This invention relates to an ink jet printer provided with a main ink tank and to a system for refilling the printer with ink.
The printer, according to the invention, is preferably applied in the retail sales sector, where a large number of transactions are performed every day, such as points of sale (POS) at supermarkets, hypermarkets, and also in banks and post offices, where receipts have to be handed over and/or commercial documents printed with monochromatic ink, or in three colours.
The colour version is more suitable for those commercial outlets that give great importance to their image, such as jewelers' shops, boutiques, quality clothes stores, which generally give out small size sales slips and/or receipts, showing off their logo.
The printer according to the invention is intended mainly, though not exclusively, for the barrier applications where the operations take place in contact with the public and therefore require a high degree of reliability and high speed operation in order not to add on useless delays due to printing; in addition, the printer according to the invention offers low cost operation, a decidedly higher printing quality than that which may be obtained with thermal printers, and make three-colour printing possible.
These requirements are obtained easily with an ink jet printer according to the invention, with which printing may take place not only on common paper, but also on different media and in different formats, such as cheques, sale slips, customer invoices, paper ribbons, etc., results that cannot be obtained from thermal printers.
The better printing quality typical of an ink jet printer is necessary not only for better readability, but also for printing of the commercial outlet's logo, whether monochromatic or colour, and for printing of the bar code, which provides unique identification of each receipt, and for which perfect printing definition is essential for it to be detected correctly, for example in the case of goods exchanges, where the information contained in the company database needs to be traced simply by scanning the receipt.
Equipment of various types is known in the art arranged for the real time printing of receipts for payments, or sales slips; this equipment is provided with ink jet printers, generally provided with a low-capacity ink cartridge, especially on account of dimensions; these printers do not however seem suitable for points of sale due to their costs of management and due to the limited life of their ink cartridges, which must be replaced frequently, causing annoying delays for the customer, who has to wait to pick up the receipt, with resultant discomfort and wasting of time.
European patent application No 1.142.713 proposes an ink jet printer for points of sale, which attempts to overcome the above-mentioned drawback; this European application describes a printer in which a secondary tank integral with the mobile printhead is connected to a main, fixed ink tank, by means of external tubes for refilling the printhead with the aid of a pump and cut-off valves.
The pump and valves are regulated by a control circuit, which processes the signals generated by an ink level measuring device, consisting of a mobile float, contained in the secondary tank. The float bears a permanent magnet, which in the vertical movement of the float successively faces on to one or the other of two fixed magnetic field detectors, arranged on a wall of the secondary tank; accordingly the response of the level measuring device is not continuous, passing from the full condition to the empty condition, but presents a maximum when the magnet is perfectly facing one or the other magnetic detector, but in the intermediate positions, the response of the measuring device reaches a minimum before rising to one or the other of the maximum values, according to the direction of movement of the float.
This printer is very complicated to build and is subject to faults due to the presence of hydraulic connections between the main, fixed tank and the movable printhead, in which the connection tubes, having to move in order to follow the movement of the printhead, are subject to continuous bending, with a high risk of breaks and losses of ink.
In addition the system of detecting the level of ink in this printer, being made of moving parts, is subject to jamming easily and/or unexpected malfunctions. Besides, the indications of the level measuring device are not exact, as they are affected by errors produced by non-linearity of the response of the magnetic sensors employed and by hysteresis phenomena of different signs, depending on the direction of movement of the float.
Therefore the object of this invention is that of producing an ink jet printer provided with a high capacity ink tank and the associated ink refilling system without the drawbacks found in similar devices in the known art.
In particular one object of this invention is that of producing an ink jet printer employed at points of sale (POS), in which the ink cartridge integral with the printhead, movable with respect to a printing medium, is refilled from a separate ink tank, mounted on the structure of the printer, to which the cartridge is connected at intervals, determined by the measurement of the level of ink contained in it.
Another object of this invention is that of using, for measuring the level of ink contained in the cartridge, a static resistive detector, fixed inside the cartridge and suitable for detecting with continuity and linearity the level of ink in between the cartridge full situation and the cartridge substantially empty situation.
Still another object of this invention is that of making an ink jet printer in which the service, or movable printhead parking, position coincides with the ink refilling position.
A further object of this invention is that of producing an ink jet printer provided with an innovative head cleaning system in which the cleaning blade loaded with the ink just removed from the head is replaced by another clean blade.
In accordance with the envisaged objects of this invention, an ink jet printer is proposed, provided with a high capacity ink tank characterized in the way defined in the main claim.
The characteristics of the invention will be seen clearly from the following description of a preferred embodiment, provided by way of non-restrictive example, with reference to the figures of the drawings attached.
a, 3b represent respectively a perspective view of the ink cartridge integral with the printhead and a median section of the same;
a represents a perspective view of the recovery and refilling stations, mounted on the main tank in the case of a colour printer;
a, 9b represent an external perspective view of the group of
With reference to
The equipment 1 is inserted in a casing 2 substantially consisting of three parts separated ideally by a separation line 3 between a base portion 4 and the rear part 5 and by a line 6 corresponding to the internal paper path 7 described later, which separates a front block 8 from the base 4 and from the rear part 5; the base 4 prevalently comprises the section electronically controlling and managing the entire equipment item. The rear part 5 encloses a number of auxiliary mechanical groups mounted on an auxiliary frame, such as an automatic cutter, a seat for a roll of paper and a main, high capacity ink tank.
The front block 8 encloses a printing group, comprising a mobile printhead with its own cartridge and mechanisms for driving the printhead and for feeding the various printing media, not depicted in
In the front part, the casing 2 presents a horizontal aperture 9 from which a support plane 10 protrudes for inserting the documents on which printing is to take place.
In the top part, the casing 2 presents at the end of the paper path a transversal slot 11 from which are ejected both the printed documents, entered in the aperture 9, and the receipt slips, not shown, which are cut by the operator by means of a cutter 12 placed in the slot 11. Also located on the top part of the casing is a small console 14 containing a number of buttons for control of the whole item of equipment.
On the whole, the casing 2 stands out on account of its extremely compact size, so as not to take up too much space on the cashier's work plane.
The printhead 22 is suitable for printing on print media of different types and formats, among which a strip of paper 30, on which the logo, or trading name of the commercial outlet and a list of the transactions, with the total to be paid and any change are normally printed; the strip 30 is cut into sales slips by the operator by means of the manual cutter 12 and handed over to the customer, or at the operator's discretion by a known type of automatic cutter 34, arranged on the top part 34a of the equipment 1.
The strip 30 unwinds from a roll 32, disposed in an internal seat 33 and not visible in
The printhead 22 is also suitable for printing on paper media of larger dimensions than the ribbon 30, for instance customer invoices, cheques, etc. These documents are inserted on a front plane 10 and are started by means of feeding rollers 37, moved by a motor 38 (
Arranged along the paper path, as is known in the sector art, are sensors which, in association with an electronic control unit, not shown in the drawings, control the motor 38 for feeding the documents first with a continuous motion towards the printhead 22, and then with a discrete pitch motion (line feed), during printing.
On the right hand side of the equipment 1 is a large capacity tank for the ink 35, for instance of 200 ml, designated main, in that, as will be described later in detail, it is intended to refill the cartridge 25; the tank 35 is positioned in correspondence with an end-of-stroke E of the printhead 22 (on the right in
Therefore in the printer according to this invention, the printhead stops in a sole position E of its stroke, whether for its parking and cleaning operations, or for refilling with ink, whenever necessary.
Printing Unit
The known type printing unit 21 is depicted in
The cartridge 25 is closed by a lid 47, opposite the wall 42, mounted on which are two electrodes 48, extending into the inside of the spongy body 41, and having the function of sensor Rs (
The printing unit 21 is blocked on the carriage 26 (
To increase the autonomy of the printer 22, the cartridge 25, according to the invention, may be refilled with ink at regular intervals, defined by the detecting circuit CR, without being bound to substitute the empty cartridge, or extract it for refilling, thereby interrupting a printing operation in progress.
Refilling of the cartridge 25, according to this invention, occurs by transferring the ink from the main tank 35, of high capacity with respect to the capacity of the cartridge 25, disposed in an appropriate seat 57 (
Therefore as the refilling with ink from the main tank 35 to the cartridge 25 can occur every frequently, even during each stoppage of the head 22 in the service station S (
By way of non-restrictive example, it is assumed that the cartridge 25 may contain a minimum of 3 cc. and normally 5 cc. of ink, whereas the main tank 35 may contain up to 200 cc. of ink; therefore before the main tank 35 runs out of ink, about 40 refills may be made.
The main tank 35 is made of a plastic, parallelepiped container 58 (
To avoid sudden interruptions of the printing activity of the head 22, refilling of the cartridge 25 with the ink drawn from the main tank 35, is performed when the printhead 22 is in the end-of-stroke position E (
The service station S is mounted on a self-standing, plastic structure 68 (
The service station S comprises a soft rubber cap 72, rectangular shaped in plan view, provided with a continuous embossed edge 73, which is kept in contact with a front face 43 (
The cap 72 is mounted on a plastic support 74 (
Head Cleaning System
During printing it is known that a certain amount of ink remains deposited on the outer surface around the nozzles; it is necessary therefore to clean the head after a certain time interval, to avoid dirtying the medium that is being printed on.
For this purpose, on the ink jet printer, according to the invention, a cleaning system has been arranged that comes into action each time the head stops in correspondence with the service station S.
The system for cleaning the nozzles 45 of the printhead 22 (
The cleaning group P comprises a rotating disc 82, made of soft, elastic rubber, built with a plurality of radial expansions, or cleaning blades 83 (
The disc 82 is mounted on a bushing 85 by means of a cross-shape coupling element 86; the bushing 85 is in turn mounted on a pin 87 integral with a toothed wheel 88, by means of a known type of unidirectional clutch, consisting of a helical spring 89, inserted with play between the bushing 85 and the pin 87, pivotingly mounted on the support case 78. When the wheel 88 is rotated in a direction such as to cause an increase in the diameter of the spring 89, the bushing 85 and therefore the disc 82 are driven in rotation. Vice versa, the bushing 85 remains motionless when the toothed wheel 88 is rotated in the opposite direction, when the diameter of the spring decreases.
Also mounted on the case 78 is an ink collecting element 90 shaped as an open ring, arranged concentrically facing the disc 82, and provided with a knurled surface 92, placed in contact with one face of the disc 82 and suitable for removing from the disc 82 the ink accumulating during each head cleaning operation.
To prevent an excessive amount of ink accumulating on each of the blades 83, the disc 82 is rotated by 90° anti-clockwise (in
The feeding device 94 is actuated by means of the same alternating approach/retract movement of the tank 35 in the direction of the printhead 22, used also in the refilling phase, which will be described below.
Each time the head 22 reaches the service station S, the cleaning group P finds itself in a retracted position, and therefore the head 22 goes past it without any interference and stops in the service station S, as is shown in
At this point, the tank 35 is made advance until an arm 97 (
Subsequently the head 22 is moved a number of times back and forward in front of the cleaning group P so as to slide the cleaning blade 83 against the nozzles, to remove the ink deposited there. During this movement of the head 22, the arm 97 comes into contact with a front surface of the carriage 26 in order to keep the disc 82 at the right distance from the head 22, so that the edge 84 slides over the front surface 43 of the head 22 with the right amount of interference.
Subsequently the tank 35 is retracted; the elastic member 81 is released, thus re-establishing the original distance between the cleaning group P and the structure 68. During this relative motion between the group P and the structure 68, the rack 95 causes the toothed wheel 88 to turn idly, i.e. without transmitting motion to the cleaning disc 82, since the unidirectional clutch 89 is not active.
The blades 83 may also be of a number other than four, and it will be obvious generally that if the number of blades such as those designated with the numeral 83 is increased, functionality of the disc 82 will improve; however, it is considered that four expansions represents a good compromise between optimization of the disc 82 and overall dimensions of the cleaning group P.
Ink Refilling System
As anticipated earlier, to increase efficiency and autonomy of the printer, and to prevent sudden interruptions of printing, or more generally to lower the management costs, the cartridge 25 of the head 22 may be repeatedly refilled with ink from the main tank 35 each time it is motionless in the service station S and the detecting circuit CR detects a shortage of ink in the cartridge 25.
To satisfy these requirements, according to one aspect of this invention, refilling means 100 (
The refilling means 100 are mounted on the same autonomous structure 68 that bears the service station S, in a higher position than the latter. Said refilling means 100 consist of the capillary element 101 with high capillarity, protruding frontally from a protective cover 102, set in alignment with the hole 50 in the cartridge 25 (
The capillary element 101 comprises a cylinder made of a high capillarity, spongy material, housed in an appropriate seat 104 (
Alternatively the capillary element 101 may be replaced by a fibrous element, consisting of a bunch of parallel fibres packed inside the seat 104 during the assembly stage.
The seat 104 communicates with one end of a feeding duct 106, preferably made from a flexible, silicon tube 107, which is connected at the other end with the main tank 35 and more precisely with the outlet tube 66 (
As already anticipated above, the cartridge 25 is refilled with ink, when required by the detecting circuit CR, by placing the capillary element 101 in hydraulic contact with the spongy body 41.
For this purpose, according to another aspect of the invention, advancing means 112 (
The container 58 of the main tank 35 is in turn arranged in a rigid housing 57 (
The housing 57 is mounted slidingly on two pins 113 (
The advancing means 112 (
The slide 119 is provided with a laterally protruding thrust tab 122, which engages with a projection 124 protruding laterally from the housing 57 (
Accordingly the main tank 35 can move by the amount necessary to bring the refilling means 100 alongside the cartridge 25, stopped in the service station S, and insert the capillary element 101 through the hole 50 in the cartridge 25 until hydraulic contact is made with the sponge 41, in such a way as to set up a flow of ink from the tank 35 to the cartridge 25 through the capillary element 101.
At the end of each refilling operation, the motor is activated to move the slide 119 in the opposite direction, while the housing 57 is retracted due to the action of a recall spring not depicted in any of the drawings.
In order to greatly reduce the refilling time, the refilling means 100 comprise, according to the invention, an auxiliary ink feeding device 126, associated with the capillary element 101, for increasing the stream of ink transferred from the tank 35 to the cartridge 25.
The auxiliary feeding device 126 is arranged along the course of the feeding duct 106, downstream of the pouch 60, and is mounted on an auxiliary frame 128 of its own, suitable for being removably fixed by means of elastic catches 130 to the lower part 132 of the container 58, thus making a rear wall of the same container (
The auxiliary feeding device 126 consists of at least one peristaltic type pump 134 (
Operation of the peristaltic pump 134 is obvious: each roller 135 compresses the tube 107 and in its rolling movement gradually compresses successive zones of the section 138 of the tube 107, pushing the ink forward towards the capillary element 101; downstream of the roller 135, through the effect of its elasticity, the tube 107 regains its original shape, creating inside a depression which calls up more ink from the pouch 60.
The pulley 136 is provided with front toothing 140, protruding from the side opposite the rollers 135, and suitable for meshing frontally with a drive pulley set in motion by a motor, located in the bottom part of the frame 20.
Each time the detecting circuit CR detects a level of ink in the cartridge 25 less than a predefined value, the motor 116 is started for moving the slide 119 (
During the phase in which the tank 35 is brought alongside the cartridge 25, to ensure perfect alignment between the capillary element 101 and the hole 50 in the cartridge 25, the support structure 68 (
In the description above, reference was made to a preferred embodiment of the printer according to the invention, equipped for printing with a single ink, for instance black. Naturally the prefixed objects of the invention are not changed in the slightest in the case of a colour printer using the three basic colours, red, cyan and yellow.
In this case, the container 58 houses three pouches 60, each filled with an ink of one of the basic colours. The refilling means 100 use three capillary elements 101a, 101b, 101c, one for each colour, (
The three pumps 147, 148, 149 are mounted on the same auxiliary frame 128 shown in
According to an alternative embodiment of the main tank 35, as represented in
The container 258, built according to this alternative embodiment, comprises a single compartment 263 suitable for being filled with black ink, during construction.
The rear wall 260 is provided with an outlet pipe 66, not shown and similar to that previously described in relation to
On account of the stiffness of the walls 259, 260, 262 of the container 258, the pressure inside the container 258 would tend to drop significantly as the ink is withdrawn from the auxiliary feeding device 126, until feeding of the ink is interrupted.
To avoid this happening, according to this alternative embodiment, a device 265 (
The compensating device 265 comprises a small one-way valve 266 (
The valve 266 is preferably made of a round, concave disc shaped elastic element 267 (
The support 268 is also traversed by a number of communication holes 272 arranged on the inside of the edge 271 of the disk 267 and hence of the umbrella surface defined by the same disk 267.
Therefore, when the pressure inside the container 258 drops with respect to the external pressure, the outside air pressing against the convex surface of the disc 267, lifts the edges 271 and flows into the container itself, bring the pressure inside to a level close to that of the external pressure.
Similarly, in the case of a colour printer as well, the container 258 comprises three compartments 275, 276, 277 separated by rigid walls 278, 280 (
On the top wall 262 of the container 258 (
The three compensating devices 282, 283, 284 operate fully independently each from the other, depending on the pressure variation inside each compartment 275, 276, 277, generated by the different quantity of colour ink withdrawn by the auxiliary feeding device 126, for feeding the refilling device 100.
Management and Control of Refilling with Ink
Management and control of the phases of refilling the cartridge 25 with ink from the main tank 35 is handled by a known type of electronic unit, which also manage all the other functions of the printer according to this invention.
In particular the control unit receives the signals regarding the level of ink conditions inside the cartridge 25, from the detecting circuit CR (
Each time a new, original head is fitted in the printer, it undergoes an initialization procedure (
the FULL value, of cartridge full of ink;
the REF value, for normal reference for commencing refilling;
the LOW1 value, upper limit of the intervention window;
the LOW2 value, lower limit of the intervention window, corresponding to a cartridge empty situation.
The initialization procedure is conducted in the following steps (
step 150: a current pulse is applied to the sensor Rs;
step 151: the CR circuit detects a resistance value corresponding to the cartridge full condition (FULL);
step 152: the ambient temperature in a zone adjacent to the cartridge 25 is measured in one of the ways known in the sector art;
step 153: the temperature measured is compared with a reference value of 25° C.;
step 154: if the temperature measured is 25° C., the FULL value detected in step 151 is stored in the memory M;
step 155: if the temperature measured is other than 25° C., the FULL value detected in step 151 is calculated again on the basis of the current value of the temperature by means of a conversion algorithm stored in the memory M, and then stored;
step 156: calculation and storage of the REF value, between 40% and 60% of FULL;
step 157: calculation and storage of the LOW1 value, between 35% and 45% of REF;
step 158: calculation and storage of the LOW2 value, generally lower than REF;
step 159: storage of the values of other parameters used in management of refilling and also in operation of the head, such as: conductivity of the ink; manufacturing tolerances on position of the electrodes 48; tolerances of the components of the CR circuit; number of droplets possibly already ejected, for taking stock of non-new heads; etc.
After performing initialization of the head, the electronic management unit is capable of following the trend in consumption of ink by the head during printing. Management of ink refilling therefore takes place according to the following steps (
step 160: the management unit checks if a head is present in the carriage 26;
step 161: reading from the memory M on board the cartridge 25 of the FULL, REF, LOW1 and LOW2 values;
step 162: reading from the memory M of the number of droplets already ejected;
step 163: comparison of the number of droplets ejected with that relative to the head's life span;
step 164: if the head has completed its life, a head substitution message is output;
step 165: if the head can go on printing, the value of the ambient temperature in the vicinity of the head is read;
step 166: comparison of the temperature measured with the value of 25° C.;
step 167: if the temperature measured is other than 25° C., the values for FULL, REF, LOW1 and LOW2 are re-calculated;
step 168: if the temperature measured is 25° C., the sensor Sr is activated for obtaining the current value of the level of ink in the cartridge 25;
step 169: the current level value is compared with the calculated values LOW1 and LOW2;
step 170: if the level is lower than LOW1, the control unit actuates the motor 116 (
step 171: activation of the sensor Sr for detecting the new ink level;
step 172: comparison between the level detected and the value REF;
step 173: if the level detected is greater than REF, this means that the cartridge 25 has been filled for more than 50% of the FULL value, and therefore the control unit stops the pump 134 and commands retraction of the tank 35 and printing can continue;
step 174: if the level detected is lower than REF, a check is made to see if the current level is greater than the level previously detected at step 168;
step 175: if the comparison is passed, the procedure returns to step 170 for activation of a new refilling cycle; if subsequently the level is lower than REF, and no increase in the level was detected in step 174, then the main tank is empty, and so printing is resumed from step 173 in order to use up the ink remaining in the cartridge 25;
step 176: if X dots have been printed with X a value in the order of millions of dots, the number of droplets ejected is updated in step 177, and the process is repeated from step 163 to step 169, in which a level lower than LOW2 will surely be detected, so that in step 178 a message to substitute the main tank 35 is displayed.
It will therefore be clear that, according to the invention, with a single sensor Sr, placed on board of the cartridge 25 of the printhead 22, it is possible to detect both the filling condition of the cartridge 25, and that of the main tank 35.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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TO2002A000428 | May 2002 | IT | national |
This application is a divisional of co-pending U.S. application Ser. No. 10/515,217, filed on Nov. 22, 2004, which in turn is a U.S. National Phase Application under 35 U.S.C. § 371 claiming priority to International Application No. PCT/IT03/00297, filed on May 19, 2003, which was published under PCT Article 21(2) in English, and also claiming priority to Application No. TO2002A000428, filed in Italy on May 20, 2002. This application claims priority to each of the foregoing applications. In addition, the contents of each of the foregoing applications is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10515217 | Nov 2004 | US |
Child | 11819865 | Jun 2007 | US |