Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6308022
-
Patent Number
6,308,022
-
Date Filed
Monday, June 26, 200024 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, October 23, 200123 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 399 67
- 399 69
- 399 70
- 399 320
- 399 328
- 399 335
- 347 156
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
A warm-up completion temperature (temp 2) of an electro-photographic type printer is set to be lower than a stand-by temperature (temp 3). When a temperature detector detects that a temperature of a fuser reaches the warm-up completion temperature, then a controller ends the warm-up operation. The warm-up time between the turning on of power and the completion of the machine's warm-up operation is thus reduced. An amount of power required for the warm-up operation is also reduced.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an electro-photographic type image forming apparatus and a method of warming up the image forming apparatus.
2. Description of the Related Art
When power is turned on in an electro-photographic type image forming apparatus, the apparatus performs a warm-up operation (forwardly rotating a photosensitive drum, and raising the temperature of a fuser. The warm-up operation continues until the fuser reaches a certain stand-by temperature.
However, it may take a long time for the fuser to reach the stand-by temperature during the warm up operation. This generally results in having to wait for a long time before the apparatus can begin printing. Consequently, the user has to wait for a long time until the printing out is complete.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is thus an object of the present invention to provide an image processing apparatus capable of reducing the warm up period.
In order to accomplish this object, according to one aspect of the present invention, an electro-photographic type image processing apparatus includes a heating unit that heats a fuser, a detection unit that detects the temperature of the fuser, and a control unit that stops performing the warm-up operation when the fuser reaches a warm up completion temperature that is lower than the stand-by temperature. Since the warm up operation is terminated at a temperature lower than the stand-by temperature, the warm-up period of the image forming apparatus can be reduced. The conventional image forming apparatus stops the warm up operation when the fuser temperature reaches the stand-by temperature.
The control unit may heat the fuser to the stand-by temperature after the fuser reaches the warm up completion temperature. Accordingly, it is possible to heat the fuser unit to the fusing temperature in a relatively short period. Therefore, even if a start key is pressed while the image forming apparatus is in a stand-by condition, the fuser unit is heated to the fusing temperature before the recording paper reaches the fusing unit, whereby printing can be reliably enabled.
The control unit may cause the heating unit to heat the fuser such that the temperature of the fuser becomes the fusing temperature in the period of time between the receiving of a print command signal and the moment the front end of the recording paper reaches the fuser. Accordingly, the fuser is brought into a “printing ready” condition. Thus, the transferred toner image can be reliably fused/fixed on the recording paper.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided an image forming device including a photosensitive body, an exposure unit that forms an electrostatic latent image on the photosensitive body, a developer that forms a toner image by applying toner to the electrostatic latent image, a transfer that transfers the toner image onto a recording sheet, a fuser that fuses/fixes the transferred image onto the recording sheet, a heater that heats the fuser, a temperature detector that detects the temperature of the fuser, and a controller that adjusts the heater based on the temperature detected by the temperature detector, wherein the controller ends a warm-up operation when the detected fuser unit temperature reaches a warm-up completion temperature that is lower than a stand-by temperature. This arrangement also reduces the length of the warm-up period.
In the detailed description, the heating unit is embodied as a heat lamp
101
a
, the temperature detection unit is embodied as a temperature sensor
110
, and the control unit is embodied as MPU
11
, ROM
12
, and RAM
13
.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1
is block diagram showing a facsimile machine according to the present invention;
FIG. 2
is a cross-section view of a record unit of the facsimile machine shown
FIG. 1
;
FIG. 3
is a time line showing the relationship between motor operation and detected temperature from the time power is turned on in the fax machine of
FIG. 1
;
FIG. 4
is a flow chart showing the operation of the fax machine of
FIG. 1
after power is turned on; and
FIG. 5
a temperature characteristics chart showing the relationship between time and temperature after power is turned on in the fax machine of FIG.
1
.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
An embodiment of the image forming apparatus of the present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings. This embodiment will describe the image forming apparatus as a facsimile machine
1
.
As shown in
FIG. 1
, the facsimile machine
1
includes MPU
11
, ROM
12
, RAM
13
, scanning unit
14
, printing unit
15
, operating unit
16
, display unit
17
, image memory
18
, CODEC
19
, modem
20
, and NCU
21
. These elements
11
˜
21
are interconnected over BUS
22
.
MPU
11
controls the various elements of the machine
1
, and ROM
12
stores programs used to control the machine
1
. RAM
13
temporarily stores data used by the machine
1
.
Scanning unit
14
scans a document and outputs it as binary (black and white) image data. Printing unit
15
is comprised as an electro-photographic type printer, and is capable of printing out onto a recording sheet image data received from a remote location, and image data of a document scanned by the scanning unit
14
for copying. The printing unit
15
will be described in greater detail hereinbelow.
Operating unit
16
contains various keys that allow the user to operate the machine. These keys and controls include a numeric key pad
16
a
(including # and * keys) to allow input of telephone and facsimile numbers, a one-touch/quick-dial key
16
b
to allow a user to register and input telephone and fax numbers using a quick dial number, a start key
16
c
through which the user can initiate scanning of a document, and a transmit/copy key
16
d
to switch the machine
1
between fax transmission and copying.
Display unit
17
includes an LCD or the like, and indicates the operating status of the machine
1
, as well as various other information.
Image memory
18
temporarily stores image data received from a remote source, or image data scanned by the scanning unit
14
. CODEC
19
encodes the image data for transmission that is scanned by the scanning unit using an appropriate encoding method, such as MH, MR, MMR, or the like, and also decodes image data received from a remote source.
Modem
20
modulates and demodulates data that is sent or received according to V.17, V.27ter, V.29 or the like, based on ITU-T recommendation T.30 facsimile transmission procedures. NCU
21
controls the establishment and breakage of connection with a telephone line L, sends dialing signals corresponding to remote fax numbers, and detects arrival of a call from a remote source.
The operation of the printing unit
15
will now be described in detail.
As shown in
FIG. 2
, a photosensitive drum
30
is held by its axial shaft such that the drum
30
is rotatable. Photo-conductive film
31
is laid over the outer surface of the photosensitive member
30
.
A charger
40
, formed as a brush roller made of electro-conductive fiber, uniformly charges the photo-conductive film
31
on the drum
30
to a predetermined electric potential. Exposure unit
50
, formed as an LED array
51
, radiates light at the photo-conductive film
31
creating an electrostatic latent image on the photosensitive drum
30
.
Developer unit
60
is provided with a toner case
61
that holds toner, a supply roller
62
that is supplied with a predetermined voltage and arranged in the bottom portion of the toner case
61
, and a developing roller
63
, also supplied with a predetermined voltage and arranged in an opening at the bottom of the toner case
61
between the supply roller
62
and photosensitive drum
30
. The toner, which is transported from the toner case
61
by the supply roller
62
and developing roller
63
, and which is charged to a predetermined polarity, is selectively applied to the electrostatic latent image based on the polarity of the toner and the difference in electrical potential between the developing roller
63
and the electrostatic latent image formed on the photosensitive drum
30
. The toner that adheres to the electro-static latent image thus forms a toner image on the drum
30
.
A stirrer
64
is rotatably held inside the toner case
61
. Rotation of the stirrer
64
agitates the toner inside the toner case
61
, maintaining the toner at a uniform consistency.
Paper cassette
70
is capable of holding stacked sheets of recording paper
71
of a predetermined size. Semi-circular roller
72
feeds out the upper most sheet
71
from the stack of paper stored in the paper cassette
70
one sheet at a time. The sheet that is fed out
71
is transported towards the photosensitive drum
30
. The paper
71
follows the path indicated in the drawing by the chain-dotted line P.
A transfer unit
90
is arranged below the photosensitive drum
30
, and is controlled at a predetermined electrical potential. The difference in electrical potential between the transfer unit
90
and the photosensitive drum
30
causes the toner image to be transferred from the photosensitive drum to the paper
71
.
Memory removing brush
91
is formed as an electrically conductive brush, and brushes any toner remaining on the photosensitive drum
30
after transfer such that the toner is uniformly dispersed on the photosensitive drum
30
.
Fuser unit
100
includes a heat roller
101
and a nip roller
102
, and is arranged downstream (in the direction of paper passage) from the photosensitive drum
30
. A lamp
101
a
(a halogen lamp, for example) is arranged inside the heat roller
101
to maintain the fuser unit
100
at a predetermined temperature. The fuser unit
100
melts the toner and fuses/fixes it to the paper
71
when the paper
71
is passed between the heating roller
101
and the nip roller
102
.
A temperature sensor
110
is arranged in proximity to the fuser
100
. The temperature sensor
110
is connected to MPU
11
. The sensor detects the temperature of the fuser
100
, and outputs the detected temperature to the MPU
11
.
A motor M serves as the drive source for the printing unit
15
, driving the supply roller
62
, developing roller
63
, and other various rollers. As in the present embodiment, the motor M may drive the entire facsimile machine
1
. It should further be noted that in the present embodiment, the charging of the photosensitive drum, exposure, development, image transfer, and fusing processes are all performed sequentially, and constitute in combination a “printing process.”
The operation of the facsimile machine
1
from the time it is supplied with power to the time it performs copying will now be described in detail with reference to the time line in FIG.
3
and the flow chart of FIG.
4
. This operation is executed based on programs stored in the ROM
12
, and performed under the control of MPU
11
.
At step S
1
the machine (or MPU) determines whether or not power has been turned on; if not, the program loops back in a stand-by mode, but when power is turned on, the machine
1
performs an initialization procedure and starts warming up.
At step S
2
the lamp
101
a
is illuminated, and the fuser
100
is heated.
The machine
1
then waits until the temperature of the fuser unit
100
reaches a predetermined motor rotation temperature level (temp
1
). Specifically at step S
3
the machine
1
determines whether the temperature detected by the temperature sensor
110
has reached temp
1
(80° C., for example); if not, the program loops back until the temperature reaches the predetermined temp
1
.
At step S
4
the motor M is rotated, and a photosensitive drum
30
pre-rotation operation is begun. This pre-rotation operation includes cleaning the surface of the drum
30
, and collecting the toner gathered in the memory removing brush
91
at the developing roller
63
via the photosensitive drum
30
.
At step S
5
it is determined whether or not the temperature detected by the temperature sensor
110
has reached a warm-up completion temperature (temp
2
). In the present embodiment, the warm-up completion temperature is set at 120° C. If not, the program loops back and repeats step S
5
until the detected temperature reaches temp
2
.
At step S
6
the rotation of the motor M is stopped, and the pre-rotation operation is complete. In other words, the warming-up procedure is complete.
Next, at step S
7
the heat generation of the lamp
101
a
is adjusted such that the temperature of the fuser unit
100
reaches a pre-determined stand-by temperature (temp
3
). In the present embodiment, the stand-by temperature temp
3
is 140° C.
At step S
8
it is determined whether or not the start key
16
c
has been pressed. If the key is pressed, the program advances to step S
10
. If not, the program advances to step S
9
.
At step S
9
it is determined whether or not the temperature detected by the temperature sensor
110
is equivalent to the stand-by temperature temp
3
. If so (step S
9
, YES) then the program returns to step S
8
; if not, then the program returns to step S
7
. It should be noted that the stand-by temperature temp
3
should be set at a temperature that allows the temperature of the fuser unit
100
to rise to the fusing temperature temp
5
, enabling the image data to be properly recorded on the recording sheet
71
, during the time period between when the recording sheet leaves the cassette
70
(after the start key
16
c
has been pressed) and reaches the fuser unit
100
.
At step S
10
, heat generation of the lamp
101
a
is adjusted in order to raise the fuser temperature to a fusing temperature temp
5
. In the present embodiment the fusing temperature temp
5
is set at 160° C.
At step S
11
an image of the document is scanned-in by the scanning unit
14
.
At step S
12
the motor M is rotated, and a sheet of recording paper
71
is transported from the paper cassette
70
towards the photosensitive drum
30
.
At step S
13
the image data is recorded onto the recording sheet
71
by the recording unit
15
. When this happens, the temperature detected by the temperature sensor
110
has reached the fusing temperature temp
5
. In other words, when the start key
16
c
is pressed thereby inputting a print command signal to the machine, the temperature of the fuser unit
100
is raised from the stand-by temperature temp
3
to the fusing temperature temp
5
during the time period between which the recording sheet
71
moves from the paper cassette
70
to the fuser unit
100
.
Next, a method of calculating the minimum warming up end temperature temp
2
will be described with reference to temperature/time graph shown in FIG.
5
.
The “minimum temperature” is herein defined as the lowest temperature that would permit the fuser to reach the fusing temperature temp
5
during the interval T from the start of motor M rotation upon depression of the start key
16
c
, which causes the recording sheet
71
to be drawn from the paper cassette
70
towards the photosensitive drum
30
, to the moment when the front edge of the recording sheet
71
reaches the fuser unit
100
.
The minimum temperature for temp
2
is derived based on the relationship between time T and the fusing temperature temp
5
. Specifically, the heating capability “a” of the lamp
101
a
(defined by the slope of the heating characteristic curve in FIG.
5
—more specifically, the amount of temperature increase for each unit of time), time T, the warming up completion temperature t
2
and the fusing temperature temp
5
combine to form the following function.
temp
5
−temp
2
≦a*T
(1)
Since the heating slope “a” depends on the heating characteristics of the lamp
101
a
, it is a constant value. Additionally, since time T is defined as the amount of time it takes for the recording sheet
71
to move from the paper cassette
70
until the tip of the paper reaches the fusing unit
100
, time T is also constant.
Thus the minimum temperature temp
2
can be defined as:
temp
2
=temp
5
−a*T
(1)
As thus described in the foregoing, the present embodiment can demonstrate the following advantages.
1) The warm-up completion temperature temp
2
of the fuser unit
100
is set to a temperature lower than the stand-by temperature t
3
. This reduces the warm-up period (the time required between the moment power is supplied to the machine until the completion of the warming up operation), and also reduces the amount of electric power the machine consumes for the warm-up operation.
2) After the warm-up operation is completed, the temperature of the fuser unit
100
is raised from the warm-up completion temperature temp
2
to the stand-by temperature temp
3
. This enables the fuser unit
100
to be brought to the fusing temperature
5
during the time period T from when the recording sheet
71
exits the paper cassette
70
to the moment the tip of the recording sheet
71
meets the fuser unit
100
with great reliability even when the start key
16
c
is pressed while the machine is in stand-by mode. Accordingly, even if the start key
16
c
is pressed during the stand-by condition, the machine can properly perform the printing operation.
3) The minimum allowable warm-up end temperature temp
2
is calculated based on the amount of time T needed for the recording sheet
71
to move from the paper cassette
70
to the fuser unit
100
, the fusing temperature temp
5
of the fuser unit
100
, and the heating capability (the heating slope “a”) of the lamp
101
a.
Thus, as long as the warm-up end temperature temp
2
of the fuser unit
100
is equal to or above the minimum temperature, the fuser unit
100
can be reliably brought to the fusing temperature temp
5
before the tip of the recording sheet
71
reaches the fuser unit
100
, thus making the fusing/fixing of the transferred toner image to the recording sheet
71
more reliable.
It should be noted that the present invention is not limited to the illustrated and described configuration. For example, the following modifications can be made to the embodiment without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention.
In the above embodiment, the pre-rotation operation is initiated when the temperature detected by the temperature sensor
110
reaches the rotation start temperature temp
1
of the motor M, and ended when the detected temperature reaches the warm-up end temperature temp
2
. It is possible, however, to arrange the present invention such that the pre-rotation operation ends at a different point in time as long as that point is before recording of the image data begins.
Additionally, it should be noted that when the present invention is employed in a facsimile machine to receive facsimile data from a remote device, the processing step of detecting whether or not the start key
16
c
has been pressed can be replaced by a step of determining whether or not facsimile data has been received at MPU
11
.
It is also satisfactory that when the start key
16
c
is pressed or a print command is sent to the MPU
11
after power is turned on but before the machine has completed the warm-up operation, the image of the document scanned-in by the scanning unit
14
may be temporarily stored in image memory
18
. Similarly, if facsimile reception takes place (i.e., facsimile data is input to MPU
11
) during the warm-up period (before the warm-up operation ends after energization of the image forming apparatus), the received image data may also be temporarily stored in image memory
18
. Still further, once heating of the fuser unit
100
is completed, the recording sheet
71
may be advanced from the paper cassette
70
and the image recorded on the recording sheet
71
without stopping the rotation of the motor M.
The illustrated and described image forming apparatus is disclosed in Japanese Patent Application No. 11-197406 filed on Jul. 12, 1999 in JPO, the instant application claims priority of this Japanese Patent Application, and the entire disclosure thereof is incorporated herein by reference.
Claims
- 1. An electro-photographic type image forming apparatus comprising:a fuser; a heating unit that heats the fuser; a temperature detection unit that detects the temperature of the fuser; and a control unit that stops performing a warm-up operation when the temperature of the fuser reaches a warm-up completion temperature (Temp 2) that is lower than a stand-by temperature; wherein Temp 2 satisfies the relationship Temp 5−a*T≦Temp 2≦Temp 5, where Temp 5 is a fusing temperature, a is a heating capability of the heating unit, and T is a time interval between issuance of a print command and a moment when a front end of a recording sheet reaches the fuser.
- 2. The image forming apparatus of claim 1 wherein the control unit causes the heating unit to heat the fuser to the stand-by temperature after the fuser reaches the warm-up completion temperature.
- 3. The image forming apparatus of claim 1 wherein the control unit causes the heating unit to heat the fuser such that the temperature of the fuser becomes a fusing temperature during a time period between giving of a print command signal and a moment of front end of a recording sheet reaches the fuser.
- 4. The image forming apparatus of claim 3 wherein the print command signal is given by pressing of a start key.
- 5. The image forming apparatus of claim 3 wherein the print command signal is given by reception of facsimile data from a remote device.
- 6. The image forming apparatus of claim 3 wherein the warm-up completion temperature is about 120° C., the stand-by temperature is about 140° C. and the fusing temperature is about 160° C.
- 7. An image forming apparatus comprising:a photosensitive drum; an exposure unit that forms an electrostatic latent image on the photosensitive drum; a developer that forms a toner image by applying toner to the electrostatic latent image; a transfer unit that transfers the toner image to a recording sheet; a fuser that fuses the transferred toner image to the recording sheet; a heater that heats the fuser; a temperature detection unit that detects the temperature of the fuser; and a control unit that controls the heating unit based on the temperature detected by the temperature detection unit wherein the control unit terminates a warm-up operation when the temperature of the fuser reaches a warm-up completion temperature (Temp 2) that is lower than a stand-by temperature; wherein Temp 2 satisfies the relationship Temp 5−a*T≦Temp 2≦Temp 5, where Temp 5 is a fusing temperature, a is a heating capability of the heating unit, and T is a time interval between issuance of a print command and a moment when a front end of a recording sheet reaches the fuser.
- 8. The image forming apparatus of claim 7 wherein the control unit causes the heater to heat the fuser to the stand-by temperature after the fuser reaches the warm-up completion temperature.
- 9. The image forming apparatus of claim 7 wherein the control unit causes the heater to heat the fuser such that the temperature of the fuser becomes a fusing temperature during a time period between giving of a print command signal and a moment a tip of the recording sheet reaches the fuser.
- 10. The image forming apparatus of claim 9 further including an operation unit having a start key, and wherein the print command signal is given by pressing the start key.
- 11. The image forming apparatus of claim 9 further including a network control unit, and wherein the print command signal is given by detection of a facsimile received by the network control unit.
- 12. A warm-up method in an image forming apparatus comprising the steps:(A) starting a warm-up operation upon energization of the image forming apparatus; (B) activating a heating unit that heats a fuser, and starting rotation of a motor that rotates a photosensitive body; (C) detecting the temperature of the fuser; (D) determining whether or not the detected temperature of the fuser has reached a warm-up completion temperature (Temp 2) that is lower than a stand-by temperature; and (E) stopping rotation of the motor and ending the warm-up operation when it is determined at step (D) that the temperature of the fuser has reached the warm-up completion temperature; wherein Temp 2 satisfies a relationship Temp 5−a*T≦Temp 2≦Temp 5, where Temp 5 is a fusing temperature, a is a heating capability of the heating unit, and T is a time interval between issuance of a print command and a moment when a front end of a recording sheet reaches the fuser.
- 13. The warm-up method of claim 12 further including the step of (F) heating the fuser to the stand-by temperature after step (E).
- 14. The warm-up method of claim 13 further including the step of (G) heating the fuser to a fusing temperature from the stand-by temperature according to printing instructions.
- 15. The warm-up method of claim 14 wherein an amount of time required for step (F) is less than an amount of time between giving of a print command signal and arrival of a tip of a recording sheet at the fuser.
- 16. The warm-up method of claim 15 wherein the print command signal is given by pressing a start key of the image forming apparatus.
- 17. The warm-up method of claim 15 wherein the print command signal is given by detection of facsimile signal received from a remote device.
- 18. The warm-up method of claim 14 wherein the warm-up completion temperature is about 120° C., the stand-by temperature is about 140° C. and the fusing temperature is about 160° C.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
11-197406 |
Jul 1999 |
JP |
|
US Referenced Citations (8)
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
04-250484 |
Sep 1992 |
JP |