real time.
As an example, one system uses a comb bracket and 3 sensors to identify motion and upper and lower position only. Relatively expensive sensors are located on the elevator that detects transitions on a “comb bracket” located at the back of the frame.
By installing a small sensor array such as a CIS (contact Image Sensor) horizontally along with a continuously variable slanted shape such as a triangle, the system can provide both accurate and instantaneous elevator positional data. This solution allows for a low complexity, efficiency and low cost system.
With the sensor array mounted horizontally and using a continuously varying slanted shaped target on the finisher frame, the sensor used can be much shorter than the length of elevator travel. This sensor/target system creates an optical reduction to reduce the sensor size requirement while providing accurate positioning and motion data.
In the prior art, elevator controls consistently rely on encoder type controls (linear or rotary) that limit the ability of a stacker/feeder system to accurately determine its location (without a homing operation) and to determine both motion and location in real time with accuracy. The encoder style designs rely on the intermittent triggering of point sensors that look for transitions in either a linear or rotary segmented target. Because these prior art systems look only at transitions, location is identified by an encoder count. To ensure the encoder counts are accurate, homing is required. In addition, because the motion is detected by transitions, there is a need to confirm motion and not noise in triggering the transition. The elevator must perform the homing operation any time the system has a shutdown or to confirm the elevator has not been moved. Additional sensors are needed to ensure that the elevator does not move past the upper or lower limits.
Ideally, in the present invention, array sensors (CIS for low cost) are used to identify both elevator motion and location accurately without the need for homing. Absolute location is determined directly from the sensor readout. However, heretofore there was a cost issue with using a single or stitched sensor system able to span the entire elevator travel distance. This distance can be considerable; the present invention solves this issue.
The present invention provides a method for reducing the elevator motion to be detectable by a small CIS sensor such as an A6 (100 mm) or A8 (54 mm). This significantly reduces the cost and complexity associated with using a longer CIS system.
By mounting the CIS on the elevator horizontally and detecting in one embodiment a triangle image (decal) on the frame, the sensor's inherent accuracy can be used to identify location and motion in real time without the expense or complexity associated with using an array sensor capable of spanning the whole range of travel.
The present invention in one embodiment provides an analog based approach in which affixed to a reference structure is a triangular decal or marking. A contact image sensor is mounted horizontally on the movable elevator and detects the width of the triangular marking which is height dependent. The triangular or other marking has a height at least the equivalent of the distance of travel of the elevator. In this way, a direct measurement of height can be obtained. As earlier noted, any suitable sensor can be used in the present invention; however, a low cost Contact Image Sensor (CIS) is preferably used in this invention. An example (by illustration not limitation) of a sensor is a C16054-IR5S31 sensor obtained from Toshiba. The triangular decal or other suitable markings can be used, such as a slanted line where the bottom location of the line is furthest from a straight imaginary vertical perpendicular line. These markings will be referred to in this disclosure and claims as a “continuously variable slanted shape marker”.
The sensor is attached to the elevator and is in sensing contact with the triangular decal so that it can measure shape, color, horizontal lines or plural (“measurables”) as the sensor moves vertically along with the elevator along the height of the triangle or other continuously variable slanted shape marker. Each of these measurables will vary as the sensor moves up or down the vertical height of the triangle. The sensor in one embodiment can sense the shape of the triangle which is widest at its bottom portion and narrowest at its top portion. The black color of the triangle will be largest at the bottom of the triangle and less at the small peak of the triangle. The lines in another embodiment are detected by the sensor, the longest horizontal lines at the bottom of the triangle and the shortest at the top of the triangle. The change in pixel intensity is easily sensed by the small sensor as the sensor moves up and down the triangle height or distance (see
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In summary, this invention provides a stacker tray assembly positioned in a marking system after a paper or sheet has been marked. This assembly comprises in an operable arrangement a vertically movable elevator stacker tray, at least one sensor attached to an end portion of the stacked tray, a continuously variable slanted shape marker in sensing contact with the sensor. The marker comprises measurables throughout its height. The sensor is configured to indicate a vertical position of the elevator stacker by vertically sensing the measurables in the variable slanted shape marker. At least one sensor is a CIS sensor and the marker in one embodiment is a triangle marker.
The measurables decrease as they proceed from a bottom portion of the continuously slanted shape marker to a top portion of the triangle marker or top portion of the continuously variable shaped marker. It is important to the invention that a size of at least one sensor is substantially shorter than a length of the movable elevator stacker tray travel. At least one sensor is configured to identify both elevator up and down motion and the elevator stack tray location with a stack of sheets thereon. The sensor is configured to directly indicate a vertical position of the elevator stacker tray.
The measurables used comprise those selected from the group consisting of shape, color, horizontal line width and pixels. These measurables decrease in measurement as they proceed up the continuously variable slanted shape marker or up the triangle.
In an embodiment, the invention provides a stacker tray assembly comprising in an operable arrangement a vertically movable elevator stacker tray, a CIS sensor fixed on a side section of the stacker tray and a triangular marker or decal positioned in the assembly where it is in sensing communication with the CIS sensor. The triangular marker has its widest portion or base on a plane parallel with the movable elevator stacker tray. The movable elevator stacker tray is configured to be movable along a distance at least equal to a height of the triangular marker. The triangular marker comprises measurables throughout its height. These measurables are configured to be measured by the CIS sensor. The measurables decrease in measurement as they proceed from a base to an upper portion of the preferred triangular marker. The sensor is configured to indicate a vertical position of the elevator stacker tray by incrementally sensing the measurables in the triangular marker.
It is important that the size of the CIS sensor is substantially shorter than a length of the movable elevator stacker tray travel. As noted earlier, the measurables comprise those selected from the groups consisting of shape, color, horizontal line width and pixels.
The present invention also provides a method of determining a location of a stacker tray in a stacker tray assembly. This method comprises providing an elevator stacker tray in the assembly, loading a stack of sheets on this tray and attaching a sensor at an end portion of the tray in such a manner that the sensor is in a sensing relationship to a continuous variable slanted shape marker. The method comprises providing measurables in the marker so that the measurables: decrease as they approach the top of the marker in a decreasing manner. The measurables are configured to be sensed by the sensor. The method comprises moving the elevator stacker tray wherein the sensor senses the measurables as the elevator moves to thereby directly indicate the location of the stacker tray and the paper stack. The marker is positioned on a finisher frame adjacent the sensor and the marker extends vertically to at least a distance of travel of the elevator stacker. The preferred sensor is a contact image sensor.
The preferred marker is a triangular decal with increased measurables at the bottom of the triangle and progressively less measurables as they approach the top of the triangle. The size of the sensor is substantially shorter than a length of a distance of travel of the movable stacker tray. This is a critically important feature of this invention. Any suitable measurable can be used in this invention such as those measurables selected from the group consisting of shape, color, horizontal line width and pixels. The measurables decrease progressively in measurement as they proceed up the continuous variable slanted shape marker or proceed up the preferred triangular shaped marker.
It will be appreciated that variations of the above-disclosed and other features and functions, or alternatives thereof, may be desirably combined into many other different systems or applications. 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.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5188353 | Parks | Feb 1993 | A |
5261655 | Keller et al. | Nov 1993 | A |
5409902 | Carson et al. | Apr 1995 | A |
5476256 | Fortuna et al. | Dec 1995 | A |
5570172 | Acquaviva | Oct 1996 | A |
5839015 | Faguy et al. | Nov 1998 | A |
5842695 | McVeigh | Dec 1998 | A |
6443450 | Antinora | Sep 2002 | B1 |
6575461 | Rider | Jun 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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57-67439 | Apr 1982 | JP |
2003-330334 | Nov 2003 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20110260392 A1 | Oct 2011 | US |