1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to electrophotographic printing devices and, more particularly, to drive systems for the fuser units of electrophotographic printing devices.
2. Description of the Related Art
In the electrophotographic (EP) imaging process used in printers, copiers and the like, a photosensitive member, such as a photoconductive drum or belt, is uniformly charged over an outer surface. An electrostatic latent image is formed by selectively exposing the uniformly charged surface of the photosensitive member. Toner particles are applied to the electrostatic latent image, and thereafter the toner image is transferred to the media intended to receive the final permanent image. The toner image is fixed to the media by the application of heat and pressure in a fuser.
A fuser is known to include a heated roll and a backup roll forming a fuser nip through which the media passes. At least one of the rolls is driven, along with a variety of infeed and outfeed rolls to transport the media to and from the nip. If two-sided printing is provided, a duplexing path to reverse the media also includes driven rolls to transport the media along the duplexing path. A fuser drive system drives the aforementioned rolls, perhaps also together with other fuser components.
Known designs for drive systems of fuser units in electrophotographic printing devices incorporate a portion of the fuser drive system in the machine separate from the fuser unit itself. The machine side of the fuser drive system is known to include a motor and a portion of a drive train, and includes a mounting plate, studs and at least one gear. It is also known to use a belt pulley drive system in a fuser unit drive system. It also is known to use the machine side motor to drive more than just the fuser unit components. For example, the motor may also drive components within the paper path or EP system. The remainder of the fuser drive system is included in the fuser unit, and includes at least one gear of the drive train that engages a gear on the machine side of the drive system.
In a known design, the motor that drives the fuser and other paper feed modules is located on a bracket mounted to the machine frame. A fuser drive gear on the machine side mates with an input gear located on the fuser upon insertion of the fuser unit. Each time the fuser unit is removed and installed, such as for servicing or replacement, the drive system is separated and re-engaged. This making and breaking of the drive train creates design challenges and potential problems such as sub-optimal gear center distance control, which can lead to premature gear wear and noise.
It is known to provide the fuser unit as a customer replaceable unit (CRU) or as a field replaceable unit (FRU) intended to be serviced or replaced by a field technician. With the drive system split between the machine side and the fuser unit side of the device, gear center distance can vary across the module boundaries. Gear life can be shortened and objectionable noise created if the mating gears on the machine side and the fuser unit side are not optimally positioned. Further, during the life of an electrophotographic printer, a fuser unit may be replaced several times. Since the motor and a portion of the drive train are not part of the fuser unit, old components of the drive system remain when the fuser unit is replaced. An old, partially worn gear on the machine side must mate with a new, non-worn gear on the fuser unit. Optimal gear engagement might not result, and increased noise and wear may occur immediately when the new fuser unit is installed.
What is needed in the art is an integrated drive train that is self-contained within the fuser unit, to simplify machine architecture and improve machine performance and reliability.
The present invention provides a drive motor and drive train mounted on and contained within the fuser unit. A swing arm is provided to engage and disengage the hot roll, facilitating bi-directional drive for duplexing.
The invention comprises, in one form thereof, a fuser unit for an EP printing device. The fuser unit has a unit frame, a hot roll mounted in the frame, and a backup roll mounted in the frame and disposed in nipped relationship with the hot roll. A fuser drive motor and a drive train are mounted in the frame and drivingly connected. The drive train has at least one gear for driving at least one of the hot roll and the backup roll.
The invention comprises, in another form thereof, a drive system for a fuser having a fuser unit frame and a hot roll mounted in the frame. The drive system has a motor mounted in the frame, and a drive train operatively connected to the motor. The drive train includes a plurality of individual gears each mounted to the frame and including a hot roll gear in the drive train for driving the hot roll.
In still another form thereof, the invention provides a method for operating a fuser of an EP printing device, with steps of providing a frame, a hot roll, a drive train and a drive motor as an integral unit; providing a hot roll gear as part of the drive train, operating the drive motor in a first direction when passing media past the hot roll; and operating the drive motor in an opposite direction for routing the media to a duplexing path.
An advantage of the present invention is providing improved gear center distance control for all gears in the fuser drive train, thereby minimizing tolerance variations between gear centers, improving gear life and reducing noise.
Another advantage is providing improved machine reliability by replacing the motor and all drive components each time the fuser unit is replaced.
A further advantage of the present invention is using the fuser motor to drive the machine output rolls in a reverse direction to feed media into a duplexing path, thereby eliminating the need for an additional duplexer drive motor.
A still further advantage of the present invention is disconnecting the fuser nip rolls from the drive system as the media is routed to a duplex path, thereby reducing the power needed from the motor, and enabling the motor to turn faster and reduce dead time from duplex routing.
Yet another advantage of the present invention is changing the direction of drive train rotation without disengaging the drive motor, providing a substantially instantaneous reversal.
Still another advantage of the present invention is reducing manufacturing cost by minimizing mounting hardware in the base machine frame.
The above-mentioned and other features and advantages of this invention, and the manner of attaining them, will become more apparent and the invention will be better understood by reference to the following description of an embodiment of the invention taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views. The exemplification set out herein illustrates one preferred embodiment of the invention, in one form, and such exemplification is not to be construed as limiting the scope of the invention in any manner.
Referring now to the drawings and particularly to
Fuser unit 10 includes a frame 12 consisting of a variety of substantially ridged members such as plates, bars and the like securely affixed to one another to form a substantially ridged supporting structure for the remaining components of fuser 10. Frame 12 is adapted for mounting in the printing device, and may be provided as a customer replaceable unit (CRU), or a field replaceable unit (FRU). While the features of the present invention also can be used in a fuser integrated directly into the machine frame, the invention has particular advantages for replaceable fuser units including those of the aforementioned CRU and FRU designs.
In general, fuser unit 10 includes a hot roll 14 heated in known manner, such by a lamp within roll 14. A backup roll 16 is disposed in nipped relationship to hot roll 14, and heat and pressure are applied to media passing through the nip formed between hot roll 14 and backup roll 16. Hot roll 14 and backup roll 16 are metal, such as aluminum, and have a cover of an elastomer, which can be a silicone rubber covered by a PFA sleeve. A media path defined by an entry guide member 18 directs media between hot roll 14 and backup roll 16. An exit path includes one or more exit rolls 20 from the fusing nip and output rolls 22 from fuser 10, at least some of which are driven. In the exemplary embodiment shown in the drawings, fuser unit 10 includes a sensor flag/diverter assembly 24 for a duplexing path indicated by arrow 26 to provide imaging on both sides of media processed through fuser unit 10. The present invention can also be used in printing devices not having duplexing features.
With reference now to
Drive train 44 includes a hot roll gear 46 connected to hot roll 14 for rotating hot roll 14, an exit drive gear 48 connected to driven exit roll 20 for driving exit roll 20, and an output drive gear 50 connected to driven output roll 22, for driving output roll 22. A variety of additional gears 52 in drive train 44 are provided for rotating other components of the printing device or as idling gears on studs 54 in fuser housing 12, for speed and rotational directional control and adjustment in drive train 44. Additional gears 52 can be of different gear types, as necessary, including both single and compound gears rotatably mounted on studs 54.
A swing arm assembly 56 is incorporated into drive system 40 and functions as a clutch to engage and disengage hot roll gear 46 from drive train 44, as will be described more fully hereinafter. Drive system 40, including drive motor 42, drive train 44 and swing arm assembly 56, is fully integrated into fuser unit 10, contained within fuser frame 12, so that installation and removal requires only making and breaking electrical connections to fuser unit 10 from the base machine, in addition to completing physical attachment of the fuser unit in the base machine.
Fuser motor 42 is a bi-directional DC motor with encoder feedback for velocity control. Motor 42 includes a pinion gear 58 on motor shaft 60, which rotates in a first direction for normal printing and in the opposite direction for duplex processing.
Advantageously, motor shaft 60 and all gears of drive train 44 are located positionally by a side plate 62 of frame 12, so that center distance between gears are easily established and well controlled. All gear stud, roll shaft and other locating holes can be punched in plate 62 at the same time from a single die to provide precisely located positions with respect to one another. Gear centers are located precisely with respect to each other, facilitating the use of fine pitched, plastic gears commonly used in printers and copiers. The potential for gear breakage, gear noise, premature wear of the gears and inconsistent performance are reduced.
Swing arm assembly 56 includes a bracket 64 rotatably connected about a pivot 66. A primary gear 68 of assembly 56 is rotatably mounted to plate 62 through pivot 66, and is continuously engaged in drive train 44, to be driven in both clockwise and counterclockwise directions. Primary gear 68 is drivingly engaged with a speed adjusting gear 70 that is rotatable relative to bracket 64 through a stud 72. A compound drive gear (not shown) inwardly of gear 70 on stud 72 can be engaged with and disengaged from hot roll gear 46 upon movement of bracket 64 about pivot 66. Internal friction within swing arm assembly 56, such as between bracket 64, gear 68, gear 70 and/or pivot 66 cause pendulum-like movement of bracket 64 about pivot 66, as indicated by arrow 74. In the normal printing mode, with motor 42 rotating clockwise, bracket 64 is rotated clockwise about pivot 66 and is positioned toward hot roll gear 46, which is engaged in drive train 44 for rotation of hot roll 14. During duplex operation, the rotational direction of motor 42 is reversed. As motor 42 begins rotating in a counterclockwise direction, the rotational direction of primary gear 68 is reversed, and the internal friction between the components of swing arm assembly 56 causes bracket 64 to rotate counterclockwise about pivot 66 and swing away from hot roll gear 46. Bracket 64 moves sufficiently to disengage hot roll gear 46 from drive train 44.
By disengaging hot roll gear 46 from drive train 44, neither hot roll 14 nor backup roll 16 is turned by fuser motor 42 during reverse direction rotation of fuser motor 42. The resultant reduction in load on motor 42 allows motor 42 to be rotated at higher velocity during duplex routing, without requiring a larger, more expensive motor. Higher velocity results in greater duplex efficiency due to returning media faster for second side imaging. The swing arm also allows hot roll 14 to be freewheeling for clearing paper jams in the process direction. Fuser exit drive gear 48 and output drive gear 50 are direct driven through a separate branch of drive train 44 from hot roll gear 46, are continuously connected and driven by motor 42, in both directions of motor rotation. This allows for substantially instantaneous direction changes in the output rolls, improving duplex efficiency compared to designs requiring engagement and disengagement of the output put rolls for direction reversal.
While this invention has been described as having a preferred design, the present invention can be further modified within the spirit and scope of this disclosure. This application is therefore intended to cover any variations, uses, or adaptations of the invention using its general principles. Further, this application is intended to cover such departures from the present disclosure as come within known or customary practice in the art to which this invention pertains and which fall within the limits of the appended claims.
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