Claims
- 1. An ink-jet printer for printing onto a print medium and having a dual drying system, comprising:
- a printhead for printing on a print medium, said printhead comprising a plurality of ink-jet nozzles disposed at a print zone for ejecting jets of ink onto the surface of said medium in a controlled fashion;
- apparatus for advancing the print medium along a medium path to said print zone during print operations;
- a print heater disposed at said print zone for heating a portion of said print medium disposed at said print zone during printing operations to dry ink ejected onto said medium;
- apparatus for drying said print medium before said medium reaches said print zone to prevent uneven shrinkage of a cellulose-based print medium due to heating said medium at said print zone by said print heater, said drying apparatus comprising a heating element for heating said print medium at a location spatially separated from said print zone;
- a drying apparatus controller for controlling the operation of said drying apparatus to obtain a desired heating operation from said heater element without regard to humidity levels within a printer environment or at the print zone;
- a print heater controller for controlling said print heater to set said print heater at a heating range suitable for printing operations, and wherein said print heater is controlled by said print heater controller to provide a higher temperature at said print zone than said drying apparatus provides at said drying location, said print heater controller controlling the print heater in dependence on the type of print media on which print operations are being conducted by the printer and without regard to humidity levels at the print zone or within the printer environment to obtain good print quality on said print medium;
- apparatus for directing a turbulent flow of air across said print zone during printing operations, said apparatus comprising a fan assembly extending substantially along a width of the print medium and disposed at an output side of the print zone to provide an unobstructed flow of air between said fan assembly and said print zone and to thereby create turbulence at said print zone, increasing the ink carrier evaporation rate;
- wherein said printer provides independent control of said drying apparatus and said print heater and without regard to humidity levels to obtain good print quality on said print medium.
- 2. The ink-jet printer of claim 1 further comprising a temperature monitor for monitoring a temperature at said location and providing a signal indicative of said temperature, and wherein said drying apparatus controller is responsive to said temperature monitor signal to maintain the temperature at said location at a relatively constant temperature during print operations.
- 3. The ink-jet printer of claim 1 wherein said drying apparatus controller operates said heater element to preheat said location prior to commencement of printing operations by said printer.
- 4. The ink-jet printer of claim 3 further comprising a temperature sensor for providing a temperature sensor signal indicative of the temperature at said location, and wherein said drying apparatus controller comprises apparatus for causing said drying apparatus to operate at a first relatively high power level for a predetermined time interval upon turning on the printer, and upon expiration of said time interval for causing said drying apparatus to cycle between second and third power levels which are relatively lower than said first power level in dependence on said temperature signal, said cycling occurring in response to said temperature signal.
- 5. The ink-jet printer of claim 1 wherein said drying apparatus comprises a heated roller contacting said print medium as it is advanced along said path to said print zone, and wherein said heater element heats an external surface of said roller.
- 6. The ink-jet printer of claim 5 wherein said roller is a hollow roller element, and said heater element comprises an elongated bulb for generating infrared energy disposed within said roller.
- 7. The ink-jet printer of claim 1 further characterized as a color printer, wherein said printhead comprises ink-jet cartridge means having a plurality of differently colored inks.
- 8. The ink-jet printer of claim 7 wherein said ink cartridge means comprises a plurality of ink-jet cartridges each containing a supply of ink of different color from the other cartridge or cartridges.
- 9. The ink-jet printer of claim 1 further characterized by an ink-jet print resolution of at least 180 dots per inch.
- 10. The ink-jet printer of claim 9 further characterized by a print resolution of approximately 300 dots per inch.
- 11. The ink-jet printer of claim 1 further comprising a carriage for supporting the printhead for movement along a carriage axis transverse to the medium path and a carriage drive apparatus for driving the carriage along the carriage axis during print operations to print successive swaths on the print medium, and wherein the printer supports a plurality of print modes, including a first print mode wherein all dots to be fired on a given swath by the printhead are fired on a single pass of the carriage, and a second print mode wherein the dots to be fired on a given swath by the printhead are fired on a plurality of passes of the carriage, and wherein the print heater controller varies the temperature of the print heater during printing operations on a given print medium in dependence on the type of print mode employed during printing operations on the given print medium.
- 12. The printer of claim 1 further comprises sensing apparatus for automatically sensing whether a print medium being advanced to the print zone is an opaque type or a transparent type and generating a sensor signal indicative of said medium type, and wherein said print heater controller is responsive to said sensor signal to set heating levels of said print heater in dependence on said sensed medium type.
- 13. The printer of claim 1 wherein said printer supports printing operations on a plurality of different types of print media, said different types including plain paper, said printer further comprising a controller for controlling the apparatus for directing a flow of air, the controller adapted to control said apparatus to adjust the rate of air flow in dependence on the type of print medium advanced to the print zone, such that a highest flow rate is generated for plain paper medium, and lower maximum flow rates are generated for other types of print medium.
RELATED APPLICATIONS
This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 08/171,130 filed on Dec. 20, 1993, now abandoned, which case is a continuation of commonly assigned application Ser. No. 07/878,186, filed May 1, 1992, entitled "PREHEAT ROLLER FOR THERMAL INK-JET PRINTER," by Todd R. Medin, Richard A. Becker and Brent W. Richtsmeier issued as U.S. Pat. No. 5,287,123, Feb. 15, 1994.
This case is related to Ser. No. U.S. Pat. No. 5,329,295, issued Jul. 12, 1994, entitled PRINT ZONE HEATER SCREEN FOR THERMAL INK-JET PRINTER, by T. R. Medin and B. W. Richtsmeier; Ser. No. 07/876,986, filed May 1, 1992, attorney docket number PD 1092293, entitled THERMAL INK-JET PRINTER WITH PRINT HEATER HAVING VARIABLE HEAT ENERGY FOR DIFFERENT MEDIA, by B. W. Richtsmeier, T. L. Russell, T. R. Medin and W. D. Meyer; U.S. Pat. No. 5,296,873, issued Mar. 22, 1995, entitled AIRFLOW SYSTEM FOR THERMAL INK-JET PRINTER, by T. L. Russell, B. W. Richtsmeier, K. W. Glassett and R. M. Cundiff; and Ser. No. 07/876,924, filed May 1, 1992, attorney docket number PD 189404, entitled HEATER BLOWER SYSTEM IN A COLOR INK-JET PRINTER, by B. W. Richtsmeier, T. L. Russell, T. R. Medin, S. W. Bauer, R. M. Cundiff, and K. L. Glassett.
US Referenced Citations (27)
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Date |
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89302308 |
Sep 1989 |
EPX |
Continuations (2)
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Number |
Date |
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171130 |
Dec 1993 |
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878186 |
May 1992 |
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