Liquid container and printing apparatus to which the liquid container is mounted

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6554411
  • Patent Number
    6,554,411
  • Date Filed
    Friday, September 1, 2000
    25 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, April 29, 2003
    22 years ago
Abstract
A liquid container for retaining a liquid which is detachably attached onto a main body of a printing apparatus that conducts printing by attaching the liquid onto a print medium, the liquid container includes a convex connecting portion which communicates with the main body of the printing apparatus, and a wall formed around the connecting portion, wherein the connecting portion includes an elastic member, and a leading edge of the connecting portion projected from the wall.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




1. Field of the Invention




The present invention relates to a liquid container detachably replaceably attached to a main body of a printing apparatus for reserving a liquid (ink) used for printing in the printing apparatus and the printing apparatus onto which the liquid container is attachable, and more particularly to an ink jet printing apparatus using a large-capacity liquid container.




2. Related Background Art




Up to now, as printing apparatuses that print a print medium such as a paper, a cloth, a plastic sheet or an OHP sheet, there have been employed printing apparatuses each having a head mounted thereon, using various printing systems such as a wire dot system, a thermal printing system, a heat transfer system or an ink jet system. Among them, the printing apparatus using the ink jet system (ink jet printing apparatus) is employed as a printer which is output means of an information processing system, for example, an output terminal of a copying machine, a facsimile machine, an electronic typewriter, a word processor or a work station, or a handy printer or a portable printer equipped in a personal computer, a host computer, a disk apparatus or a video apparatus. Thus, the ink jet printing apparatus is made commodity of commercial basis.




The ink jet system is of the print system in which an ink droplet is flied from a fine discharge port defined in an ink jet head, and the ink droplet is attached onto a print medium, to thereby conduct a desired print. The ink jet head of the ink jet printing apparatus is equipped with an electromechanical converting element such as a piezo electric element which generates a pressure with application of an electric energy, means for generating a heat due to irradiation of an electromagnetic wave such as laser or an electrothermal converting element having a heating resistor to discharge the ink droplet by using the heat energy, or the like, as discharge energy generating means for generating energy for discharging an ink from the discharge port.




Recently, an improvement in computers and its software leads to the execution of a precise color image processing, and as its output terminal, a printing apparatus which can output a color image with high precision and high quality has been demanded. In the ink jet printing apparatus, an ink jet head which can discharge a plurality of liquid different in color is employed in order that the color image can be outputted, and also the density of the discharge port is heightened or the concentration of ink is changed so as to output the high-precision and high-quality image.




The above-described ink jet printing apparatus is equipped with a liquid supply container which reserves a liquid (ink) for printing and a waste liquid container which retains the ink that does not contribute to print and falls into disuse. As an example of the liquid supply container and the waste liquid container, an ink cartridge into which the liquid supply container and the waste liquid container are integrated and which is detachably replaceably attached onto a main body of the printing apparatus is shown in

FIGS. 73 and 74

.

FIG. 73

is an exploded perspective view showing the structure of the parts of the ink cartridge, and

FIG. 74

is a cross-sectional view of the ink cartridge shown in FIG.


73


.




As shown in

FIGS. 73 and 74

, the ink cartridge has an ink reservoir chamber formed by an ink container


541


and a cap


542


joined to an opening portion of the ink container


541


, and a waste ink reservoir chamber formed by the waste ink container


543


and a cap


545


joined to the waste ink container


543


. The ink container


541


and the waste ink container


543


are integrally engaged with each other. The waste ink container


543


includes an absorber


544


that absorbs and retains a recovery ink therein. The ink container


541


and the cap


542


, and the waste ink container


543


and the cap


545


are joined to each other by, for example, ultrasonic welding, respectively.




Two cylindrical housings


550


formed so as to surround a communication port are disposed on a face of the cap


542


of the ink container


541


which is in contact with the exterior, and a dome-shaped elastic member


556


is fitted to each opening portion of the cylindrical housings


550


by a crest member


547


attached to the housing


550


so as to cover the housing


550


. Thus, each of connecting portions of the ink container


541


with the main body of the apparatus for ink communication, etc., is formed by the communication port, the housing


550


, the elastic member


556


and the crest member


547


. Likewise, the waste ink container


543


has a connecting portion formed on a face connected to the face where the connecting portion of the ink container


541


is formed in a state where the ink container


541


and the waste ink container


543


are engaged with each other. A wall


553


is formed around those plural connecting portions on a face where the connecting portion of the ink cartridge is formed.




In the printing apparatus that enables color print, since plural kinds of inks are employed, in order to prevent an ink cartridge that reserves an ink different in kind from an ink reserved in an ink cartridge to be intentionally equipped in the apparatus from being erroneously inserted into a connecting port at the time of replacing the ink cartridge by a fresh cartridge, mis-insertion preventing grooves


551


having a configuration different for each of the ink cartridges that reserves various kinds of inks are provided in each of the ink cartridges. In other words, the main body of the printing apparatus is equipped with rails corresponding to the mis-insertion preventing grooves


551


. Therefore, even if the ink cartridge different from the ink cartridge to be intentionally connected is going to be inserted thereinto, the ink cartridge cannot be inserted.




The wall


553


is so adapted as to protect the connecting portions and the mis-insertion preventing grooves


551


so that an operator's hand is prevented from entering the connecting portions and the mis-insertion preventing grooves


551


, and the height of the wall


553


is normally equal to the height of the connecting portions or higher than the connecting portions.




The ink jet printing apparatus improves in the preservativity and the water resistance of a printing material with remarkable improvements of the ink, the head, etc., and also enhances its reliability such that the printing speed is increased, etc. For that reason, up to now, the ink jet printing apparatus market is mainly the personal user market for the purpose of utilization in a home, a small-scaled office, etc. However, now, the ink jet printing apparatus market is also advancing into a business user market for the purpose of utilization in a large-scaled office.




As compared with the personal user, the business user increases the printing frequency and the number of print sheets and is also highly conscious of the running costs. Under the circumstances, in order that the replacing frequency of the ink cartridges is reduced and the rate of the container costs to the ink costs is reduced to decrease the running costs in response to the user's demands, a large-capacity ink cartridge is increasingly employed.




In the small-capacity ink cartridge, there does not arise any problem even if the user drops down the ink cartridge in error to apply an impact to the wall


553


. In the large-capacity ink cartridge, because an increased capacity causes an increase in weight, an impact becomes large when the ink cartridge drops down, resulting in the large possibility that the wall


553


is destroyed by the impact such as dropping.




The wall


553


is provided with a convex portion matched with a guide groove of the main body of the printing apparatus in order to surely connect the ink cartridge to the connecting port of the main body of the printing apparatus when the ink cartridge is inserted into the main body of the printing apparatus. Also, the mechanical key mechanism such as the above-mentioned mis-insertion preventing grooves


551


is formed in the wall


553


portion. Since the convex portion and the mechanical key mechanism come in contact with the main body of the printing apparatus to execute their functions as described above, there are many cases in which they are located on the outer portion of the ink cartridge. Therefore, when the ink cartridge drops down, the impact is directly applied to the convex portion and the mechanical key mechanism, and a breakage, deformation or the like may occur in the convex portion and the mechanical key mechanism. Some precision is required for the convex portion and the mechanical key mechanism in order to achieve their functions, and if the breakage or deformation occurs in the convex portion and mechanical key mechanism, there is the possibility that their functions are lost. In this case, there may be a case in which the ink cartridge cannot be used although any problem does not exist at all as the function for retaining the ink.




In addition, recently, in order to improve the reliability and the operability of the main body of the printing apparatus with an appropriate process in accordance with the kind of ink and the amount of ink reserved in the ink cartridge, there is a case where a storage medium in which various information, setting parameters and so on are recorded is disposed in the ink cartridge. The storage medium is also frequently fitted onto the wall


553


portion. The storage medium is formed of a member manufactured through a semiconductor process, and generally low in resistance to an impact. Upon application of the impact caused by dropping, the operating failure may occur in the storage medium, and the function of the storage medium is completely lost if a stronger impact is applied to the storage medium. Similarly, in this case, there is a fear that the ink cartridge cannot be used although a sufficient ink retaining function is effective.




Up to now, there has been applied a method of preventing the occurrence of the breakage and deformation of the convex portion and the mechanical key mechanism, the operating failure of the storage medium, etc., by provision of a packaging material made of a shock absorbing material which covers the entire ink cartridge. However, the provision of the shock absorbing member causes the costs of the ink cartridge to be raised.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The present invention has been made under the above circumstances, and therefore an object of the present invention is to provide a liquid container which is high in resistance to an impact occurring when the liquid container drops down in error and a printing apparatus to which the liquid container is attachable without any increase in the manufacturing costs.




In order to achieve the above object, according to the present invention, there is provided a liquid container for retaining a liquid, which is detachably attached onto a main body of a printing apparatus that conducts printing by attaching the liquid onto a print medium, the liquid container comprising:




a convex connecting portion which communicates with the main body of the printing apparatus; and




a wall formed around the connecting portion;




wherein the connecting portion includes an elastic member, and a leading edge of the connecting portion is projected from the wall.




According to the above structure, since the largest impact caused by a first contact of the liquid container with a floor when the liquid container drops down is liable to be applied to the connecting portion projected from the wall, the wall can be suppressed from being deformed or damaged by application of a large impact to the wall. In addition, since the connecting portion has the elastic member, the impact can be absorbed by the elastic deformation of the elastic member.




When the connecting portion includes a hole defined in the liquid container, a housing formed so as to surround the hole, an elastic member which is disposed within an opening portion of the housing and shuts the hole, and a crest member which is disposed so as to cover the housing and fixedly presses the elastic member within the opening portion, the impact caused by dropping is transmitted to the elastic member through the crest member and can be absorbed by the elastic deformation of the elastic member.




When the housing is in the form of a cylinder and the elastic member is in the form of a dome a diameter of which is slightly larger than an inner diameter of the housing, a force that contracts in a radial direction is exerted on the elastic member from the housing in a state where the elastic member is fixedly pressed within the housing by the crest member. With this structure, in the case where the liquid container is attached to the main body of the printing apparatus, when a needle for communication penetrates the center portion of the elastic member to open a hole, a liquid can be prevented from being leaked from a clearance between the hole and the needle. Also, even if the liquid container is removed from the main body of the printing apparatus, since the hole cut by the needle is shut by the force exerted on the elastic member from the housing, the liquid can be prevented from being leaked.




When the elastic member and the crest member are integrally molded by a bicolor mold, the number of structural members is reduced, thereby being capable of reducing the manufacturing costs.




In addition, when a concave portion or a concave portion is defined in the main body of the printing apparatus, and another convex portion or another convex portion which is engaged with (fit to) the concave portion or the convex portion in the printing apparatus main body and then slid in an engaged state so that the liquid container can be inserted into the printing apparatus main body are formed on the wall of the liquid container, in the case where the liquid container is installed in the printing apparatus main body, the liquid container can be surely guided to a position to be installed. In this situation, since the liquid container of the present invention makes it difficult to exert the impact on the wall portion when the liquid container drops down in error as described above, it is difficult that the concave portion or the convex portion defined in the wall is deformed or damaged.




Also, when a concave portion or a convex portion a pattern of which is different for each of the kinds of the liquid containers to be attached is defined in the printing apparatus main body, and another concave portion or another convex portion which is engaged with the concave portion or the convex portion in the printing apparatus main body and a pattern of which is different for each of the kinds of the liquid containers is defined in the wall of the liquid container, even if one liquid container different from another liquid container to be intentionally connected is going to be inserted into the printing apparatus main body, the one liquid container cannot be inserted into the main body, thereby being capable of preventing the mis-attaching of the liquid container. In this situation, since the liquid container of the present invention makes it difficult to exert the impact on the wall portion when the liquid container drops down in error as described above, it is difficult that the concave portion or the convex portion defined in the wall is deformed or damaged.




Further, when a storage medium and connecting means for electrically connecting the storage medium and the main body are disposed on the wall of the liquid container, and means for reading stored information in the storage medium and printing apparatus operation control means the operating contents of which are changed on the basis of the stored information are disposed in the printing apparatus main body, the storage medium is allowed to store the monitor information, the control information, the identification information, the liquid amount information or the manufacturer's information of the liquid container therein. On the basis of the contents of those information, it is possible that an alarm signal is produced, the stored information is indicated or the printing operation is stopped, thereby being capable of improving the reliability of the operation of the printing apparatus. In addition, when means for changing the stored information in the storage medium is disposed in the printing apparatus main body, the contents of the stored information in the storage medium are appropriately corrected, thereby being capable of enhancing the reliability of the stored information. In this situation, since the liquid container of the present invention makes it difficult to exert the impact on the wall portion when the liquid container drops down in error as described above, it is difficult that the storage medium disposed on the wall is damaged and also that the operating failure of the storage medium occurs due to the impact.




Still further, when a convex portion or a concave portion is defined on a side surface of the connecting portion of the liquid container, and a concave portion or a convex portion which is engaged with the convex portion and the concave portion defined on the side surface of the connecting portion is formed on the printing apparatus main body, in the case where the liquid container is installed in the printing apparatus main body, the connecting portion of the liquid container can be surely guided to a position to be installed.




Yet still further, when the connecting portion is formed in such a manner that the height of the connecting portion from the face on which the connecting portion of the liquid container is disposed is changed for each of the kinds of the liquid containers, and a connecting base is formed in such a manner that the height of the connecting base of the printing apparatus which is connected to the connecting portion is changed for each of the kinds of the liquid containers to be attached in correspondence with the height of the connecting portion, even if one liquid container different from another liquid container to be intentionally connected is going to be inserted into the printing apparatus main body, the one liquid container cannot be inserted into the main body, thereby being capable of preventing the mis-attaching of the liquid container.




Yet still further, when the connecting portion is formed in such a manner that the height of the leading edge of the connecting portion of the liquid container which is projected from the wall is changed for each of the kinds of the liquid containers, and the connecting base is formed in such a manner that the height of the connecting base of the printing apparatus which is connected to the connecting portion is changed for each of the kinds of the liquid containers to be attached in correspondence with the height of the above leading edge of the connecting portion, even if one liquid container different from another liquid container to be intentionally connected is going to be inserted into the printing apparatus main body, the one liquid container cannot be inserted into the main body, thereby being capable of preventing the mis-attaching of the liquid container.




The present invention is applicable to a liquid container that supplies a liquid to the printing apparatus main body, and a liquid container that retains the liquid that does not contribute to print, falls into disuse and is discharged from the printing apparatus main body.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




These and other objects, features and advantages of this invention will become more fully apparent from the following detailed description taken with the accompanying drawings in which:





FIG. 1

is a perspective view showing the main portion of a printing apparatus in accordance with the present invention;





FIG. 2

is a perspective view showing the main portion of the printing apparatus in accordance with the present invention, viewed from a direction different from that in

FIG. 1

;





FIG. 3

is a cross-sectional view showing a main tank non-receiving state of a tank receiving portion;





FIG. 4

is a cross-sectional view showing a main tank receivable state of the tank receiving portion shown in

FIG. 3

;





FIG. 5

is an exploded diagram showing a main tank;





FIG. 6

is a perspective view showing a cartridge unit;





FIG. 7

is a perspective view showing the cartridge unit viewed from a direction different from that in

FIG. 6

;





FIG. 8

is a front view showing a coupling state of a CR frame, a CR gap plate, etc.;





FIG. 9

is an enlarged cross-sectional view showing a coupling state of the CR frame, the CR gap plate, etc.;





FIG. 10

is a plan view showing a moving range of the cartridge;





FIG. 11

is a side view showing the moving mechanism of the cartridge;





FIG. 12

is an enlarged side view showing a fixing state of the cartridge and a CR belt;





FIG. 13

is an enlarged front view showing a fixing state of the cartridge and the CR belt;





FIG. 14

is a flowchart showing the moving operation of the cartridge;





FIG. 15

is a front view showing a connecting state of the cartridge, a CR connector, etc.;





FIG. 16

is a perspective view showing a liquid jet head unit non-attaching state of the cartridge;





FIG. 17

is a bottom view showing the cartridge;





FIG. 18

is a front view showing the cartridge;





FIG. 19

is a perspective view showing the cartridge viewed from the upper;





FIG. 20

is a perspective view showing the liquid jet head unit;





FIG. 21

is a front view showing a CR needle attaching portion;





FIG. 22

is a plan view showing the CR needle attaching portion;





FIG. 23

is a side view showing a procedure of attaching the liquid jet head onto the cartridge;





FIG. 24

is a side view showing a procedure of attaching the liquid jet head onto the cartridge;





FIG. 25

is a side view showing a procedure of attaching the liquid jet head onto the cartridge;





FIG. 26

is a side view showing a procedure of attaching the liquid jet head onto the cartridge;





FIG. 27

is a perspective view showing a recovery system unit;





FIG. 28

is a schematic view showing a driving system of the recovery system unit;





FIG. 29

is a diagram showing a relationship between a liquid path and a valve in the recovery system unit;





FIG. 30

is a schematic view showing a negative pressure generating state of a tube pump;





FIG. 31

is a schematic view showing the negative pressure generating state of the tube pump;





FIG. 32

is a schematic view showing the operation of an auxiliary discharge valve;





FIG. 33

is a schematic view showing the operation of a suction valve;





FIG. 34

is a schematic view showing the operation of an atmosphere communication valve;





FIG. 35

is a cross-sectional view showing a cap;





FIG. 36

is a schematic view showing a cap open state;





FIG. 37

is a schematic view showing a cap close state;





FIG. 38

is a schematic view showing a non-wiping state of wiping means;





FIG. 39

is a schematic view showing a wiping state of wiping means;





FIG. 40

is a schematic view showing a structure in which a waste ink is absorbed from a cleaner blade;





FIG. 41

is a schematic view showing a structure in which the waste ink is absorbed from the cleaner blade;





FIG. 42

is a timing chart showing the operation of the respective members which are interlocked with a cam;





FIG. 43

is a flowchart showing a printing process;





FIG. 44

is a flowchart showing an auxiliary discharging process;





FIG. 45

is a flowchart showing a wiping process;





FIG. 46

is a flowchart showing an auxiliary discharge port dummy sucking process;





FIG. 47

is a flowchart showing a suction recovery process;





FIG. 48

is a perspective view showing a liquid jet head unit;





FIG. 49

is a perspective view showing the liquid jet head unit;





FIG. 50

is a cross-sectional view showing the liquid jet head unit;





FIG. 51

is a block diagram showing an ink supply system flow path used in the printing apparatus in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 52

is a block diagram showing a valve switch mechanism in the ink supply system used in the printing apparatus in accordance with the embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 53

is a cross-sectional view showing the structure of a sub-tank in the ink supply system used in the printing apparatus in accordance with the embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 54

is a perspective view showing the structure of the sub-tank in the ink supply system used in the printing apparatus in accordance with the embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 55

is an enlarged view showing a head set plate;





FIG. 56

is a plan view showing a rib portion of the CR connector;





FIGS. 57A and 57B

are perspective views showing a rotating direction adjusting mechanism of the liquid jet head;





FIG. 58

is a diagram for explanation of the operation of attaching/detaching the head with respect to the cartridge;





FIG. 59

is a diagram for explanation of the operation of attaching/detaching the head with respect to the cartridge;





FIG. 60

is a diagram for explanation of the operation of attaching/detaching the head with respect to the cartridge;





FIG. 61

is a diagram for explanation of the operation of attaching/detaching the head with respect to the cartridge;





FIG. 62

is a cross-sectional view showing the cartridge in a state where the head is attached to the cartridge;





FIG. 63

is a perspective view showing the liquid jet head unit in accordance with the embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 64

is a perspective view showing the liquid jet head unit shown in

FIG. 63

, viewed from another direction;





FIG. 65

is a longitudinally cross-sectional view showing the liquid jet head unit shown in

FIG. 63

;





FIG. 66

is a perspective view showing the liquid jet head unit shown in

FIG. 63

, in a state where parts of a chip tank and a second common liquid chamber are broken;





FIG. 67

is an enlarged cross-sectional view showing a connecting portion of the chip tank and the second common liquid chamber in the liquid jet head unit shown in

FIG. 63

,





FIG. 68

is a perspective view showing a head chip in the liquid jet head unit shown in

FIG. 63

;





FIG. 69

is a cross-sectional view showing the head chip in the liquid jet head unit shown in

FIG. 63

;





FIGS. 70A

,


70


B and


70


C are cross-sectional views gradually showing a flow of bubbles in a print liquid supply path of the chip tank, respectively;





FIG. 71

is a cross-sectional view showing an ink cartridge in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 72

is an enlarged view showing the periphery of a connecting portion of the ink cartridge shown in

FIG. 71

;





FIG. 73

is an exploded perspective view showing a conventional example of the ink tank;





FIG. 74

is a cross-sectional view showing the ink tank shown in

FIG. 73

;





FIGS. 75A and 75B

are schematic views showing an ink cartridge in accordance with another embodiment of the present invention, respectively;





FIGS. 76A and 76B

are enlarged views showing a crest member of the ink cartridge shown in

FIGS. 75A and 75B

, respectively; and





FIG. 77

is a block diagram showing an appearance of the connection of a storage medium of the ink tank shown in

FIG. 71 and a

main body of the printing apparatus.











DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS




Hereinafter, a description will be given in more detail of preferred embodiments of the present invention with reference to the accompanying drawings.




(Entire Structure)




First, a printing apparatus to which the structure of the present invention is applied will be described. The printing apparatus has a plurality of print positions so fixed as to correspond to two kinds of printing medium such as an envelope and a continuous sheet which can be appropriately cut, and continuously prints a given print pattern. The printing apparatus is detachably attached on a printing machine main body.




The printing apparatus includes a liquid jet head unit


401


that conducts print by discharging an ink, a cartridge unit that moves the liquid jet head unit


401


to the print positions and a standby position, an ink supply system unit


10


for supplying the ink to the liquid jet head unit


401


and a main tank


501


detachably attached onto the ink supply system unit


10


. The printing apparatus also includes a recovery system unit


300


for recovering a trouble such as a discharge failure of the liquid jet head unit


401


, a frame unit


70


that receives the above respective units, a control board


80


that conducts the electric control of the print and a power supply unit


90


.




Hereinafter, the detailed structure of the printing apparatus will be described for each of the above-described units.




(Frame Unit)




First, the frame unit


70


will be described with reference to

FIGS. 1 and 2

.




A bottom plate


56


is formed of a sheet metal bent in a substantially L-shape, and a plurality of right and left parallel bump portions (not shown) for holding a distance constant are disposed on the bottom portion. Positioning protrusions


56


A and


56


B are projected from both ends of the bottom portion, and a plurality of threading portions are defined on both ends of the bottom portion. A left side plate


54


and a right side plate


55


have positioning holes into which positioning protrusions


56


A and


56


B are inserted. Threading portions of the bottom plate


56


are screwed into corresponding tapped holes-up to the bump portions of the bottom plate


56


in a state where the positioning protrusions


56


A and


56


B are inserted into the positioning holes, to thereby assemble the left and right side plates


54


and


55


in parallel together with the bottom plate


56


as a center stay. A front surface portion


56


C that erects substantially in the form of L and a rear plate


53


positioned opposite to the front surface portion


56


C are screwed to each other, to thereby form an outer shell of the box-shaped printing apparatus which is opened upward.




One front cylindrical leg and two rear cylindrical legs, that is, three cylindrical legs in total are attached onto the bottom portion of the bottom plate


56


by caulking. Those legs are inserted into screw protrusions (not shown) of the printing machine main body, thereby being capable of fixedly screwing the bottom plate


56


to the printing machine main body. In addition, a slender hole (not shown) is defined in the bottom portion and associated with the front leg


60


A to position the bottom plate


56


with respect to the printing machine main body.




The printing apparatus has two spaces through which two kinds of printing medium are conveyed. One of those spaces are structured as follows: An L-angle resist plate


57


is fixedly screwed so as to extend over the left and right side plates


54


and


55


above the substantially L-shaped front surface portion (rising portion)


56


C. The envelope which is a printing medium of the printing machine is interposed between an upper surface of an envelope conveying belt of the printing machine main body and a lower surface of the resist plate


57


and conveyed from the left side toward the right side in

FIG. 1

along an inner bending portion of the resist plate


57


.




The other space is structured as follows: In

FIG. 2

, a position which connects a recess


54


A of the center portion of the left side plate


54


and a rectangular window


55


A of the right side plate


55


is a position at which a conduit that forms a conveying space of the continuous sheet is formed. Although being not shown, the conduit is located at a container of the continuous sheets and at a leading edge of the continuous sheet conveying unit on which a conveyance driving system is mounted. A positioning dowel formed at the leading edge of the conduit is inserted into a positioning hole


55


B of the right side plate


55


, to thereby decide the positions of the printing apparatus and the continuous sheet conveying unit, and the conduit is screwed to the left side plate


54


, to thereby integrate the printing apparatus with the continuous sheet conveying unit.




(CR Frame and Cartridge Unit)




A CR frame


201


is fixedly erected from the bottom portion of the bottom plate


56


in the vicinity of the middle portion between the left and right side plates


54


and


55


. Inserting holes of the CR frame


201


are defined at regular distances at the dump portions for assembling the left and right side plates


54


and


55


in parallel, and a groove


53


B that regulates the CR frame


201


in a vertical direction is formed at the upper portion of the rear plate


53


and above the substantially L-shaped front surface portion (rising portion)


56


C of the bottom plate


56


. The groove


53


B allows the CR frame


201


to erect from the bottom portion of the bottom plate


56


. The indication of CR in the component names means that those components pertain to the cartridge.




A carriage


200


on which the liquid jet head unit


401


for conducting print is mounted is installed downstream side of the printing medium conveying direction at the right side of the CR frame


201


and is movable between the above-described conveying spaces of two systems.




(Ink Supply System Unit)




As shown in

FIG. 1

, an ink supply system unit


10


for supplying the ink to the liquid jet head unit


401


, which receives a plurality of large-capacity main tanks


501


, is disposed upstream side of the printing medium conveying direction at the left side of the CR frame


201


. The ink supply system unit


10


is made up of a tank receiving portion


11


which receives the plurality of main tanks


501


and has a function of deriving the ink from the main tanks


501


to the exterior, and a sub-tank unit


12


for supplying the derived ink to the liquid jet head unit


401


. The detailed structure will be described later.




(Recovery System Unit)




As shown in

FIG. 1

, a recovery system unit


300


for recovering the discharge trouble of the liquid jet heat unit


401


is located between the above-described two conveying spaces downstream side of the printing medium conveying direction at the right side of the CR frame


201


. The recovery system unit


300


is so designed as to forcibly discharge the ink from the liquid jet head unit


401


in order to recover the discharge trouble, and a waste ink consumed at this time is expeled to a waste ink reservoir within the printing machine main body from a hole formed on a lower portion of the recovery system unit


10


which is opened toward the bottom plate


56


.




(Control Board and Power Supply Unit)




A control board


80


that controls the printing operation and the system of the printing apparatus is fixed onto a back surface of the outer rear plate


53


of the box-shaped frame unit


70


. Although being not shown, the control board


80


is covered with a cover in a state where a connecting connector that receives a signal from the printing machine main body is exposed from the frame unit. The cover includes a cable for transmitting a control signal of the control board


80


to the liquid jet head unit


401


within the carriage


200


, and an opening for connection to the carriage


200


and the control board


80


.




The power supply unit


90


is fixed onto the rear plate


53


inside of the frame unit


70


on the opposite side of the control board


80


. A power supply receptacle that receives an external power supply is installed in a rectangular hole opened in the left side plate


54


and connected from the external of the frame unit. The power supply unit


90


is so wired as to supply a power supply to the control board


80


and a board on the carriage


200


.




(Tank Receiving Portion)




Subsequently, the tank receiving portion


11


will be described with reference to

FIGS. 3

to


5


. The tank holder


59


is a frame for receiving and holding the main tanks


501


and has an inserting port from which the main tanks


501


are inserted opened upward. One side surface of the tank receiving portion


11


is fixedly screwed to the left side plate


54


in a state where the tank receiving portion


11


is U-shaped, and one side surface of the tank receiving portion


11


is in contact with the bottom plate


56


. A tank slot


27


is inserted into the upper opening portion of the tank receiving portion


11


and shaped such that the opening area of the tank slot


27


is large at the inserting port of the main tank


501


and narrower toward the receiving portion so as to approach to the cross section of each of the main tanks


501


. Positioning rails


29


for positioning the main tanks


501


and tank guides (not shown) are disposed below the tank slot


27


so as to nip the plurality of main tanks


501


therebetween in an opposed state. A rib


524


(see

FIG. 5

) formed on one shorter side of the inserting cross-section of each of the main tanks


501


and extending along the inserting direction is inserted into the groove of the positioning rail


29


, to thereby position one side of each of the main tanks


501


. Other sides are positioned so as to nip the shorter sides therebetween to decide the inserting position.




A needle base


51


constitutes a receiving bottom


51


A of each of the main tanks


501


, and hollow needles


52


which are ink deriving ports are fixed onto the receiving bottom


51


A so as to be directed vertically upward. Each of the hollow needles


52


is a metal tube having a sharp tip and a side with holes. The hollow needles


52


are fixed by an ink detection plate (not shown) in a state where the half of the straight portion of the hollow needle


52


is embedded in the ink detection plate, and two hollow needles


52


are disposed for one of the main tanks


501


.




Although will be described later, communicating ports are formed in the bottom portion of each of the main tanks


501


at positions which can be opposed to the hollow needles


52


, and the communicating ports are shut by rubber stopcocks


513


. At the time of installing each of the main tanks


501


, when the bottom portion of the main tank


501


reaches the receiving bottom


51


A, each of the hollow needles


52


penetrates the rubber stopcocks


513


that shuts the communicating port of the main tank


501


, as a result of which the ink within the main tank


501


can be derived to the external through the hollow needle


52


(ink supply system unit which will be described later). One set of communicating port and hollow needle


52


serves as an ink deriving port, and the other set of communicating port and hollow needle


52


forms a flow path that returns an air to the main tank


501


and functions to smooth the air-liquid exchange in the main tank


501


. One end of the above-described ink detection plate is electrically connected to the control board


80


by a conductor. A current value between those two hollow needles


52


the tip of which is exposed to the interior of the main tank


501


is measured through the ink detection plate, thereby being capable of detecting the presence/absence of the ink within the main tank


501


.




Danger preventing doors


41


of the same number as that of the main tanks


501


for protecting an operator from being injured by the tip portions of the hollow needles


52


are disposed in the vicinity of the center of the tank receiving portion


11


.




First, a state in which each of the main tanks


501


is not installed in the tank receiving portion


11


will be described with reference to FIG.


3


.




Each of the danger preventing doors


41


has a rotating center


41


A on the side portion of the tank receiving portion


11


and is urged toward a direction of the tank inserting port by a torsion coil spring


61


. Then, since the rotation caused by the urging force is stopped by a convex portion


29


A of each of the positioning rails


29


, one end of the rotating range of the danger preventing doors


41


is regulated at a posture where its posture is substantially in a horizontal state. Stoppers


44


and


45


for regulating the open/close of the danger preventing doors


41


are disposed below the free ends


41


B of the danger preventing doors


41


. The stoppers


44


and


45


are symmetrical with each other and rotatably disposed. The rotating centers of those stoppers


44


and


45


are positioned below a portion of a clearance between two main tanks


501


when those main tanks


501


are installed in the printing apparatus. The stoppers


44


and


45


are fixed by inserting supporting point arms into two sides of the tank holder


59


and sloped with an angle


44


C which is slightly inclined with respect to a right angle so that the upper one end is positioned engageably with the free end within the rotating radius of the danger protecting door


41


.




End portions


44


A and


45


A of the stoppers


44


and


45


at the positioning rail side enter the groove portions of the rails to keep their posture in a state where the main tanks


501


are not installed in the printing apparatus. In this state, even if the danger preventing doors


41


are pushed down, the rotation of the free end of the danger preventing doors


41


is stopped by the upper portions of the stoppers


44


and


45


, and the danger preventing doors


41


is opened.




When the insertion of each of the main tanks


501


starts, the rib of the main tank


501


pushes away the end portions


44


A and


45


A of the stoppers


44


and


45


that enter the positioning rails. As shown in

FIG. 4

, the inclinations of the stoppers


44


and


45


become substantially right angle by pushing away the stoppers


44


and


45


, as a result of which, because the stoppers


44


and


45


go out of the rotating radius of the free end of the danger protecting door


41


, the door


41


becomes rotatable downward. Accordingly, the main tank


501


is further inserted toward the receiving bottom without being obstructed by the danger protecting door


41


.




[Sub-tank Unit]




(Outline of Ink Supply System Flow Path)




Subsequently, a flow path through which the ink is supplied from the main tanks


501


to the liquid jet head unit


401


and its structure will be described with reference to

FIGS. 51

to


54


.




In order to give a negative pressure caused by a water head difference to the ink within the liquid jet head unit


401


so that the meniscus on a nozzle surface


401




a


of the liquid jet (ejection) head unit


401


is prevented from being damaged by pressurization, a sub-tank unit


12


is located at a position lower in level than the nozzle surface


401




a


in a flow path extending between each of the main tanks


501


and the liquid jet head unit


401


(refer to FIG.


51


). Also, pressure generating means


5


(


73


) for giving a negative pressure to a common liquid chamber of the liquid jet head unit


401


is connected to the liquid jet head unit


401


. The sub-tank unit


12


, the liquid jet head unit


401


and the pressure generating means


5


are coupled to each other through rubber joints and tubes.




As shown in

FIG. 52

, the sub-tank unit


12


includes a sub-tank base


37


and a sub-tank cover


38


which form a plurality of cells. The sub-tank unit


12


is roughly made up of a first cell


71


(hereinafter referred to as “water head difference generating chamber”) for generating a water head difference, a second cell


72


(hereinafter referred to as “full (fill-up) detection chamber”) which is provided with an electrode for detecting that the liquid jet head unit


401


is full of the ink, pressure generating means


73


for generating a suction negative pressure, and five kinds of valves openably and closeably disposed on the ink entrance ports of the respective cells. The flow path is changed by the combination of the open/close states of the respective valves, to thereby realize the various modes pertaining to the ink supply.




In other words, the ink derived from the main tank


501


by the first hollow needle


52


A is temporarily reserved in the water head difference generating cell


71


through a supply valve


81


by a needle joint


36


which is connected to each of the needle (refer to

FIG. 3

) and by a first supply tube


76


. A print valve


82


is disposed on the ink deriving port of the water head difference generating chamber


71


, and the flow path is directed vertically upward through the print tube


77


, and an ink flow direction is changed to a carriage moving direction at a joint portion (not shown) where a plurality of rubber joints-L


18


having an L-shaped flow path are disposed at substantially the same level as that of the carriage


200


. Further, the flow path is connected to a tube extending from the carriage


200


, to thereby supply the ink to the liquid jet head unit


401


(ink circulation at the carriage


200


and the liquid jet head unit


401


will be described later).




The tube coupled to the upper portion of the liquid jet head unit


401


for extracting a bubble pool from the common liquid chamber of the liquid jet head unit


401


is returned to the joint portion (not shown) again and connected to the pressure generating means


73


from the suction tube


78


directed vertically downward through the rubber joint-L.




The pressure generating means


73


generates a negative pressure by driving a pump and produces a negative pressure in the common liquid chamber of the liquid jet head unit


401


, to thereby draw out the ink in the main tank


501


at the most upstream side of the ink flow path and supply the ink to the liquid jet head unit


401


. The structure will be described later.




The flow path back side (discharge (expel) side) of the pressure generating means


73


is coupled to the full detection chamber


72


. If the above coupling port is a flow-in port of the full detection chamber


72


, there are three discharge ports. A first discharge port is a first discharge port connected to the water head difference generating chamber


71


through a communication valve


83


, a second discharge port is an atmosphere valve


84


that conducts atmosphere release, and the communication valve


83


and the atmosphere valve


84


are released to generate a water head difference between the nozzle surface of the liquid jet head unit


401


and the liquid surface of the sub-tank unit


12


. A third discharge port is an air-liquid exchange valve


85


and its extension reaches the main tank


501


through the second hollow needle


52


B in the rear of a circulation tube


79


. The second hollow needle


52


B is mainly employed for air-liquid exchange within the main tank


501


by circulating the air.




A plurality of sub-tank units


12


are disposed in each of the plural main tanks


501


that supplies the ink to each of the plural liquid jet head units


401


, independently.




(Pressure Generating Portion)




Subsequently, the above-described pressure generating means will be described with reference to

FIGS. 53 and 54

.




Reference numeral


4005


denotes a supply motor which is screwed to a sub-tank holder


58


, and the normal rotation of the supply motor


4005


allows an eccentric groove cam within a pump cam


26


while it is being decelerated by a pinion gear


4005


A, an idler gear


28


and the outer peripheral gear of the pump cam


26


which constitute a gear train.




A pump lever L


22


and a pump lever R


21


are disposed at symmetric positions with respect to the above gear train, and both of the pump lever L


22


and the pump lever R


21


are rotatable with pump lever shafts


47


A and


47


B fixed to the sub-tank holder


58


through rotation holes formed substantially in the center of those pump levers


21


and


22


by caulking as rotating axes, respectively. One ends of the pump levers L and R are slidable in the eccentric groove cam through a roller (not shown), and one revolution of the pump cam


26


is converted into the reciprocating motion of the other ends of the pump levers L and R.




The other end of each of those pump levers L and R grips a round knob


16


A of a pump rubber


16


by its thin tip groove. The pump rubber


16


is made up of the round knob


16


A disposed in the center thereof, a bowl-shaped thin cylinder portion


16


B and a cylindrical portion


16


C with a bottom. The bowl-shaped cylinder portion


16


B forms a pressure generating chamber by a round spot facing (not shown) of the sub-tank base


37


. A bevel valve


17


having a bevel at the pressure generating chamber side is fixed to the center hole of the round spot facing by a stopper


17


A. The ink flow path is appropriately opened at a bevel inner diameter position of the round spot facing. A cell is further formed by an L-joint


25


at the above opening side (an opposite side of the bevel) and connected with a suction tube


78


extending from the liquid jet head unit


401


.




The round spot facing further includes a groove


37


B connected to the full detection chamber


72


, and the circumstance of a thin cylindrical portion


16


C with a bottom of the pump rubber


16


is sealed by the cylindrical inlet of the sub-tank base


37


, and the tip of the groove is also closed. Since the pump rubber


16


is sandwiched by the pump plate


33


, the sub-tank base


37


and the L-joint


25


, they are screwed to fix the bowl-shaped cylinder portion


16


B in a sealed state.




It is assumed that the pump cam


26


is half rotated by driving the supply motor


4005


, and the pump levers L and R move (normal movement) in a direction of crushing the interior of the bowl-shaped cylinder


16


B through the round knob


16


A. Because a pressure raised in the interior of the bowl-shaped cylinder


16


B is also applied to the bevel valve


17


, the opening below the bevel looks for another escape way without communicating with the atmosphere. Because the cylindrical portion


16


C with a bottom which shuts the tip of the groove


37


B is thin, the rubber falls down toward the inside because the outside is high in pressure and the inside is low in pressure, and the pressurized gas within the bowl-shaped cylinder


16


B is discharged to the full detection chamber


72


.




Subsequently, it is assumed that the pump levers L and R move (backward movement) in a direction of expanding the bowl-shaped cylinder


16


B due to the remaining half rotation of the pump cam


26


. A negative pressure is produced in the interior of the cylinder. The inside of the cylindrical portion


16


C with a bottom of the pump rubber is of the atmosphere, the outer groove


37


B is of the negative pressure, and the tip of the groove


37


B is in a sealed state. The negative pressure in the interior of the cylinder leads the bevel valve


17


to a release state due to the atmospheric pressure in the cell of the L-joint


25


. As a result, the negative pressure in the interior of the cylinder sucks the common liquid chamber direction of the liquid jet head unit


401


.




In the above way, the continuous rotation of the pump cam


26


allows the negative pressure in the interior of the liquid jet head unit


401


to increase.




(Change of Flow Path)




In this embodiment, the flow path of the ink supply system is changed due to a change in the open/close states of the five kinds of valves, to thereby realize various functions.




The upper portion of the sub-tank base


37


has five grooves that form flow paths and open/close holes


37


C,


37


D,


37


E,


37


F and


37


G which are opened in the respective grooves, respectively. The grooves have members which cover the opening portion to form the flow paths and dowels that shut the five open/close holes, and the open/close of the plural valves are realized by a multi-valve rubber


15


which is formed of a single rubber member rich in sealing property and elasticity and having a vertically movable diaphragm portion.




The multi-valve rubber


15


is preferably made of chlorinated butyl rubber low in gas permeability and excellent in ink resistance.




Thick-tip protrusions


15


A that move the dowels vertically are disposed outside of the flow path of the diaphragm in the center of which the dowels that shut the open/close holes are disposed, respectively, and one end of each the swingable valve lever


24


grips each the protrusion


15


A in an interlocking manner. The number of valve levers


24


is identical with that of the open/close holes, and the valve levers


24


are arranged in a rotating direction where the open/close holes of the sub-tank base


37


are arranged. The fulcrum of each the valve lever


24


is formed by the lever arm


23


, and the sub-tank cover


38


, the sub-tank base


37


, the multi-valve rubber


15


, the lever arm


23


and a lever spring (not shown) are fastened together with the sub-tank plate


32


by a continuous thread so as to be integrally fixed together. The dowel of the multi-valve rubber


15


is so shaped as to shut the open/close hole in a natural configuration. The lever spring (not shown) fastened together with other members is urged in a direction of shutting the open/close direction.




The arranging position of the valve levers


24


are arranged symmetrically inside of the respective two sub-tanks where those two sub-tanks are arranged. The valve levers


24


are uniformly bent downward in the form of L at the rotating fulcrums and have sliding force points at the other ends (not shown). The center of the arrangement of two-line sliding force points is the center of the above pump cam. A valve shaft


46


which is interlocked with the pump cam having the center hole of the D-cut is pivotally supported by the sub-tank holder


58


in parallel with the arrangement of the sub-tank units


12


. The valve shaft


46


is coaxially rotatably installed with a timing drum


20


with a one-way clutch. The timing drum


20


is formed with a protrusion


20


A that pushes the respective sliding force points of the valve levers


24


in accordance with a required rotation angle. When the protrusion


20


A pushes the sliding force point of the valve lever


24


, another end of the valve lever


24


operates to open the open/close hole of the sub-tank base


37


. If no protrusion


20


A is provided, the open/close hole is left close.




The rotation of the timing drum


20


is conducted by the reverse rotation of the supply motor


4005


. The supply motor


4005


is formed of a pulse motor and can stop at a required rotation angle. That is, since the one-way clutch built in the timing drum


20


is rotated in association with the reverse rotation of the motor


4005


when the motor


4005


is reversely rotated, the pumping operation is conducted during the open/close operation of the valve. However, when the angle of the timing drum


20


and the state of the valve is decided, if the motor


4005


is normally rotated as occasion demands the negative pressure generating operation due to the pump is conducted without changing the flow path.




Also, a light shield plate (not shown) for indicating a reference position (angle) is projected from the timing drum


20


. The reference position is recognized by a photosensor


5382


fixed to the sub-tank holder


58


, and the rotation angle of the timing drum


20


is operated by the number of steps corresponding to the required angle from the reference position, to thereby realize various flow paths.




(State of Flow Path and its Function)




Subsequently, the states of the flow path which is realized by the combination of the open/close states of the valves and their functions will be described. The functions include five kinds of “supply 1”, “supply 2”, “print”, “circulation” and “exchange”.




It is assumed that the combination at the left side when being viewed from the envelope conveying side is “supply 1”, and the respective parts are the main tank


501


(L), the sub-tank unit


12


(L) (the unit inner pressure generating portion


73


(L)) and the liquid jet head unit


401


(L), and the valve train is


81


(L) to


85


(L). Also, it is assumed that the combination at the right side is “supply 2”, and the respective parts are the main tank


501


(R), the sub-tank unit


12


(R) (the unit inner pressure generating portion


73


(R)) and the liquid jet head unit


401


(R), and the valve train is


81


(R) to


85


(R).




In the “supply 1” which is the first combination, the opened valves are


81


(L),


82


(L),


85


(L) and


85


(R) whereas the closed valves are


83


(L),


84


(L),


81


(R),


82


(R),


83


(R) and


84


(R). The negative pressure generated by the pressure generating portion


73


L sucks the ink from the common liquid chamber of the upstream-side liquid jet head unit


401


(L), the water head difference generating chamber


71


(L) and the main tank


501


(L) in the stated order and in the reverse order. In this situation, it is needless to say that a cap that tightly closes the nozzle surface is required in order to prevent the meniscus on the nozzle surface of the liquid jet head unit


401


(L) from being destroyed. After the ink within the main tank


501


(L) reaches the pressure generating portion


73


(L), the ink reaches the full detection chamber


72


(L) having the full detecting means therein by the discharge force of the cylinder.




The full detecting means allows a current to flow between two electrodes


49


A and


49


B which are projected from the sub-tank cover and measures a resistance, to thereby detect that the full detection chamber is full of the ink. Two deriving port atmosphere valve


84


(L) and air-liquid exchange valve


85


(L) from the full detection chamber are the open/close holes formed above the electrodes


49


A and


49


B which stop the rotation of the motor to suspend the more suction of the ink. The remaining deriving port communication valve


83


(L) is a flow path communicating with the water head difference generating chamber


71


(L), and its inlet


83


A is positioned below the exposed portion of the above electrodes.




It is apparent that the close of the valve


81


(R) does not allow the ink to be supplied to the liquid jet head unit


401


(R) side in this mode.




In the “supply 2”, the opened valves are


85


(L),


81


(R),


82


(R) and


85


(R) whereas the closed valves are


81


(L),


82


(L),


83


(L),


84


(L),


83


(R) and


84


(R). As described in the “supply 1”, the ink is supplied to the liquid jet head unit


401


(R), but the ink is not supplied to the liquid jet head unit


401


(L).




In the “print”, the opened valves are


82


(L),


83


(L),


84


(L),


82


(R),


83


(R) and


84


(R) whereas the closed valves are


81


(L),


85


(L),


81


(R) and


85


(R). This ink supply system realizes the print state of both the liquid jet head units


401


. The supply of the ink from the main tank to the sub-tank is cut off. The atmosphere valves


84


(L) and


84


(R) are opened into the atmosphere release state. The open of the communication valves


83


(L) and


83


(R) renders the ink in the water head difference generating chamber and the ink in the full detection chamber communicative, and when the full detection chamber is full of the ink, the ink surface in the full detection chamber becomes a reference of the water head difference.




In the “circulation”, the opened valves are


82


(L),


83


(L),


82


(R) and


83


(R) whereas the closed valves are


81


(L),


84


(L),


85


(L),


81


(R),


84


(R) and


85


(R). The common liquid chamber of the liquid jet head unit


401


and the sub-tank unit conduct the ink circulation for each of the head units


401


, independently. Similarly, in this case, a cap tightly closes the nozzle surface in order to prevent the orifice from being destroyed.




In the “exchange”, the valves are not opened at all, and all the valves are closed. In the exchange of the ink tank, all the valves are closed, and ink drop due to the water head difference in the respective tubes is prevented.




[Carriage]




Subsequently, the structure of the carriage


200


will be described in more detail.




(Carriage Retaining Frame)




The printing apparatus according to the present invention includes the carriage


200


that detachably retains the liquid jet head unit


401


. As shown in

FIGS. 6 and 7

, the carriage


200


is slidably supported by a CR shaft


202


and a guide rail


203


both end portions of which are fixed to a CR frame


201


and which are arranged in parallel with each other in a direction which is orthogonal to the conveying direction of the envelope and the continuous sheets and in parallel with the nozzle train of the liquid jet head unit


401


mounted on the carriage


200


. Also, the carriage


200


is supported in such a posture that the nozzle surface


401




a


of the liquid jet head unit


401


becomes substantially in parallel with the print surface of the printing medium (envelope and continuous sheet) when the liquid jet head unit


401


is mounted on the carriage


200


.




As shown in

FIG. 8

, the guide rail


203


is formed of a thin sheet metal bent in an L-shape and attached to the upper bent portion of the CR frame


201


. The guide rail


203


is positioned by two embosses


201




a


of the CR frame


201


and two holes of the guide rail


203


and fixed to the CR frame


201


by two vises.




The CR frame


201


is bent at the front and rear portions and has a slot


201




b


for fixing the CR shaft


202


. In addition, as shown in

FIGS. 8 and 9

, CR gap plates


204


each formed of a sheet metal are attached to the front and rear portions of the CR shaft


202


for adjustment of the position (paper-interval distance) of the CR shaft


202


in the heightwise direction. Each of the CR gap plates


204


has a hole into which an emboss


201




c


disposed on the CR frame


201


is inserted and is rotatable around the emboss


201




c.


A vis


291


fixes the upper portion of the CR gap plate


204


to the CR frame


201


. A slot


204




b


is defined in the vicinity of the center of the CR gap plate


204


, and the CR shaft


202


penetrates the slot


204




b


and the slot


201




b


of the CR frame


201


. Therefore, the CR shaft


202


inserted into both of the slots


204




b


and


201




b


moves vertically with the rotation of the CR gap plate


204


. Also, gear teeth


204




c


are disposed on the upper portion of the CR gap plate


204


. The teeth


204




c


is meshed with teeth of a jig not shown, and when the jig is operated, the CR gap plate


204


rotates about which the CR shaft


202


moves vertically to adjust the position of the CR shaft


202


in the heightwise direction (paper-interval distance).




In addition, the front and rear portions of the CR frame


201


are bent in the form of L, from which a bar-shaped CR shaft lock spring


205


is hung. The CR shaft


202


is positioned in the center of the CR shaft lock spring


205


, and the CR shaft


202


is always urged in one direction (indicated by an arrow A) by the CR shaft lock spring


205


. As a result, the CR shaft


202


is fixed without shaking with respect to the CR frame


201


.




Also, as shown in

FIG. 9

, a groove


202




a


is cut in one end portion of the CR shaft


202


, and since the CR shaft lock spring


205


is inserted into the groove


202




a,


there is no case in which the CR shaft


202


is drawn in the thrust direction (axial direction).




Further, as shown in

FIGS. 6 and 7

, the carriage


200


is coupled to a part of a CR belt


208


put between a CR drive pulley


206




a


rotationally driven by a CR motor


206


fixed onto the CR frame


201


and an idler pulley


207


slidably movable in a parallel with the CR shaft


202


and rotatably fixed on the CR frame


201


by two vises. The CR belt


208


is rotated by driving the CR motor


206


, and the carriage


200


is reciprocated in a direction along the CR shaft


202


and the guide rail


203


.




Although will be additionally described in the item of recovery system unit, the recovery system unit


300


is attached to the CR frame


201


, and the structure is made so that a variation of a distance between the liquid jet head unit


401


mounted on the carriage


200


and the recovery system unit


300


becomes as small as possible.




(Carriage Stop Position)




As shown in

FIG. 10

, in the printing apparatus according to the present invention, there are provided three stop positions of the carriage


200


. A home position S is provided substantially in the center of the printing apparatus, and a cap of the recovery system unit which will be described later moves vertically at the home position S and covers the nozzle portion of the liquid jet head unit


401


mounted on the carriage


200


. Print positions are so provided as to interpose the home position S therebetween, and a front-side print position is an envelope print position T and a rear-side print position is a continuous-sheet print position U.




(Carriage Control)




The CR frame


201


is attached with a home position sensor (hereinafter referred to as “HP sensor”) of the photonic sensor type not shown. The HP sensor is disposed at the position of the home position S and detects the passage of a shielding plate


200




a


(refer to

FIGS. 11 and 13

) disposed on the carriage


200


, thereby being capable of detecting the position of the carriage


200


.




As shown in

FIG. 10

, a shaft


206




b


extends on an opposite side of the CR drive pulley


206




a


of the CR motor


206


, and a disc-shaped encoder slit


210


is attached to the shaft


206




b.


Upon the operation of the CR motor


206


, the encoder slit


210


also rotates in synchronism with the CR motor


206


. The slits of the same number as steps per one revolution of the CR motor


206


are cut in the encoder slit


210


. In this embodiment, since the CR motor


206


has 200 steps per one revolution, 200 slits are cut in the encoder slit


210


. Then, a photonic sensor


211


is attached so as to interpose the encoder slit


210


, and since the encoder slit


210


rotates upon the actuation of the CR motor


206


, the rotary momentum of the CR motor


206


is transmitted to the board from the photonic sensor


211


as a signal. Then, as described above, since one step of the CR motor


206


corresponds to one step of the encoder slit


210


, every time the CR motor


206


rotates one step (in this case, one step is 1.8° since one round is composed of 200 steps), the photonic sensor


211


detects the passage of one slit and transmits a signal to the board. That is, if the number of slits of the encoder


210


that passed through the sensing position of the photonic sensor


211


is notified of, the rotation of the CR motor


206


, that is, the moving distance of the carriage


200


is accurately obtained so as to feed back the detected movement distance.




Now, the moving operation of the carriage


200


will be described in more detail with reference to a flowchart of FIG.


14


. As described above, the CR motor


206


is controlled by the combination of the HP sensor, the encoder slit


210


and the photonic sensor


211


.




First, in an initial state, when the HP sensor which is at the home position S detects the carriage


200


(on-state) (step S


1


), the CR motor


206


is rotated normally to move the carriage


200


toward the envelope print position T (step S


2


). Then, at the time when the HP sensor does not detect the carriage


200


(off-state) (step S


3


), the CR motor


206


is rotated reversely to move the carriage


200


toward the home position S (step S


4


). Then, at the time when the HP sensor turns on again (step S


5


), that is, from the time when the carriage


200


moves up to a position where an edge portion of the shielding plate


200




a


of the carriage


200


shields the HP sensor, the CR motor


206


is further driven a given number of pulses (step S


6


), and the carriage


200


is positioned at the home position S at which the CR motor


206


stops (step S


7


). With the above operation, the initial operation of the carriage


200


is completed. The number of pulses supplied to the CR motor


206


in step S


6


is determined by a distance between the edge portion of the shielding plate


200




a


and the center portion of the carriage


200


and the positional relationship between the HP sensor and the home position S.




On the other hand, in the initial state, when the HP sensor does not detect the carriage


200


(off-state) (step S


1


), the CR motor


206


is rotated reversely to move the carriage


200


(step S


8


). When the HP sensor detects the carriage


200


(off-state) (step S


9


), the above-described steps S


6


to S


7


are executed.




Incidentally, even if the carriage


200


is moved in step S


8


, the HP sensor does not detect the carriage


200


(step S


9


), and the carriage


200


further continues to be moved (step S


10


). Then, in the case where the pulses continue to be supplied such that it is judged that the movement distance X of the carriage


200


is equal to or longer than the movable distance L of the carriage


200


(step S


11


), the CR motor


206


is rotated normally (step S


12


). Then, when the HP sensor detects the carriage


200


(step S


13


), the above-described steps S


6


to S


7


are executed. However, when the HP sensor does not detect the carriage


200


in step S


13


, the CR motor


206


is stopped (step S


14


) and an error message is displayed (step S


15


).




Subsequently, the operation of moving from the home position S to the print position (the envelope print position T and the continuous-sheet print position U) will be described.




First, the CR motor


206


is driven so that the carriage


200


moves from the home position S toward the print position, and from the time when the shielding plate


200




a


of the carriage


200


does not shield the HP sensor (at the time of the off-state where the HP sensor does not detect the carriage


200


), the number of pulses of the CR motor


206


is counted by the encoder slit


210


and the photonic sensor


211


. Then, when a predetermined number of pulses (corresponding to a distance to the envelope print position or the continuous-sheet print position) are counted, the CR motor


206


stops. Under that control, the carriage


200


always reaches a desired print position.




If the CR motor


206


steps out or the carriage is caught by something so as not to move, because the number of counts is short, the user is warned of this fact as an error.




When the carriage


200


moves from the print position (the envelope print position T and the tape print position U) to the home position S, the CR motor


206


is driven so that the carriage


200


first moves toward the home position S, and from the time when the edge of the shielding plate


200




a


of the carriage


200


reaches a position where it shields the HP sensor, the CR motor


206


is further driven a predetermined number of pulses, and the carriage


200


is positioned at the home position S and stops.




(Carriage Structure: Bearing Portion)




As shown in

FIG. 11

, because the carriage


200


slides in a direction which is orthogonal to the conveying direction of the envelope and the continuous sheet and in parallel with the nozzle train of the liquid jet head unit


401


mounted on the carriage


200


, two CR bearings


212


into which the CR shaft


202


are inserted are disposed. The CR bearings


212


are fixed onto the front and rear portions of the left side surface of the carriage


200


.




The CR bearings


212


are made of a material that does not require grease and prevent power powders or ink mist from being stuck onto the CR shafts


202


or the CR bearings


212


. Also, a CR slider


212


which is excellent in sliding property and so fitted as to interpose the guide rail


203


is fixed on the upper and center portion of the CR bearings


212


.




As described above, the carriage


200


is supported at three points by two CR bearings


212


positioned at the lower portion and one CR slider


213


positioned at the upper portion.




(Carriage Structure: HP Sensor Shielding Plate)




As shown in

FIGS. 11 and 13

, a HP sensor shielding plate


200




a


necessary to control the position of the carriage


200


is attached in the vicinity of the center of the left side surface of the carriage


200


and below the vicinity of the center position of the fixing portion of the two CR bearings


212


.




(Carriage Structure: CR Belt Fixing Portion)




As shown in

FIGS. 12 and 13

, a fixing portion


200




b


of the CR belt


208


is disposed in the vicinity of the center of the left side surface of the carriage


200


and above the vicinity of the center position of the fixing portion of the two CR bearings


212


. The CR belt fixing portion


200




b


is so structured as to nip the CR belt


208


, and the nipping portion of the CR belt fixing portion


200




b


is slightly thinner than the thickness of the CR belt


208


, and the CR belt


208


is fixed onto the carriage


200


without any backlash because the CR belt


208


is inserted into the nipping portion under pressure. Since the CR belt


208


is thus fixed, the carriage


200


is moved by the CR motor


206


.




In addition, as a stopper of the CR belt


208


, a CR belt stopper


214


formed of a U-shaped sheet metal is attached onto the CR belt fixing portion


200




b


of the carriage


200


, and a convex portion of the carriage


200


is inserted into a hole portion of the CR belt stopper


214


so that the CR belt stopper


214


is fixed onto the CR belt fixing portion


200




b.






(Carriage Structure: Board Retaining Portion)




As shown in

FIGS. 15 and 16

, a board or the like such as a CR printed wiring board on which two CR connectors


216


that receive and send a signal with respect to the liquid jet head unit


401


is mounted on the carriage


200


.




The CR connector


216


is fixed in the inner depth (the depth of a space wherein the liquid jet head unit


401


is mounted) of the carriage


200


so as to be disposed vertically and opposed to one face of the liquid jet head unit


401


. Then, as shown in

FIG. 7

, the substrate or the like is covered with a CR printed wiring board cover


219


.




Also, the board or the like is connected with a flexible cable (hereinafter referred to as “FPC”)


220


to which an electric signal or a power supply is transmitted from a control board (not shown) which is in the exterior of the carriage


200


. The FPC


220


is so connected as to extend from a gap between the carriage


200


and the CR printed wiring board cover


219


to the external of the carriage


200


. The FPC


200


is fixed by an FPC stopper


221


attached onto the carriage


200


and the CR printed wiring board cover


219


so as to be nipped between the CR printed wiring board cover


219


and the FPC stopper


221


. With above structure, the FPC


220


is fixed so as not to fall out even if an external force is applied to the FPC


220


.




The FPC


220


is connected to the control board of the printing machine main body, and as the carriage


200


moves, an interval between the carriage


200


and the control board of the printing machine main body is varied. For that reason, the FPC


220


is sufficiently long to be loosened, and an excessive stress is not applied to the FPC


220


due to the loosening even if the carriage


200


moves and stands at any position.




(Carriage Structure: Recovery System Unit Related Portion)




As shown in

FIG. 17

showing a bottom view of the carriage


200


,

FIG. 18

showing a side view of the carriage


200


and

FIG. 19

showing a perspective view of the carriage


200


, two hole portions


200




c


from which the nozzles of the liquid jet head unit


401


are exposed are formed in the lower portion of the bottom surface of the carriage


200


, and a CR blade rib


200




d


is disposed in parallel with the moving direction of the carriage


200


on the right and left sides of those hole portions


200




c.


The action of the CR blade rib


200




d


will be separately described on the item of the recovery system unit


300


.




A square hole


200




e


is defined in the bottom surface portion of the carriage


200


at the right side of a portion where the liquid jet head unit


401


is mounted. A carriage lock arm


390


of the recovery system unit


300


is inserted into the hole


200




e,


and prevents the carriage


200


from being moved due to the vibrations of the entire printing machine when the nozzles of the liquid jet head unit


401


are covered with the cap


308


of the recovery system unit


300


. The detailed structure will be separately described on the item of the recovery system unit.




(Carriage Structure: Ink Supply Portion)




As shown in

FIG. 20

, two joint rubbers


416


are disposed on this side surface of the liquid jet head unit


401


. When a tip of a CR needle


222


(refer to

FIG. 21

) is inserted into the surface of each the joint rubber


416


and penetrates the interior of the tank of the liquid jet head unit


401


, an ink is supplied to the interior of the tank of the liquid jet head unit


401


from a supply system which is upstream side of the CR needles


222


and coupled to the CR needles


222


by connecting means such as the CR tubes


226


.




A mechanism for supplying the ink to the liquid jet head unit


401


is disposed on this side of a portion where the liquid jet head unit


401


is mounted on the carriage


200


. This structure will be described below.




First, as shown in

FIGS. 21 and 22

, four CR needles


222


are shaped in a slender hollow pipe, respectively, and directed forward of the liquid jet head unit


401


from this side. The tip of each the CR needle


222


has a closed spherical portion


222




a,


and a small rectangular hole


222




b


is defined in the vicinity of the tip spherical portion


222




a


from the middle portion of the hollow portion of the pipe toward the upper side. Each of the CR needles


222


is fixed by a plastic CR joint support


223


and a CR tube joint


224


. The CR joint support


223


and the CR tube joint


224


are integrated together by welding, and a route of each the CR needle


222


is sandwiched by a CR needle seal


225


which is shaped in a doughnut and made of rubber so as to prevent the ink from being leaked. Then, in the CR joint support


223


and the CR tube joint


224


, a flow path is formed in each of the four CR needles


222


and communicates with four pipe-shaped portions disposed on the CR tube joint


224


, respectively.




Those four pipe-shaped portions disposed on the CR tube joint


224


are covered with one ends of L-shaped pipe-shaped CR joint rubbers


227


, respectively, and the CR tubes


226


are inserted into the other ends of the CR joint rubbers


227


, respectively. That is, the CR joint rubbers


227


serve as couplings of the CR tube joints


224


and the CR tubes


226


.




Those four CR tubes


226


penetrate four holes


223




a


defined in the side plate of the CR joint support


223


in a press fitting state, and even if the CR joint support


223


which will be described later moves, the CR tubes


226


are fixed so as not to fall out from the CR joint rubbers


227


. Although being not shown, those four CR tubes


226


are loosened for the movement of the CR joint support


223


.




In addition, those four CR tubes


226


penetrate the hole portions of CR tube rubbers not shown, and each of the CR tube rubbers is nipped between the carriage


200


and a CR tube stopper not shown so as to be fixed therebetween. Those CR tubes


226


extend to the external of the carriage


200


. Although being not shown, those four CR tubes


226


are integrated into a band, and each of their tips is connected to a joint plug with a rubber CR joint as a coupling. The joint plug is detachably coupled to the CR joint and also coupled to the ink supply system unit.




The CR tubes


226


are loosened for the movement of the carriage


200


between the carriage


200


and the ink supply system unit


10


. An excessive stress is not applied to the CR tubes


226


due to the loosening even if the carriage


200


moves and stands at any position.




(Carriage Structure: Ink Supply Joint Portion)




Subsequently, a mechanism of inserting or drawing out the above-described four CR needles


222


into or from the liquid jet head unit


401


will be described with reference to

FIGS. 18 and 21

to


26


. The liquid jet head unit


401


is omitted from those figures.




As shown in

FIGS. 21 and 22

, a CR joint shaft


233


is fixed onto the CR needles


222


, the CR joint support


223


and the CR tube joint


224


which are integrated together. Also, as shown in

FIGS. 18 and 23

to


26


, a slot


234




a


is defined in the middle portion of a CR joint lever


234


which rotates about holes


200




r


defined on the right and left side surfaces of the carriage


200


, and the CR joint shaft


233


is inserted into the slot


234




a


and fixed so as not to fall out. With the above structure, when the CR joint lever


234


rotates, the CR joint shaft


233


moves forward and backward (between this side and the depth side) while being interlocked with the CR joint lever


234


. Also, the CR needles


222


, the CR joint support


223


and the CR tube joint


224


move forward and backward (between this side and the depth side) while being interlocked with the CR joint lever


234


.




As a result, when the CR joint lever


234


falls down toward the depth side (a direction indicated by an arrow E in FIG.


25


), because the CR needles


222


are inserted into the two joint rubbers


416


disposed on the front surface portion of the liquid jet head unit


401


, and the CR joint lever


234


jumps beyond the convex portion


200




h


of the carriage


200


during the rotating motion. As a result, as shown in

FIG. 26

, the CR joint lever


234


is fixed so as not to move when the CR joint lever


234


completely falls down toward the depth side. In this situation, because the CR joint shaft


233


is inserted into groove portions


200




i


(refer to

FIG. 18

) defined on the right and left side surfaces of the carriage


200


, the CR joint shaft


233


is positioned without any backlash.




When the CR joint lever


234


is allowed to jump beyond the convex portion


200




h


of the carriage


200


and fall down toward this side (in a direction indicated by an arrow C in

FIG. 24

; refer to FIG.


18


), the CR needles


222


are drawn out from the joint rubbers


416


disposed on this side (front surface side) of the liquid jet head unit


401


. In this situation, since an L-shaped portion


234




c


disposed on a lower end of the CR joint lever


234


is abutted against a rib


200




k


(refer to

FIG. 18

) of the carriage


200


, the CR joint lever


234


stops to rotate at this position.




Subsequently, the CR joint lever stopper


235


will be described. As shown in

FIG. 23

, a hole


235




a


is defined in one end portion of the CR joint lever stopper


235


, the CR joint shaft


233


is inserted into the hole


235




a,


and the CR joint lever stopper


235


moves in association with the CR joint lever


234


. The other end portion of the CR joint lever stopper


235


is equipped with a shaft


235




b,


and the shaft


235




b


penetrates an L-shaped slot


200




j


defined on the right side surface of the carriage


200


and is inserted into the carriage


200


so as to be movable along the-L-shaped slot


200




j.


In addition, the other end portion of the CR joint lever stopper


235


is equipped with a spring latch portion


235




c,


and a CR joint lever spring


236


which is formed of an extension spring is hooked between the spring latch portion


235




c


and a spring latch portion


234




b


disposed on the upper portion of the CR joint lever


234


.




Subsequently, a description will be given of a mechanism of preventing an error in the operating procedures of the CR lever


237


for retaining and fixing the liquid jet head unit


401


mounted on the carriage


200


, and the CR joint lever


234


that moves the CR needles


222


for supplying the ink to the liquid jet head unit


401


mounted on the carriage


200


, when the liquid jet head unit


401


is detached or attached from or to the carriage


200


.





FIG. 23

shows a state in which the liquid jet head unit


401


is not mounted on the carriage


200


, where the CR lever


237


which will be described later is positioned above whereas the CR joint lever


234


is positioned at this side. In this state, the CR joint lever stopper


235


is pulled up by the CR joint lever spring


236


, the shaft


235




b


abuts against an upper edge of the L-shaped slot


200




j


of the carriage


200


, and the CR joint lever


234


does not move. As a result, in the state where the liquid jet head unit


401


is not mounted on the carriage


200


, the CR needles


222


cannot be moved to the portion on which the liquid jet head unit


401


is mounted.




Then, as shown in

FIG. 24

, when the CR lever


237


is rotated in a direction indicated by an arrow B and the liquid jet head unit


401


is mounted on the carriage


200


, the shaft


235




b


of the CR joint lever stopper


235


abuts against the CR lever


237


and is then pushed down against a force of the CR joint lever spring


236


in a direction indicated by an arrow C along the L-shaped slot


200




j


of the carriage


200


. In this situation, since the shaft


235




b


of the CR joint lever stopper


235


is positioned at the lower portion of the L-shaped slot


200




j


of the carriage


200


, as shown in

FIG. 25

, the shaft


235




b


of the CR joint lever stopper


235


is movable in a direction indicated by an arrow D along the straight portion of the L-shaped slot


200




j


of the carriage


200


. Accordingly, the CR joint lever


234


can fall down toward the depth side (in a direction indicated by an arrow E), and the CR needles


222


can be inserted into the liquid jet head unit


401


.




Also, in a state where the liquid jet head unit


401


is inserted and fixed as shown in

FIG. 26

, since the CR joint lever


234


falls down toward the depth side, and the CR joint shaft


233


is above the lever portion


237




a


of the CR lever


237


, an operator cannot touch the lever portion


237




a


and cannot operate the lever portion


237




a.


Therefore, in the state where the liquid jet head unit


401


is inserted and the CR needles


222


are inserted, the liquid jet head unit


401


cannot be drawn out.




(Carriage Structure: Liquid Jet Head Unit Fixing Portion)




As shown in

FIG. 16

, a rectangular hole is formed in the depth side wall of the carriage


200


, and two CR connectors


216


for receiving and transmitting a signal with respect to the liquid jet head unit


401


are arranged and fitted into that hole portion. Each of the CR connectors


216


has a large number of contacts, and the respective contacts are moved forward and backward, independently. According to this structure, when the liquid jet head unit


401


is mounted on the carriage


200


, a contact portion of the liquid jet head unit


401


comes to a surface of the contact pad


421


(in more detail refer to the item of the liquid jet head unit which will be described later), a contact of the CR connector


216


is drawn, and due to its reaction, a force of pushing back the contact portion of the liquid jet head unit


401


is exerted on the contact of the CR connector


216


in a direction indicated by an arrow H.




Above the carriage


200


, the CR lever


237


is rotatably supported by the CR lever shaft


238


supported by the right and left side surfaces of the carriage


200


. The CR lever


237


is provided with a lever portion


237




a


for rotating the CR lever


237


.




Two head set plates


239


shown in

FIG. 55

are retained in the center of the carriage


200


. One of those head set plates


239


is disposed for each of the liquid jet head units


401


. In this example, because two liquid jet head units


401


are mounted on one carriage


200


, those two head set plates


239


are disposed in the carriage


200


. The numbers of liquid jet head units


401


and head set plates


239


can be appropriately changed depending on the design.




A shaft


239




a


disposed at the right and left in the rear of the head set plate


239


is inserted into a U-shaped bearing


237




b


disposed on the CR lever


237


, and the head set plate


239


rotates about the U-shaped bearing


237




b


as a center. Also, a spring bearing


239




b


is disposed in the center of the head set plate


239


, and a CR set plate spring


240


formed of a compression spring not shown is disposed between the spring bearing


239




b


and a spring bearing portion not shown. Due to the action of the CR set plate spring


240


, the tip portion


239




c


of the head set plate


239


is going to rotate downward toward the depth side with a shaft


239




a


disposed backward at the right and left as a center when the CR lever


237


is made in a set state. As a result, in the state where the liquid jet head unit


401


is set, the liquid jet head unit


401


is pushed downward toward the depth side by the head set plate


239


. The CR lever


237


is equipped with a portion


237




c


that receives a rib


239




d


disposed at the right and left of the tip portion of the head set plate


239


so that the head set plate


239


is not disengaged from the CR lever


237


in the state where the liquid jet head unit


401


is not set.




Two trapezoidal bosses


2001


a top surface of which is flat are disposed for each of the liquid jet head units


401


, that is, four trapezoidal bosses


2001


in total are disposed on a bottom surface of the carriage


200


, as shown in FIG.


19


. Two bosses disposed on the bottom surface of each the liquid jet head unit


401


(in more detail refer to the item of the liquid jet head unit which will be described later) are abutted against those bosses


2001


, respectively, in the state where the respective liquid jet head units


401


are set, to thereby determine the position of the liquid jet head unit


401


in the heightwise direction. Also, one U-shaped rib portion


200




m


is disposed for each of the liquid jet head units


401


, that is, two U-shaped rib portions


200




m


in total are disposed on the bottom surface of the carriage


200


. The side surfaces of the bosses disposed on the bottom surface of the respective liquid jet head units


401


are abutted against those rib portions


200




m,


respectively, in the state where the respective liquid jet head units


401


are set.




Other U-shaped rib portions


200




n


are disposed on a vertical wall portion at the upper depth side of the CR connector


216


of the carriage


200


so as to be opposed to the above U-shaped rib portions


200




m.


When being viewed from the upper portion of the carriage


200


, the U-shaped rib portions


200




n


are structured as shown in FIG.


56


. That is, cylindrical shapes


200




p


are formed at portions where the U-shaped rib portions


200




m


on the bottom surface of the carriage


200


faces the U-shaped rib portions


200




n


disposed on the vertical wall. In the state where the liquid jet head unit


401


is set, spherical protrusions (in more detail refer to the item of the liquid jet head unit which will be described later) disposed above the contact portion contact pads


421


at the depth side of the liquid jet head unit


401


are abutted against the U-shaped rib portions


200




n


disposed on the vertical wall portion.




As shown in

FIGS. 57A and 57B

, a mechanism for adjusting the rotating direction of the liquid jet head unit


401


(an inclination of the nozzle train which constitutes the liquid jet head) (in more detail refer to the item of the liquid jet head unit rotating direction adjusting mechanical portion) is disposed on this side of the carriage


200


. This mechanism is made up of a CR head spring


242


formed of a leaf spring and a CR head cam


241


. The CR head cam


241


is so rotated as to finely adjust an abutting position of the left peripheral surface


241




a


of the cam, to thereby adjust the rotating direction of the liquid jet heat unit


401


. The CR head spring


242


is disposed in such a manner that one surface of the liquid jet head unit


401


opposite to another surface which is in contact with the left peripheral surface


241


of the CR head cam


241


is pushed toward the CR head cam


241


. A trapezoidal protrusion


411


is disposed on a portion of the liquid jet head unit


401


which is in contact with the left peripheral surface


241




a


of the CR head cam


241


, and the liquid jet head unit


401


is positioned at that portion in the rotating direction (an inclination of the nozzles of the head). In

FIG. 57B

, reference numeral


251


denotes a small steel ball, and


250


is a spring.




According to the above-described structure, the positioning of the liquid jet head unit


401


installed in the carriage


200


in the heightwise direction is determined by a downward pushing force g


1


of a component force of the head set plate


239


, and the abutment of two trapezoidal bosses


2001


whose top surfaces are flat which are disposed on the bottom surface of the carriage


200


against two bosses disposed on the bottom surface of the liquid jet head unit


401


, as shown in

FIGS. 61 and 62

.




Also, the positioning of the liquid jet head unit


401


forward/backward and rightward/leftward is determined by the abutting portion of the U-shaped rib portions


200




m


disposed on the bottom surface of the carriage


200


and the side surfaces of the bosses disposed on the bottom surface of the liquid jet head unit


401


, the abutting portion of the U-shaped rib portions


200




n


disposed on the vertical wall at the depth side of the carriage


200


and the spherical portions disposed above the contact portion at the depth side of the liquid jet head unit


401


, and the balance of a reaction force H of the CR connector


216


toward this side and a force g


2


downward at the depth side of the head set plate


239


due to the CR set plate spring


240


disposed on the CR lever


237


. That is, in this embodiment, as shown in

FIG. 56

, the liquid jet head unit


401


is positioned forward/backward and rightward/leftward with the cylindrical portion


200




p


formed by the opposed U-shaped rib portions


200




m


and


200




n


disposed on the bottom surface of the carriage


200


and the vertical wall at the depth side, respectively, as a center.




Also, as described above, the liquid jet head unit


401


rotates about the cylindrical portion


200




p


formed by the opposed U-shaped rib portions


200




m


and


200




n


disposed on the bottom surface of the carriage


200


and the vertical wall at the depth side, respectively, as a center. The trapezoidal protrusion


411


disposed downward at this side of the liquid jet head unit


401


is inserted between the left peripheral surface


241




a


of the CR head cam


241


disposed at this side of the carriage


200


and the CR head spring


242


, to thereby position the liquid jet head unit


401


in the rotating direction (an inclination of the nozzles of the head).




(Carriage Structure: Liquid Jet Head Unit Rotating Direction Adjusting Mechanical Portion)




As described above, the rotating direction adjusting mechanism of the liquid jet head unit


401


disposed at this side of the carriage


200


will be described in more detail with reference to

FIGS. 57A and 57B

.




The rotating direction adjusting mechanism of the liquid jet head unit


401


is rotatably retained by two pairs of bearing portion configuration disposed at this side of the carriage


200


. The rotating direction adjusting mechanism is made up of the CR head cam


241


which is shaped in a disc and has a D-shaped hole in the center thereof and has an axial center, a CR head dial


243


which rotates the CR head cam


241


, has grooves


243




a


formed on the outer peripheral surface at regular intervals and has a D-shaped hole in the center thereof, and a CR head shaft


244


which is shaped in a D-cut and connects the CR head cam


241


and the CR head dial


243


. Although being not shown, a small steel ball is abutted against the grooves


243




a


defined on the outer periphery of the CR head dial


243


by a spring, as a result of which the rotation of the CR head dial


243


is retained while it is clicked at a given angle.




According to the above structure, when the CR head dial


243


is rotated while it is clicked at a given angle, the CR head cam


241


rotates through the CR head shaft


244


, and the left peripheral surface


241




a


of the CR head cam


241


is finely moved. In this situation, the trapezoidal protrusion


411


disposed below this side of the head unit


401


is abutted against the left peripheral surface


241




a


of the CR head cam


241


by the CR head spring


242


which is in the form of a leaf spring and disposed on the carriage


200


.




When the CR head cam


241


rotates and the position of the left peripheral surface


241




a


is finely moved as described above, the trapezoidal protrusion


411


disposed below this side of the liquid jet head unit


401


is moved in accordance with the rotating amount of the CR head cam


241


, and the liquid jet head unit


401


rotates about the cylindrical portion


200




p


formed by the opposed U-shaped rib portions


200




m


and


200




n


disposed on the bottom surface of the carriage


200


and the vertical wall at the depth side, respectively, as a center. Accordingly, with the adjustment of the rotating amount of the CR head dial


243


, the rotating direction (an inclination of the nozzles that discharge the ink in the head) of the liquid jet head unit


401


can be arbitrarily adjusted. In this embodiment, since the adjusting mechanism is provided for each of the liquid jet head units


401


, the inclination of the nozzles that discharge the ink in the liquid jet head unit


401


can be finely adjusted for each of the liquid jet head units


401


.




(Carriage Structure: Liquid Jet Unit Mounting Procedure)




Subsequently, the mounting procedure of the liquid jet head unit


401


will be described with reference to

FIGS. 58

to


62


.




First, as shown in

FIG. 58

, the CR lever


237


is rotated with the CR lever shaft


238


supported at the left and right side plates of the carriage


200


as a center, and the liquid jet head unit


401


is kept in a state where it can be inserted into the carriage


200


. In this state, a grip


406


disposed on the upper portion of the liquid jet head unit


401


is held by operator's hand, and the liquid jet head unit


401


is inserted in a direction indicated by an arrow J from this side of the carriage


200


in the state where its nozzles are directed obliquely downward.




When the liquid jet head unit


401


is further inserted into the carriage


200


, as shown in

FIG. 59

, the side surface of the cylindrical protrusion


415


disposed on the right side surface of the liquid jet head unit


401


is abutted against a guide portion


200




q


for head unit insertion guide which is disposed on a wall positioned at the right side of the head unit insertion position of the carriage


200


. Then, when the liquid jet head unit


401


is still further inserted into the carriage


200


, the liquid jet head unit


401


is received at the head unit insertion position of the carriage


200


while the cylindrical protrusion


415


is guided by the guide portion


200




q.


Then, the trapezoidal protrusion


411


disposed downward at this side of the side surface of the liquid jet head unit


401


is inserted between the CR head cam


241


(refer to

FIG. 57A

) and the CR head spring


242


(refer to FIG.


57


A).




After the liquid jet head unit


401


is inserted into the head unit insertion position of the carriage


200


, as shown in

FIG. 60

, the CR lever


237


is rotated in a direction indicated by an arrow F about the CR lever shaft


238


as a center. As a result, the tip portion


239




c


(refer to

FIG. 55

) of the head set plate


239


retained by the CR lever


237


pushes the liquid jet head unit


401


downward toward the depth side.




As a result, as shown in

FIGS. 61 and 62

, the liquid jet head unit


401


is retained in a state where it is inserted into the head unit insertion position of the carriage


200


, and the attachment of the liquid jet head unit


401


to the carriage


200


is completed.




(Carriage Structure: Liquid Jet Head Detaching Procedure)




The procedure of detaching the liquid jet head unit


401


from the carriage


200


is reverse to the above-described attaching procedure.




First, as shown in

FIGS. 61 and 62

, the CR lever


237


is rotated in a direction indicated by an arrow K with the CR lever shaft


238


as a center from a state where the liquid jet head unit


401


is received at the head unit insertion position of the carriage


200


, and the pressurization of the tip portion


239




c


of the head set plate


239


toward the liquid jet head unit


401


is released.




As a result, the liquid jet head unit


401


is pushed toward this side by the reaction H of the CR connector


216


mounted on the carriage


200


in the direction of this side. In this situation, because an side surface of the cylindrical protrusion


415


of the liquid jet head unit


401


is abutted against the guide portion


200




q


of the carriage


200


, the liquid jet head unit


401


obliquely erects and comes to a state shown in FIG.


59


.




In this state, the operator holds the grip


406


of the liquid jet head unit


401


and draws out the liquid jet head unit


401


from the carriage


200


in a direction indicated by an arrow L shown in FIG.


59


. As a result, the liquid jet head unit


401


is detached from the carriage


200


.




(Recovery System Unit)




Subsequently, a description will be given of the recovery system unit


300


disposed for eliminating the discharge failure or a twist (the ink is discharged in an abnormal direction, and a position at which the ink droplet is landed is shifted) which is caused by attaching dusts onto the periphery of the nozzle of the liquid jet head unit


401


or drying the ink stuck on the interior of the nozzle or the nozzle surface


401




a


to increase the viscosity of the ink.




The discharge performance recovery means provided in the recovery system unit


300


in this embodiment is mainly made up of the following three means.




One of the discharge performance recovery means is preliminary discharge means for discharging the ink from all of the nozzles in a region except for the printing medium, in this embodiment, in a given region disposed in the recovery system unit


300


at the time of non-printing to discharge a thickener ink within the nozzles or around the nozzles or another kind of ink that enters the nozzles in the case where plural kinds of inks can be discharged in the same apparatus, and the discharged ink is carried to the waste ink tank.




Another discharge performance recovery means is wiping means disposed for removing a mist discharged together with the main ink droplet discharged for printing, a rebounded mist occurring when the main ink droplet is landed on the printing medium, an ink attached onto the nozzle formation surface through the suction recovery process which will be described later, etc. The wiping means is made up of, for example, a blade


303


formed of an elastic member such as rubber.




Still another discharge performance recovery means is the suction recovery means. The suction recovery means abuts a cap


308


made of an elastic material such as rubber against the nozzle surface


401




a


of the liquid jet head unit


401


. so as to be in close contact with the nozzle surface


401




a,


reduces an air pressure within the cap


308


to the atmospheric pressure or lower by pumping means to forcibly discharge the ink from the nozzles, to thereby remove the discharge interruption elements such as the dusts within the nozzles, a dry ink or bubbles due to the ink flow. Thereafter, the sucked ink is carried to the waste ink tank and then processed.




Subsequently, the structure of the recovery system unit


300


in this embodiment will be described.





FIG. 27

shows a perspective view of the appearance of the recovery system unit


300


. The recovery system unit


300


is fixed to the CR frame


201


where a carriage scanning guide member such as the CR shaft


202


which is inserted into the carriage


200


is disposed so that the relative position of the carriage


200


and the liquid jet head unit


401


is ensured with a high precision.




A preliminary discharge port (a preliminary discharge acceptance port


301


) is so formed as to be shorter than the overall length of the nozzle train of the liquid jet head unit


401


in a direction of the nozzle train of the liquid jet head unit


401


. This structure can be achieved by not conducting the preliminary discharge from all of the nozzles at the same time, but sequentially conducting the preliminary discharge from the nozzles little by little, separately. With this structure, the recovery system unit


300


is downsized. Also, in this embodiment, in order to prevent a preliminary discharge processing period of time from increasing due to the separate discharge, a so-called moving (flow) preliminary discharge method in which the discharge is conducted while the carriage


200


is being scanned is applied. In more detail, it is assumed that 616 nozzles disposed on the liquid jet head unit


401


are divided into, for example, 10 blocks in total, consisting of 9 blocks each having 62 nozzles and 1 block having 58 remaining nozzles. Also, the number of times of preliminary discharge for each of the nozzles in the preliminary discharge operation is 200, the discharge frequency is 8 kHz and the nozzle arrangement pitches are 600 dpi. Under the above conditions, if the ink discharge is sequentially conducted from the nozzle blocks in the moving direction of the carriage


200


while the carriage


200


is being moved at a given speed of 105 mm/sec, the ink is landed in an area of just twice as long as the 62 nozzles, that is, about 5.25 mm. Accordingly, in this embodiment, the length of the preliminary discharge port


301


is set to 8 mm slightly longer than the above-described landed area. That is, the length of the preliminary discharge port


301


becomes ⅓ or less with respect to the nozzle train about 26 mm in length. Also, within the preliminary discharge port


301


is disposed a preliminary discharge absorber


302


formed of a porous resin member so as to retain the discharged ink and collect the ink through a preliminary discharge port idle suction process which will be described later without remaining.




At the time of the above flow preliminary discharge operation, it is not always necessary to scan the carriage


200


at the given speed, and for example, in order to reduce the processing period of time, a ramp-up or ramp-down area of the carriage


200


may be employed to conduct the preliminary discharge operation.




Also, the carriage


200


may not conduct the discharge operation while the carriage


200


is being scanned as described above. That is, the carriage


200


may be moved not continuously but intermittently so that the preliminary discharge operation is conducted at a stop state in such a manner that after the carriage


200


is moved one by one for each of the nozzle blocks and then stopped above the preliminary discharge port


301


, the preliminary discharge operation is conducted a given number of times.




One blade


303


formed of an elastic material plate which is made of rubber or the like is provided for each of two liquid jet head units


401


. This has the effects of eliminating an adverse affect of a difference in the heights of the nozzle surfaces


401




a


of the two liquid jet head units


401


, and preventing such a drawback that various inks are mixed together in the case where the kinds of inks discharged from those two liquid jet head units


401


are different from each other, as compared with the integral structure. Each of the blades


303


is fixed onto a blade holder


304


, and the blade holder


304


is elastically urged through a blade spring which will be described later upward (in a direction indicated by an arrow A


301


) with respect to a blade shaft


305


integrated with a blade gear


305




a.


Also, because the blade shaft


305


is rotatable in a direction indicated by an arrow A


302


by blade driving means which will be described later, the blade


303


engaged with the blade shaft


305


is rotatable likewise. In addition, the blade holder


304


is integrated with a blade cam


306


, and when the carriage


200


is scanned on the wiping means in a direction indicated by an arrow A


303


, the wiping means is elastically pushed down to a blade rib (not shown) on the carriage


200


, thereby being capable of executing wiping operation while the overlapped amount (hereinafter called “entry amount”) of the blade


303


and the nozzle formation surface of the liquid jet head is ensured with a high precision. With this structure, a stable entry amount can be ensured regardless of an error in the mounting position of the liquid jet head unit


401


and the recovery system unit


300


in the heightwise direction, and the excellent wiping operation can be always executed.




Also, in this embodiment, there are also provided a blade cleaner


307


which will be described later, a cap


308


formed of an elastic member such as rubber, a cap absorber


309


made of a porous material and disposed within the cap


308


, a cap holder


310


that retains the cap


308


, and a cap lever


311


which urges the cap holder


310


through a cap spring not shown in a direction indicated by an arrow A


304


and is vertically movable so as to open or close the cap by a cap level cam which will be described later. The respective conveying directions of the envelope


312


and the continuous sheet (tape)


313


which are printing medium are indicated by arrows A


305


and A


306


. Also, the carriage lock arm


390


is a member which is engaged with a hole (not shown) disposed in the carriage


200


to fix the carriage when capping is conducted, that is, when the cap lever


311


climbs, and to prevent the positions of the liquid jet head unit


401


and the cap


308


from shifting due to an impact. Also, a carriage lock arm


390


can elastically drop in a direction indicated by an arrow A


390


since the carriage lock arm


390


is attached onto the cap lever


311


through a lock spring not shown. For that reason, even if the carriage lock arm


390


is abutted against a portion except for the hole portion of the carriage


200


, the recovery system unit


300


and the carriage


200


are not damaged.




As described above, in this embodiment, since the envelope conveying space, the preliminary discharge port, the wiping means, the capping means, the continuous sheet conveying space are arranged in the stated order for the reasons stated below.




First, the cap


308


will be described. A drawback such as an ink leakage is caused when a foreign substance, a dry ink or the like is attached and deposited onto the close contact surface (normally, the tip surface of the annular rib disposed so as to cover the nozzle train) of the cap


308


with the nozzle surface


401




a


for preventing the ink within the nozzles from being dried or for forcibly discharging the ink from the nozzles through the suction means which will be described later. Also, the main foreign material in the printing apparatus according to the present invention is a fiber foreign material called “paper powder” which is derived from the printing medium which is being conveyed. However, in this embodiment, the paper powder is hardly produced from the continuous sheet, but a large amount of paper powder is produced from the envelope. Also, as to the ink mist, although the mist is flied from the print position, the amount of ink mist flied out from the blade during the wiping operation is remarkably more. For the above reason, in order to minimize the amount of paper powder and the amount of ink which are flied to the cap, the cap


308


is disposed at a position which is the farthest from the envelope print position and to which the ink is not flied from the blade


303


during the wiping operation.




Also, since the blade


303


flies the ink during the wiping operation as described above, in order to prevent the cap


308


as well as the printing medium from being stained, it is necessary that the blade


303


of the wiping means keeps apart from the print position more than a given distance. Therefore, the preliminary discharge port is disposed between envelope conveying space and the wiping means to keep a sufficient space from the print position (envelope conveying space).





FIG. 28

is a diagram showing the structure of the driving system of the recovery system unit


300


.




The driving system is provided with a motor


370


exclusively for driving recovery system fitted to a rotating shaft of which is fitted to a gear, a first double gear


371


for deceleration which is a next-stage gear of the motor


370


, an idler gear


372


which is engaged with the first double gear


371


and rotatable about a pump shaft


373


to which a roller guide which will be described later is fitted as a rotary center, and a pump cam


374


(indicated by oblique lines in the figure) which is fitted to the pump shaft


373


and has a notch portion


374




a


that is engaged with a rib


372




a


formed on the idler gear


372


as well as fitted to the pump shaft


373


. Play is provided between the rib


372




a


and the notch portion


374




a


by a rotating angle of 55°. There are also provided a second double gear


375


which is engaged with the idler gear


372


and a one-way clutch


376


of the gear integral type which generates a fastening torque to a cam shaft to be described later which is its rotating center only when rotating in a direction indicated by an arrow A


380


.





FIG. 29

is a diagram showing the structure of an ink flow path and a valve of the recovery system unit


300


. In this embodiment, there are provided two-system flow paths to two liquid jet head units


401


. However, for simplification of a description,

FIG. 29

shows only a one-system flow path for one liquid jet head unit


401


.




In this embodiment, a preliminary discharge valve


321


, an atmosphere communication valve


322


, a suction valve


323


and negative pressure generating means (a tube pump


324


in this embodiment) for generating a negative pressure when the liquid jet head unit


401


is sucked and recovered are provided in correspondence with the liquid jet head unit


401


.




First, a state of the valve in the case of executing a preliminary discharge port idle suction process for collecting the ink discharged through the preliminary discharge process will be described. The preliminary discharge operation is executed while the liquid jet head unit


401


is moving from


401


A to


401


B. Thereafter, only the preliminary discharge valve


321


is opened, two other valves


322


and


323


are closed, and the tube pump


324


is driven by the above-described driving system, to thereby generate a negative pressure within the tube. With the above operation, the ink reserved within the preliminary discharge port


301


passes through the preliminary discharge tube


364


and the pump tube


325


, and is discharged in a direction indicated by an arrow A


307


before being supplied to waste ink processing means not shown.




Subsequently, the state of the valve at the time of executing the suction recovery process will be described. In

FIG. 29

, the cap


308


is isolated from the liquid jet head


401


, but in fact, the suction recovery process is executed in a state where a cap lever cam


350


which will be described later is driven to elevate the cap lever


311


which urges the cap


308


, and the cap


308


is elastically brought in close contact with the nozzle surface


401




a


of the liquid jet head unit


401


so that the nozzle train is covered with the cap


308


. After the tube pump


324


is operated in a state where the preliminary discharge valve


321


, the atmosphere communication valve


322


and the suction valve


323


are closed, only the suction valve


323


is opened and a pressure within the cap


308


is momentarily reduced, to thereby suck the ink within the cap


308


. In the idle sucking operation conducted for collecting the ink inside of the cap


308


, the cap tube


338


, the pump tube


325


and so on, after the atmosphere communication value


322


and the suction valve


323


are opened in a state the cap


308


is brought in close contact with the liquid jet head unit


401


, coming to a state where an air is taken from the atmosphere communication tube


339


, the tube pump


324


is actuated.




Subsequently, the mechanism of the tube pump


324


will be described with reference to

FIGS. 30 and 31

.




The roller guide


327


is provided with two rollers


326


so that those two rollers


326


are rotatable with a phase shift of 180°. Also, the roller guide


327


is formed with grooves


327




a


into which shaft portions


326




a


disposed on both ends of the rollers


326


are inserted, and each of the rollers


326


is movable along the groove


327




a.


Then, each of the rollers


326


can crush and squeeze the pump tube


325


made of silicon while the roller


326


is rotating. A roller damper


328


is formed of an elastic member such as rubber.





FIG. 30

shows a state in which the tube pump


324


is actuated to generate a negative pressure. The roller


326


drawn to one end portion of the groove


327




a


is moved to the most outer periphery and rotates while crushing the pump tube


325


and squeezes the pump tube


325


. Each of the roller dampers


328


draws the roller


326


to one end portion of the groove


327




a


out of a pump tube crush area A


308


. Because those two rollers


326


have the phase shift of 180° and the tube guide


392


is disposed in an area of 180° or more as indicated by A


308


, the tube pump


324


always continues to generate the negative pressure continuously while the roller guide


327


is rotating in a direction indicated by an arrow A


309


.





FIG. 31

is a diagram showing the operation in the case where the roller guide


327


is rotated in an opposite direction to that in

FIG. 30

(in a direction indicated by an arrow A


310


). In this case, the roller


326


is drawn to another end portion of the groove


327




a


in the opposite direction to that in

FIG. 30

due to a load produced when the roller


326


interferes with the pump tube


235


and the roller damper


328


, and the roller


326


escapes toward the rotary center direction of the roller guide


327


. In the state, in fact, the roller


326


idles without crushing the pump tube


325


. Therefore, no negative pressure is produced, and the pump tube


325


is not crushed and does not creep with no anxiety. Accordingly, it is desirable that the printing apparatus is kept in that state at the time of power. off or printing standby where the printing operation may suspend for a long period of time. In order to surely shift from the state shown in

FIG. 30

to the state shown in

FIG. 31

, the rotation angle of 40° is required in the structure of this embodiment.




Subsequently, the structure of the valve mechanism will be described with reference to

FIGS. 32

to


34


.




First, the preliminary discharge valve


321


will be described with reference to FIG.


32


. In this embodiment, there are provided a preliminary discharge valve cam


330


that controls the open/close operation of the preliminary discharge valve


321


, a valve holder


331


that is installed with all of valves, a preliminary discharge valve rubber


332


which is formed of a diaphragm valve made of an elastic material such as rubber, a valve shaft


333




a


which is engaged with the preliminary discharge valve rubber


332


or a suction valve rubber


342


which will be described later, a first valve arm


334




a


which is engaged with the valve shaft


333




a,


a cam follower


335




a


which is abutted against the first valve arm


334




a


and the preliminary discharge valve cam


330


or a suction valve cam


341


which will be described later, a first valve arm spring


336




a


that urges the first valve arm


334




a


toward the preliminary discharge valve cam


332


or the suction valve cam


341


, and a valve tube


337


that forms an ink flow path extending from the preliminary discharge valve


321


to a suction valve


323


which will be described later.




In

FIG. 32

, the preliminary discharge valve rubber


332


is positioned within the valve holder


331


, and a state in which a flow path connecting between the preliminary discharge tube


364


and the valve tube


337


is closed is indicated by solid lines. When the preliminary discharge valve cam


330


rotates in a direction indicated by A


311


and the first valve arm


334




a


rotates up to a state indicated by alternate long and two short dashes lines from the above state, the valve shaft


333




a


is moved up to a position indicated by the alternate long and two short dashes lines, the preliminary discharge valve


321


is opened, and the flow path between the preliminary discharge tube


364


and the valve tube


337


is opened.




In

FIG. 32

, reference numerals to the end of which “a” is added represent members used for the preliminary discharge valve mechanism in the respective members, and in

FIG. 33

, reference numerals to the end of which “b” is added represent members used for the suction valve mechanism in the respective members. However, although only the portions for which the respective members are used are different, their functions and configurations are identical and therefore their description will be omitted.





FIG. 33

is a diagram showing the operation of the suction valve


323


. In this embodiment, there are provided a suction valve cam


341


that controls the operation of the suction valve


323


, a suction valve rubber


342


which is formed of a diaphragm valve made of an elastic material such as rubber, and a cap tube


338


that forms an ink flow path extending from the cap


308


to the valve holder


331


.




In

FIG. 33

, a state in which the suction valve


323


is closed is indicated by solid lines, and the cap tube


328


and the valve tube


337


are closed by the same structure as that of the above-described preliminary discharge valve


321


. When the suction valve cam


341


rotates in a direction indicated by A


312


and the first valve arm


334




b


rotates up to a state indicated by alternate long and two short dashes lines, the valve shaft


333




b


is moved up to a position indicated by the alternate long and two short dashes lines, the suction valve


323


is opened, and the flow path between the cap tube


338


and the valve tube


337


is communicated.





FIG. 34

is a diagram showing the operation of the atmosphere communication valve


322


. In this embodiment, there are provided an atmosphere communication valve cam


343


that controls the operation of the atmosphere communication valve


322


, an atmosphere communication valve rubber


344


which is made of an elastic material such as rubber, and a second valve arm spring


346


that urges the second valve arm


345


and the second valve arm toward the atmosphere communication valve.




In

FIG. 34

, a state in which the atmosphere communication valve


322


is closed is indicated by solid lines. When the atmosphere communication valve cam


343


rotates in a direction indicated by A


313


and the second valve arm


345


rotates up to a state indicated by alternate long and two short dashes lines, the atmosphere communication tube


339


is opened to the atmosphere.




The atmosphere communication valve


322


is different from the above-described preliminary discharge valve


321


and suction valve


323


, and the atmosphere communication tubes


339


connected to the two-system ink flow paths, that is, two caps


308


are collected into one tube by a joint member not shown and connected to the atmosphere communication valve rubber


344


. Therefore, one valve mechanism may be provided for two caps


308


.





FIG. 35

is a cross-sectional view of the cap


308


. The cap


308


is equipped with a connecting portion


347


to the atmosphere communication tube


339


and a connecting portion


348


to the cap tube


338


.





FIGS. 36 and 37

are diagrams showing the vertical operation of the cap


308


in which

FIG. 36

is a diagram showing a cap open, that is, a state in which the cap


308


most drops whereas

FIG. 37

is a diagram showing a cap close, that is, a state in which the cap


308


most climbs.




In this embodiment, there are provided a cap lever cam


350


, and a cam follower


311




a


integrated with the cap lever


311


for the cap lever cam


350


. As is apparent from

FIGS. 36 and 37

, since the cap lever cam


350


rotates and stops at a given position, the abutment and isolation of the cap


308


with respect to the nozzle surface


401




a


can be controlled. A cap spring hung between the cap holder


310


and the cap lever


311


is omitted from the figures. Also, because the cap lever cam


350


and the cam follower


311




a


of the cap lever


311


are so shaped as to be not only abutted against each other, but also engaged with each other, even if the cap


308


and the liquid jet head unit


401


adhere to each other due to the ink fixing, etc., the cap lever cam


350


and the cam follower


311




a


can be separated from each other.




Subsequently, the operation of the wiping means will be described with reference to

FIGS. 38 and 39

. The wiping means is equipped with a blade intermittent gear


351


which is engaged with a blade gear


305


, a blade trigger gear


352


which is engaged with the blade intermittent gear


351


, a blade cleaner


307


and a blade spring


353


. The carriage


200


is provided with a blade rib.




In the wiping operation, when the carriage


200


comes to a position indicated by solid lines in

FIG. 39

from a state shown in

FIG. 38

which is a blade retreat state, the blade cam


306


is rotated up to a position shown in

FIG. 39

in a direction indicated by an arrow A


314


so that a leading edge of the blade


303


is directed upward, resulting in a wiping standby state. Then, the carriage


200


is moved at a given speed in a direction indicated by an arrow A


315


, and the wiping operation is executed. In this situation, the blade cam


306


is pushed down by a blade rib on the carriage


200


, and the wiping means moves down to a position indicated by alternate long and two short dashes lines in FIG.


39


. The blade holder


304


and the blade


303


which move down are urged upward by the blade spring


353


, and the wiping operation is executed while the blade cam


306


is sliding in contact with the blade rib. With the above operation, the blade entry amount A


316


is ensured with a high precision, and the excellent wiping operation can be always stably executed. When the nozzle surface


401




a


of the liquid jet head unit


401


is made apart from the blade


303


, the wiping operation is terminated. Subsequently, after the wiping means starts to rotate again and the blade


303


scraps the attached ink off by the blade cleaner


307


, the wiping means stops in a state shown in FIG.


38


. In this example, the interference amount A


317


of the blade cleaner


307


with the blade


303


is larger than the entry amount A


316


, and the ink attached onto the blade


303


is removed.




The blade cleaner


307


is located at a position where the ink flied from the blade


303


during the blade cleaning operation is not flied to a member which dislikes the ink attachment such as the cap


308


, for example, located below the blade


303


in this embodiment. Also, the blade cleaner


307


serves as a vessel that reserves the scrapped-off ink and can be readily replaced as occasion demands. Accordingly, in the case of conducting so-called wet wiping operation, etc., where the wiping operation is conducted while the dry ink attached onto the blade


303


is again resolved, or the discharge operation is conducted when an ink high in viscosity such as pigment is mainly used, the ink that drops from the blade


303


can be collected without going round to another portion within the apparatus.




In addition, for example, in the case where it is difficult to replace the blade cleaner by a fresh one because the amount of ink reserved within the blade cleaner


307


is large, as shown in

FIGS. 40 and 41

, a cleaner tube


397


connected to the pump tube


325


is connected to the bottom surface of the vessel portion of the blade cleaner


307


, the sucking operation is conducted as occasion demands, and the ink absorbed and retained in the cleaner absorber


398


disposed within the blade cleaner


307


is appropriately collected and discharged to the waste ink processing means. According to the above structure, there is no case in which the user is troubled about a treatment of the ink reserved within the blade cleaner


307


within the product lifetime. Although the description of the valve mechanism in this case will be omitted, the structure is identical with that shown in

FIG. 32

, and if the cleaner valve


399


is opened in a state where the suction valve


323


and the preliminary discharge valve


321


are closed, and the pump is actuated, the ink within the blade cleaner


307


can be collected.




Subsequently, the driving system of the wiping means will be described. In

FIG. 38

, the driving system is structured in such a manner that teeth


354


indicated by meshes among teeth of the blade intermittent gear


351


are meshed with only the teeth


354


indicated by meshes among teeth of the blade trigger gear


352


, and teeth


355


indicated by no mesh among teeth of the blade intermittent gear


351


are meshed with only the teeth


355


indicated by no mesh among teeth of the blade trigger gear


352


.




Accordingly, for the duration that a disc portion of the blade trigger gear


353


which almost occupied by the teeth indicated by no mesh is meshed with the blade intermittent gear


351


, the blade intermittent gear


351


stops and cannot rotate, and the wiping means stops in a state where the blade


303


is directed downward, that is, in a non-actuating state. When the blade trigger gear


352


rotates, those gears are meshed with each other, and the wiping means rotates in a direction indicated by an arrow A


314


as shown in FIG.


39


and again returns to the state shown in FIG.


38


.




In this embodiment, the blade trigger gear


352


, the preliminary discharge valve cam


330


, the suction valve cam


341


and the cap lever cam


350


are fixed to the same axis (hereinafter referred to as “cam shaft”). The blade intermittent gear


351


is meshed with the blade trigger gear


352


and rotates only when the rotation angle is 45° at a given phase while the blade trigger gear


352


is rotating by 360°. The blade gear has a speed increasing ratio eight times as large as that of the blade trigger gear


352


. That is, the wiping means continuously rotates by 360° while the cam shaft rotates by 45° in a certain phase among the 360° rotation, and the wiping means stops in a state where the leading edge of the blade


303


is directed downward while the cam shaft rotates by the remaining 315°. Thus, because the wiping means always keeps in the stop state in the operation except for the wiring operation, and the wiping surface (a surface abutted against the nozzle formation) is directed in an opposite direction of the envelope conveying space and the preliminary discharge area, the attachment of the flied paper powder or ink mist, or other dusts, etc., can be suppressed to the minimum.




The driving mechanism of the recovery system unit


300


is structured in such a manner that the idling region is provided in the gear train by the phase angle 55° of the roller guide


327


as described above, and the roller guide


327


starts to rotate with a delay of the phase angle 55° when the rotating direction is reversed. The driving force is not transmitted to the cam shaft when the tube pump


324


is driven in a direction along which the negative pressure is generated because the driving force is transmitted to the cam shaft through the one-way clutch.




Subsequently, the sequential processing operation of the recovery system unit


300


will be described with reference to

FIG. 42

showing the cam shaft and

FIGS. 43

to


47


showing flow charts. The circled numerals in the following description represent cam positions indicated in FIG.


42


.




First, the operation of the recovery system unit


300


during the printing operation will be described. When a print instruction is issued in step S


301


, the motor starts to rotate counterclockwise in

FIG. 28

in step S


302


, and rotates the cam shaft so as to open the cap


308


into a state (1).




Then, in order to conduct the preliminary discharge operation, the preliminary discharge process shown in

FIG. 44

is executed. In the preliminary discharge process, the carriage


200


is moved up to a preliminary discharge standby position in step S


321


, and subsequently in Step


322


, the flow preliminary discharge operation is sequentially executed from the nozzle block at a side close to the blade


303


. When the preliminary discharge operation is completed in all of the nozzles, the discharge operation and the movement of the carriage


200


stop, and the preliminary discharge process is terminated. The ink may not always be discharged in the flow preliminary discharge operation while the carriage


200


is being scanned as described above, but the ink may be discharged in a state where the carriage


200


stops while the carriage


200


intermittently stops to be scanned.




Then, the carriage


200


is moved to any print position of the envelope or the continuous sheet (tape) in step S


304


, and the count starts after a timer T is reset in step S


305


. In step S


306


, corresponding to the print information, the ink is discharged toward the conveyed printing medium to conduct the printing operation. If no print instruction is issued in step S


307


, the operation is advanced to step S


311


. On the contrary, if a print instruction is issued in step S


307


, the timer T is referred to in step S


308


. In this situation, if the timer T is equal to or shorter than 60 sec, the operation is returned to the step S


306


to again conduct the printing operation. However, if the timer T is longer than 60 sec, the wiping process shown in

FIG. 45

is executed in order to wipe off the ink attached onto the nozzle surface


401




a


in step S


309


.




During the wiping process, the carriage


200


is moved up to the wiping standby position in step S


331


. Subsequently, the motor is rotated counterclockwise in step S


332


and moved from the state (1) to a state (2), that is, from a state where the leading edge of the blade


303


is directed downward (refer to

FIG. 38

) to a state where the leading edge of the blade


303


is directed upward which is a state where the wiping operation is enabled (refer to FIG.


39


). Then, the wiping operation is executed by scanning the carriage


200


in step S


333


. The carriage scanning speed at this time is not always kept constant, but may be changed, for example, in accordance with the kind of ink. After the entire area of the nozzle surface


401




a


of the liquid jet head unit


401


has been wiped off by the blade


303


, the carriage


200


stops and the motor is rotated counterclockwise to bring the wiping means in a state (3), that is, the blade


303


is directed downward and enclosed in step S


334


, thus completing the wiping operation.




Then, in order to discharge a dry ink, a different kind of ink, etc., which may be pushed into the nozzles through the wiping process, the preliminary discharge process is executed in step S


310


. When the print instruction is interrupted, after the wiping process is executed as the completing operation of printing to remove the ink from the nozzle surface


401




a


in step S


311


, a preliminary discharge idle sucking operation shown in

FIG. 46

is executed in order to discharge the ink reserved within the preliminary discharge port to the waste ink processing means not shown in step S


312


.




In step S


341


, the motor is rotated counterclockwise and brought into the state (3). Then, in step S


342


, the motor is rotated clockwise by a given rotation angle to drive the pump, and the ink within the preliminary discharge port is discharged to the waste ink absorber through the pump tube


325


to complete the preliminary discharge port idle sucking process. The given rotation angle means an angle at which the amount of ink which remains within the preliminary discharge port or the tube can be surely reduced down to an amount which does not give a trouble to the liquid jet head unit


401


or the recovery system unit


300


.




Then, the carriage


200


is moved to the home position S, that is, the capping position in step S


313


, and the motor is rotated counterclockwise into a state (4), that is, a capping state in step S


314


, thus completing the printing operation. The rotation angle in this situation is 100°, and therefore the rotation angle is larger than a total angle of the delay angle 55° of the pumping operation and the rotation angle 40° required to change from a state where the roller


326


crushes the pump tube


325


to a state where the roller


326


releases the pump tube


325


, and the pump at the standby time (capping time) is in a state shown in FIG.


31


.




Subsequently, a description will be given of a suction recovery process executed automatically or manually in the case where because the liquid jet head unit


401


is not used for a long period of time, the ink within the nozzles is fixed or bubbles are mixed in the ink so that the discharge operation is not conducted, etc.




First, when a suction recovery instruction is received in step S


361


, the state of the printing apparatus is detected in step S


362


. In this situation, if the capping operation is conducted in a state where the printing apparatus is in a standby state, that is, in a state (4), the operation is advanced to step S


364


. If not so, the operation is advanced to Step


363


to execute the wiping process, and thereafter the capping operation is executed so that the printing apparatus is in the state (4) in step S


364


, and also the motor is rotated counterclockwise so that the printing apparatus is in a state (5) where all of the valves are closed. Then, in step S


365


, the motor is rotated counterclockwise to drive the pump, and the pressures within the tubes extending from three kinds of valves (five in total) to the pumps (two in total) are reduced down to a given value. Then, in step S


366


, the motor is rotated counterclockwise so that the printing apparatus is in a state (6), and only the suction valve is opened to exert the negative pressure on the interior of the cap. In this situation, the pump driving system is going to rotate the pump by 45° in a direction of A


310


until the state changes from the state (5) to the state (6). However, as described above, since the rotation angle of 55° or less is in the idle region where the roller guide does not rotate, the pump is not driven and therefore a state in which the pump tube


325


is crushed and closed by the roller


326


is kept.




If a given amount of ink necessary to remove the dry ink, the bubbles or the like within the nozzles can be sucked, the sucking operation may be terminated. However, in this embodiment, additional sucking operation is conducted assuming that the amount of suction is short. In step S


367


, the motor is again rotated clockwise to actuate the pump so that the negative pressure is generated, thus conducting the sucking operation. After the amount of suction reaches a given value, in order that the motor is rotated counterclockwise in step S


368


to open the atmosphere communication value, the state is changed to a state (7), and the cap


308


is opened to the atmosphere to stop the suction.




Subsequently, the motor is rotated clockwise to actuate the pump in step S


369


so that the ink within the cap


308


, the atmosphere communication tube


339


, the cap tube


338


and the pump tube


325


is discharged to the waste ink processing means. Then, the motor is rotated counterclockwise to open the cap, that is, to change the state to the state (1) in step S


370


, the wiping process is executed in step S


371


, the preliminary discharge process is executed in step S


372


and the preliminary discharge idle sucking process is executed in step S


373


. Finally, after the carriage


200


is moved to the home position S in step S


374


, the motor is rotated counterclockwise to conduct the capping operation in step S


375


, thus completing the suction recovery process.




The cap cam sensor shown in

FIG. 42

is a sensor which is made up of a photo interrupter having a cap cam not shown fitted to a cam shaft as a flag and can detect a phase of the cam or the like fitted to the cam shaft according to the detected result. In this example, the detection timing of the cap cam sensor is set immediately before the cap is opened and closed for the following reasons. That is, there is the possibility that when the cap is opened, a force of rotating the cap lever cam


350


counterclockwise in

FIG. 36

is exerted on the cam follower


311




a


integrated with the cap lever


311


due to the cap spring having a spring force of about 800 gf in total in this embodiment, with the result that the cap lever cam


350


overruns in a direction along which the one-way clutch idles to produce a phase shift. On the contrary, when the cap is closed, there is a risk that the largest load is exerted on the cam shaft, and the motor for driving the recovery system unit which is made up of a stepping motor is stepped out. The above detection timing is set in order to correct the phase shift produced for the above reasons to always control the cam in a correct phase.




[Liquid Jet Head Unit]





FIGS. 20

,


48


to


50


are diagrams showing the structure of the liquid jet head unit


401


, and

FIGS. 20

,


48


and


49


are perspective views of the appearance of the liquid jet head unit


401


, and

FIG. 50

is a partially cross-sectional view of the liquid jet head unit


401


.




The liquid jet head unit


401


according to this embodiment is made up of a liquid droplet discharge member (this is a so-called liquid jet head, and hereinafter referred to as “head chip”)


402


which discharges a droplet from the nozzle train where the discharge ports (nozzles) which discharge the droplet are aligned in accordance with a print signal, a sheet wiring member


403


such as a flexible cable or TAB where an electric wiring that receives or transmits the print signal transmitted between the liquid jet head unit


401


and the printing machine main body are disposed, a unit frame


404


which has an ink reservoir chamber for reserving a liquid. such as the ink which is supplied to the head chip


402


and retains the head chip


402


, etc.




The head chip


402


is fixed to the unit frame


404


, for example, by welding a positioning boss


404




a,


a vis


451


, or the like so that the head chip


402


and the unit frame


404


can be readily dissembled.




A second common liquid chamber


405


that can receive a desired amount of ink is disposed in the interior of the unit frame


404


, and the ink reserved in a second common liquid chamber


405


is supplied to the head chip


402


and then supplied to the nozzle portion through an ink passage of a chip tank


603


which will be described later, and a first common liquid chamber


605




a


of a roof


605


.




The grip


406


disposed above the liquid jet head unit


401


is a clue to the attachment or detachment of the liquid jet head unit


401


with respect to the carriage


200


.




Positioning portion groups


408


to


411


are so designed as to mount the liquid jet head unit


401


at a given position within the carriage


200


, and includes a columnar guide pin


408


disposed on a bottom surface of the liquid jet head unit


401


and a spherical projection


409


disposed on the depth surface of the liquid jet head unit


401


. The center of the spherical projection


409


is provided on the extension of a center line of a columnar portion of the guide pin


408


. When an inner columnar wall


408




a


of the guide pin


408


and the spherical projection


409


are abutted against given positions of the carriage


200


, respectively, the liquid jet head unit


401


is vertically positioned with respect to the printing medium. A tapered surface


408




b


of the tip portion of the guide pin


408


is a guide for inserting the guide pin


408


into a given position.




Also, when spherical projections


410


disposed on the bottom surface of the liquid jet head unit


401


are abutted against given positions of the carriage


200


, the liquid jet head unit


401


is positioned in the heightwise direction.




Also, the carriage


200


is positioned in a direction of the side surface and the liquid jet head unit


401


(and the discharge port train) is positioned in an inclination direction, by a trapezoidal projection


411


disposed on the side surface of the liquid jet head unit


401


. That is, the amount of inclination with a straight line that connects the center of the guide pin


408


and the center of the spherical projection


409


as a fulcrum is changed with a variation in the height of the trapezoidal projection


411


.




The columnar protrusion


415


disposed on the side surface of the liquid jet head unit


401


is an insertion guide for forcibly inclining the liquid jet head unit


401


when the liquid jet head unit


401


is inserted into the carriage


200


and so adapted as to guide the tip portion of the guide pin


408


to a given position by inclining the liquid jet head unit


401


.




When the tip portion of the CR needle


222


penetrates a front surface of the joint rubber


416


into the second common liquid chamber


405


, the ink is supplied to the second liquid chamber


405


from the main tank


501


connected to the CR needle


222


by connecting means such as a tube.




The joint rubber


416


has a closed hole


416




b


formed by allowing a needle-shaped member to penetrate from the surface side


416




a


to an opposed surface side, and the joint rubber


416


is inserted into a hole portion formed with an inner diameter smaller than the outer diameter of the joint rubber


416


under pressure. Because the closed hole


416




b


receives a compressive load from the outer peripheral portion of the joint rubber


416


by the above pressure insertion, the interior of the second common liquid chamber


405


can be kept in a sealing state when the CR needle


222


is not inserted. Then, when the CR needle


222


is inserted, since a gripping force (a compressive force from the outer peripheral portion) is exerted on the CR needle


222


, the joint portion can be completely sealed except for the hollow portion of the CR needle


222


.




Two upper and lower joint rubbers


416


are disposed, and the lower joint rubber


416


is a supply path for supplying the ink from the main tank


501


, and the ink is supplied to the second common liquid chamber


405


through the lower CR needle


222


and the hole


404




b.


On the other hand, the upper joint rubber


416


is a suction path for controlling a negative force within the liquid chamber by discharging the air reserved in the second common liquid chamber


405


to the external of the liquid chamber, and the ink is discharged to the external of the second common liquid chamber


405


through the hole


404




c


and the upper CR needle


222


by driving means for suction such as a pump.




Also, if the negative force within the second common liquid chamber


405


is increased due to the suction path, the ink supply within the second common liquid chamber


405


can be controlled.




An inclined receiving surface


417


is a portion that receives a load exerted on the liquid jet head unit


401


from the carriage


200


, and when the inclined receiving surface


417


receives the load, partial forces are produced in a direction indicated by an arrow Z and in a direction indicated by an arrow Y by the inclined configuration, and the liquid jet head unit


401


is pressed toward two directions.




A contact pad


421


is so adapted as to receive and send a print signal transmitted between the head chip


402


and the printing machine main body.




[Chip Structure]




Subsequently, the structure of the above-described liquid jet head unit


401


will be described in more detail.

FIG. 63

is a perspective view showing the liquid jet head unit


401


in accordance with this embodiment,

FIG. 64

is a perspective view of the liquid jet head unit


401


viewed from another direction, and

FIG. 65

is a longitudinal cross-sectional view of the liquid jet head unit


401


. Also,

FIG. 66

is a perspective view showing the liquid jet head unit


401


shown in

FIG. 63

in a state where parts of the chip tank


603


and the second common liquid chamber


405


are broken, and

FIG. 67

is an enlarged cross-sectional view showing a connecting portion of the chip tank


603


and the second common liquid chamber


405


.




The head chip


402


of the liquid jet head unit


401


according to this embodiment is structured in such a manner that an element board


604


on which a discharge energy generating element tray (not shown) which gives a discharge energy to the print liquid (ink or the like) is disposed for the flow paths, a roof


605


that is opposed to the discharge energy generating element tray and forms a flow path and a chip tank


603


which is a supply member that supplies the print liquid to the flow path are fitted onto a reference member


602


in a state where the respective members are relatively positioned. In addition, the unit frame


404


of the liquid jet head unit


401


includes a connecting portion for sending the supply liquid to the chip tank


603


, a connecting portion for escaping an air within the liquid chamber and a second common liquid chamber


405


for reserving the print liquid temporarily or until the print liquid is completely consumed. Also, the chip tank


603


of the head chip


402


is fitted with a porous member


606


having fine holes which is positioned at a boundary portion of the chip tank


603


and the second common liquid chamber


405


, and traps impurities within the print liquid. A connecting portion of the second common liquid chamber


405


and the chip tank


603


is filled with a filler


607


made of silicon rubber or the like.




Now, the structures of the above respective members will be described in more detail.




The second common liquid chamber


405


serves as a buffer that reserves the print liquid, and when the print liquid is consumed by the discharging operation, the print liquid is appropriately supplied from the second common liquid chamber


405


to the first common liquid chamber


605




a


made up of the roof


605


and the element board


604


(refer to FIG.


67


). Also, the second common liquid chamber


405


includes a connecting portion for receiving the print liquid from another print liquid reserving tank provided separately and a connecting portion for escaping the air within the liquid chamber to the external.




The chip tank


603


functions as a flow path that appropriately supplies the print liquid to the first common liquid chamber


605




a


(refer to

FIG. 67

) from the second common liquid chamber


405


.




The porous member


606


exists between the second common liquid chamber


405


and the chip tank


603


and traps the impurities or the like within the print liquid. In this embodiment, the porous member


606


is joined to the chip tank


603


by welding. For that reason, a gas is prevented from entering the flow path from the connecting portion of the chip tank


603


and the porous member


606


.




As shown in

FIG. 67

, the chip tank


603


and the roof


605


are joined to each other in a state where the print liquid supply path


603




a


of the chip tank


603


communicates with the print liquid supply port


605




b


of the roof


605


. The joint of the chip tank


603


and the roof


605


is conducted by fitting both of the joint surfaces to each other under pressure, and the periphery of the joint surface is complementarily sealed with a filler (not shown).




Also, as described above, a portion between the chip tank


603


and the second common liquid chamber


405


is filled with a filler


607


on the entire periphery thereof and the water-tightness of the interior of the second common liquid chamber


405


to the chip tank


603


is ensured. However, because the filler


607


is made of silicon rubber having a gas permeability or the like, the outside air can transmit the filler


607


so as to enter the second common liquid chamber


405


. The gas that has entered the second common liquid chamber


405


ascends within the second common liquid chamber


405


due to a buoyancy and stays in a gas layer on the upper portion of the liquid chamber. Then, the gas is finally discharged to the external through the connecting portion (not shown) which escapes the gas within the second common liquid chamber


405


to the external.




In this embodiment, the connecting portion of the chip tank


603


and the second common liquid chamber


405


is disposed upstream side of the porous member


606


with respect to the flow direction of the print liquid. For that reason, the gas that has transmitted the filler


607


does not enter the chip tank


603


downstream side of the porous member


606


. Also, in the second common liquid chamber


405


, even if a part of print liquid is solidified by drying or the like to produce a solid matter, the solid matter can be trapped by the porous member


606


.




With the above structure, since the gas that enters the flow path downstream side of the porous member


606


, that is, from the print liquid supply path


603




a


to the nozzles of the head chip


402


can be reduced, an adverse influence of the existence of the gas in the flow path downstream side of the porous member


606


on the liquid jet performance can be reduced. Also, since the gas that exists in the flow path downstream side of the porous member


606


is reduced, the recovery operation conducted when the liquid jet head which has been left for a long period of time starts to be used can be simplified. For that reason, the amount of print liquid sucked and dumped in the recovery operation is reduced, and the application efficiency of the print liquid can be improved.





FIG. 68

is a perspective view showing only the head chip


402


of the liquid head unit


401


shown in

FIG. 63

(a state where the unit frame


404


is omitted).

FIG. 69

is a cross-sectional view of the head chip


402


.




As shown in

FIG. 68

, a sectional area perpendicular to the flow direction of the connecting portion of the chip tank


603


to the second common liquid chamber


405


(refer to

FIG. 63

, etc.) at the flow path upstream side of the porous member


606


, that is, at the second common liquid chamber


405


(refer to

FIG. 63

, etc.) is the maximum sectional area among the sectional areas perpendicular to the flow path direction of the print liquid supply path


603




a.






Also, the porous member


606


is disposed obliquely with respect to the liquid flow direction of the print liquid supply path


603




a


of the chip tank


603


. For that reason, the area of the porous member


606


is larger than the sectional area perpendicular to the flow path direction which is in the vicinity of the connecting portion of the chip tank


603


and the second common liquid chamber


405


. In this embodiment, the area of the porous member


606


is about 20 times as large as the minimum sectional area of the print liquid supply path


603




a.






According to the porous member


606


disposed as described above, the bubbles which are produced during the liquid discharge operation and ascends in the print liquid supply path


603




a


is trapped at the upper side (upstream side of the flow path) of the porous member


606


disposed obliquely. On the other hand, since the lower side (downstream side of the flow path) of the porous member


606


disposed obliquely is always in contact with the print liquid, the print liquid that flows to the print liquid supply path


603




a


of the chip tank


603


from the second common liquid chamber


405


through the porous member


606


does not stop to flow. Therefore, the print liquid of a constant flow amount necessary for discharging the liquid is supplied to the head chip


402


.




Subsequently, a flow of bubbles in the print liquid supply path


603




a


of the chip tank


603


will be described with reference to

FIGS. 70A

to


70


C.




As shown in

FIGS. 70A

, bubbles


608




a


generated in the flow path by the discharge operation ascend in the print liquid supply path


603




a.


In this situation, the bubbles


608




a


do not yet reach the porous member


606


. For that reason, since the entire area of the lower side of the porous member


606


is in contact with the print liquid, a sufficient flow path area is ensured, and a flow


608




b


of the print liquid from the second common liquid chamber


405


to the print liquid supply path


603




a


of the chip tank


603


through the porous member


606


is smooth.




In addition, as shown in

FIG. 70B

, the ascending bubbles


608




a


reach the porous member


606


. Because the bubbles


608




a


cannot pass through the porous member


606


due to the surface tension, the bubbles


608




a


stay on the lower surface side of the porous member


606


. Similarly, in this case, since the bubbles


608




a


do not cover the entire lower surface of the porous member


606


, and the bubbles


608




a


do not grow to the degree that the bubbles


608




a


close the entire sectional area of the print liquid supply path


603




a,


a sufficient flow path area is ensured and the flow


608




b


of the print liquid is ensured.




As shown in

FIG. 70C

, the bubbles


608




a


that stay on the lower surface side of the porous member


606


move upward along the porous member


606


disposed obliquely with respect to the liquid flow direction of the print liquid supply path


603




a


and stay there. The print liquid flow path downstream side of the porous member


606


is ensured until the bubbles


608




a


cover the entire surface of the porous member


606


, and the flow


608




b


of the print liquid is ensured until that time. In this embodiment, because the porous member


606


has an area about 20 times as large as the print liquid supply path, the flow of the print liquid is ensured for a corresponding period of time. In addition, the bubbles


608




a


that stay on the lower surface of the porous member


606


can be removed by appropriately conducting the recovery sucking operation.




A ratio of the flow path sectional area of a portion of the print liquid supply path


603




a


to which the porous member


606


is attached to the area of the porous member


606


can be selectively determined by changing an angle at which the porous member


606


is attached to the print liquid supply path


603




a.






If the horizontal direction is 0°, when the attaching angle of the porous member


606


is set to 30°, the area of the porous member


606


is slightly larger than about 1.1 times of the flow path sectional area of the portion to which the porous member


606


is attached, when the attaching angle is 45°, the former is slightly larger than about 1.4 times of the latter, and when the attaching angle is 60°, the former is slightly larger than about 1.7 times of the latter. The ratio of area is decided by the outer diameter of the liquid jet head unit


401


or the assembling property adaptive to the structure, etc.




In the case where the porous member


606


is disposed perpendicularly to the gas ascending direction (the liquid flow direction of the print liquid supply path


603




a


), the bubbles


608




a


are liable to stay in the center of the print liquid supply path


603




a


on the lower surface side of the porous member


606


. The bubbles


608




a


that stay there expands in the horizontal direction and are liable to close the flow path of the lower surface side of the porous member


606


if the bubbles


608




a


further grow. However, if the porous member


606


is obliquely arranged as described above, the bubbles that reach the porous member


606


stay above the print liquid supply path and do not expand in the horizontal direction even if the bubbles further grow. For that reason, the flow


608




b


of the print liquid is liable to be ensured on the lower side of the porous member


606


. Accordingly, the recovery operation for ensuring the print liquid flow path can be reduced, and a reduction in the efficiency of the print liquid application and a reduction in the recording speed by conducting the recovery operation can be prevented.




In addition, in the case where the porous member


606


is obliquely arranged, the connecting portion of the chip tank


603


and the second common liquid chamber


405


is also oblique. For that reason, when the filler


607


with which the connecting portion is filled is injected from the upper side of the connection, since the filler


607


can smoothly flow in the connecting portion, the productivity of the liquid jet head is improved.




[Ink Tank Portion]





FIG. 5

is an exploded perspective view showing an ink cartridge in accordance with the first embodiment of the present invention. An ink reserving chamber is made up of an ink container


511


and a cap


512


of the ink container


511


. The ink container


511


is formed by the blow molding manner is equipped with a handle


511




a


for assisting the attachment or detachment of the ink cartridge with respect to the printing machine main body. In addition, a side surface of the ink container


511


is recessed to provide a space


523


to which a label for product identification is stuck.




The cap


512


is attached onto a housing


521


located on the ink container


511


by ultrasonic welding. Housings


522


that form communication ports, respectively, are disposed on the cap


512


, and a dome-shaped elastic member (rubber stopper)


513


is assembled into each of the housings


522


, and a crest


514


is assembled into each of the housings


522


as a fixing member. With this structure, connecting portions for ink circulation, etc., with the printing machine main body are formed, to thereby constitute an integral ink tank, that is, an ink cartridge.




The ink cartridge (liquid container) will be described in more detail.





FIG. 71

shows a cross-sectional view of the ink cartridge.

FIG. 72

is an enlarged view of the connecting portion in the cross-sectional view of the ink cartridge shown in FIG.


71


.




The housing


521


is cylindrically shaped so as to be disposed around two holes for supplying the ink. A surface of the ink container


511


on which the housing


521


is formed is joined with the cap


512


, and the cap


512


includes a hole which is inserted into the housing


521


of the above-described ink container


511


, a communication portion


536


which is a circular hole that communicates with that hole, the housing


522


cylindrically formed around the communication portion


536


, a wall


525


which is formed so as to surround the two housings


522


, constitutes the outer peripheral portion of the ink cartridge and protects an operator's hand from entering the interior of the housing


521


, etc.




Also, a convex portion (rib)


524


which serves as a guide for surely connecting the ink cartridge to the connection port of the printing apparatus main body is disposed on the side surface of the ink cartridge over the side surface of the ink container


511


and the wall


525


portion of the cap


512


. That is, when the convex portion


524


is slid in a state where the convex portion


524


is inserted into a groove of the rail


29


on the main body side as shown in

FIG. 3

, the main body connecting portion and the ink cartridge can be surely connected to each other.




The wall


525


is equipped with a storage medium


526


(an EEPROM (electrically erasable programmable read only memory is used in this embodiment) for storing the monitor information, the control information, the identification information, the liquid amount information, or the manufacturer information on the main body and the liquid container, and a connecting terminal


527


to the main body. The storage medium


526


and a contact of the storage medium


526


and the connecting terminal


527


are covered with a sealant


528


so as to be protected.





FIG. 77

is a block diagram showing the appearance of the connection of the storage medium


526


and the main body. With the connection of the ink tank to the main body, the storage medium


526


equipped in the ink tank is connected to an interface


562


of the main body side, the information in the storage medium


526


is transmitted to the main body, and the information is employed for control of the liquid jet head unit


401


in the main body.




The opening portion of the housing


522


disposed so as to surround the periphery of the communication portion


536


of the cap


512


is fixed with the dome-shaped elastic member


513


by the crest


514


attached so as to cover the housing


522


, and the connecting portion with the apparatus main body for ink circulation is formed by the communication portion


526


, the housing


522


, the elastic member


513


and the crest


514


. As shown in

FIG. 71

, the height of the connecting portion is higher than the height of the wall


525


, and the tip of the connecting portion, that is, the tip of the crest is projected from the wall


525


.




In order to reduce the manufacturing costs, it is desirable that the crest


514


and the elastic member


13


are integrally manufactured by the two-color molding method.





FIG. 72

shows the detailed diagram of the connecting portion. As shown in the figure, the crest


514


is so equipped as to cover the housing


522


and fixed by engaging an engaging portion


535


of the housing


522


with a claw portion


533


. The crest


514


is disposed with a pressing portion


532


that presses the elastic member


513


in an axial direction of the elastic member


513


. The elastic member


513


is shaped as indicated by a broken line before the elastic member


513


is assembled with the crest


514


, but assembled so as to be suited to the inner configuration of the housing


522


as indicated by a solid line by the pressure from the pressing portion


532


of the crest


514


in a state where the elastic member


513


is elastically deformed so as to be in close contact with the housing


522


. In other words, a diameter L in a state where no stress of the elastic member


513


is applied is larger than an inner diameter 2r of the housing


522


, and the elastic member


513


in a state where the elastic member


513


is pressed by the crest


514


produces a restoring force which is going to make the elastic member


513


spread in the radial direction of the housing


522


, thereby coming to a state where a force which is going to make the elastic member


513


contract in the radial direction in an opposite direction of the restoring force is applied from the housing


522


.




An opening portion


534


for guiding a needle


534


for ink circulation in the printing apparatus main body is formed on a top surface of the crest


514


, and the width of the top end


534




a


is made larger than that of the rear end


534




b


so that the needle


534


is surely guided substantially in the center of the elastic member. When the ink cartridge is installed in the printing apparatus main body, a needle


52


penetrates the elastic member


513


to form an ink circulation path. When the ink cartridge is detached from the printing apparatus main body, the needle


52


is drawn off from the elastic member


513


. However, since the hole cut in the elastic member


513


by the needle


52


is closed by a force applied from the housing


522


which is going to contract the elastic member


513


in the radial direction, the ink which is the content does not seep out of the hole.




Modified examples of the ink cartridge shown in

FIGS. 5

,


71


and


72


are shown in

FIGS. 75A

,


75


B and


76


A,


76


B.

FIG. 75A

is a perspective view of an ink cartridge in accordance with a modified example, and

FIG. 75B

is a side view of the ink cartridge.

FIGS. 76A and 76B

are enlarged views of the crest


514


in which

FIG. 76A

is a front view of the crest


514


and

FIG. 76B

is a perspective view of the crest


514


.




The ink cartridge shown in

FIGS. 75A and 75B

is formed with a plurality of grooves


530


on the side surface of the wall


525


. The groove


530


includes grooves


530




a


which are partially closed and grooves


530




b


which are not closed, and the combination of those different grooves


530




a


and


530




b


constitutes a mechanical key mechanism for connection to the printing apparatus main body. In other words, the combinations of the grooves


530


are changed for each kind of the ink cartridges, and rails


560


that coincide with the grooves


530


, respectively, are provided on the connected main body side as shown in

FIGS. 3 and 4

, as a result of which even if an ink cartridge of a kind different from the ink cartridge to be intentionally equipped is going to be inserted into the main body, the insertion can be prevented.




Also, the height of the crest


514


or the projected amount h from the wall


525


is changed for each kind of the ink cartridges, and the heights of a needle


52


and a needle base


51


which form a connection base of the ink cartridge which is disposed on the main body side are changed for each of the ink cartridges to be equipped so as to be adapted to the height of the crest


514


. With this structure, even if an ink cartridge of a kind different from the ink cartridge to be intentionally equipped is going to be inserted into the main body, the insertion can be prevented.




Further, grooves


531


are formed on the side surface of the crest


514


, and a connection member which coincides with the grooves


531


is disposed in the printing apparatus main body, thereby being capable of guiding the insertion of the main body.




Subsequently, a case in which the user drops down the ink cartridge according to this embodiment in error will be described. In the case where the ink cartridge drops down in a state where the user holds the handle


511




a,


the ink cartridge comes in contact with a floor from a surface of the ink cartridge on which the connecting portion is formed. In this situation, since the connecting portion is projected from the wall


525


as described above, the largest impact caused by the first contact of the ink cartridge with the floor to which the ink cartridge drops down is applied to not the wall


525


but the connecting portion. For that reason, the wall


525


and the convex portion


524


, the groove


530


, the storage medium


526


and the connecting terminal


527


which are located on the wall


525


can be prevented from being destroyed and failing in function. In addition, since the impact applied to the connecting portion is transmitted to the elastic member


513


through the pressing portion


532


of the crest


514


, and the impact can be absorbed by the elastic deformation, it is difficult to damage the connecting portion, and the impact indirectly transmitted to the wall


525


is made small, thereby being capable of preventing the operating failure of the storage medium


526


which is weak to impact from occurring.




In this embodiment, the liquid container that supplies the liquid to the printing apparatus main body was described. However, the present invention is also applicable to the liquid container that retains the liquid discharged from the printing apparatus main body which does not contribute to printing and is disused.




In the head described in this embodiment, a case in which the head is applied to the printing apparatus for the envelope and the continuous sheet which can be appropriately cut was described. However, the present invention is not limited to or by this structure but applicable to a normal printer using plain paper.




In the present specification, “print” (also “record”) means not only a case in which significant information such as a character or a figure is formed, but also a case in which an image, a pattern or the like is formed on a printing medium or a medium is processed by a broad meaning regardless of the significance or insignificance, and also regardless of information being visualized so as to be visible by humans, or not.




In the present specification, “printing medium” means not only a paper used in the normal printing apparatus but also an ink receptive material such as a cloth, plastic, a film, a metal plate, glass, ceramic, wood or leather by a broad meaning.




In addition, “ink” (also “liquid”) should be interpreted widely similar to the definition of “print” and means a liquid which can be subjected to the formation of an image, a pattern or the like, the processing of the printing medium, or the processing of an ink (for example, solidification or insolublity of a coloring material in the ink which is given to the printing medium).




A mode where the present invention is effectively used is a mode in which a film boiling is produced in a liquid by using a thermal energy generated by an electrothermal converting member to form bubbles.




As was described above, the present invention can provide an ink tank in which it is difficult to cause a damage by which the failure of connection with the printing apparatus main body occurs and which is high in impact resistance even if a user drops it by mistake. In order to enhance the resistance to the impact, since a member such as a cushioning material is not used, the manufacturing costs are not increased.




The foregoing description of the preferred embodiments of the invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed, and modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teachings or may be acquired from practice of the invention. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to explain the principles of the invention and its practical application to enable one skilled in the art to utilize the invention in various embodiments and with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the claims appended hereto, and their equivalents.



Claims
  • 1. A liquid container for storing a liquid to be supplied to a recording head of a printing apparatus, said liquid container being removably mountable to the printing apparatus, said liquid container comprising:a main container body defining a space for storing the liquid; and a connecting portion provided on a side surface of said main container body, said connecting portion being connectable to a supply route used for supplying the liquid to the recording head, wherein a most forward leading edge of said connecting portion is projected outwardly beyond a most forward leading edge of the side surface of said main container body and is elastically displaceable.
  • 2. The removable liquid container as claimed in claim 1, said removable liquid container having a hole in the side surface of said main container body, wherein said connecting portion comprises:a housing formed so as to surround the hole, said housing having an opening portion exposing the hole; an elastic member mounted within the opening portion of said housing, said elastic member covering the hole; and a crest member disposed so as to cover said housing and fixedly press said elastic member within the opening portion of said housing.
  • 3. The removable liquid container as claimed in claim 2, wherein said housing is in the form of a cylinder and said elastic member is substantially dome shaped having a maximum diameter larger than an inner diameter of said housing, wherein said elastic member is compressed in a radial direction when mounted within the opening portion of said housing.
  • 4. The removable liquid container as claimed in claim 2, wherein said elastic member and said crest member are integrally molded by a bicolor mold.
  • 5. The removable liquid container as claimed in claim 1, said removable liquid container further comprising a first concave portion or convex portion formed on a wall of said removable liquid container, wherein said removable liquid container can be inserted into a main body of the printing apparatus by engaging the first concave portion or convex portion with a second convex portion or concave portion formed on the main body of the printing apparatus and sliding said removable liquid container in an engaged state into the main body of the printing apparatus.
  • 6. A printing apparatus comprising:the removable liquid container as claimed in claim 5; and the second convex portion or concave portion formed on the main body of said printing apparatus, wherein said removable liquid container is mounted in the main body of said printing apparatus by engaging said first concave portion or convex portion of said removable liquid container with said second convex portion or concave portion and sliding said removable liquid container into the main body in an engaged state.
  • 7. The removable liquid container as claimed in claim 1, said removable liquid container further comprising a first set of up to a plurality of grooves, a pattern of which is different for each type of a plurality of types of removable liquid containers, formed on a wall of said removable liquid container, wherein said first set of up to a plurality of grooves is engaged with a second set of up to a plurality of grooves, a pattern of which is different for each type of the plurality of types of removable liquid containers, formed on a main body of the printing apparatus when said removable liquid container is inserted into the main body of the printing apparatus.
  • 8. A printing apparatus comprising:the removable liquid container as claimed in claim 7; and the second set of up to a plurality of grooves, a pattern of which is different for each type of the plurality of types of removable liquid containers, formed on the main body of said printing apparatus, wherein said removable liquid container is mounted in the main body of said printing apparatus and said first set of up to a plurality of grooves is engaged with said second set of up to a plurality of grooves.
  • 9. The removable liquid container as claimed in claim 1, further comprising:a storage medium; and an interface for electrically connecting said storage medium and a main body of the printing apparatus, wherein said storage medium and said interface are disposed on a wall of said removable liquid container.
  • 10. A printing apparatus comprising:the removable liquid container as claimed in claim 9; a circuit for reading information stored in said storage medium; and a printing apparatus operation controller for controlling said printing apparatus according the stored information.
  • 11. The printing apparatus as claimed in claim 10, further comprising a processor for changing the stored information in said storage medium.
  • 12. The removable liquid container as claimed in claim 1, wherein said connecting portion comprises a first convex portion or concave portion formed on a side surface of said connecting portion, wherein said first convex portion or concave portion is engaged with a second concave portion or convex portion formed on a main body of the printing apparatus to guide insertion of said removable liquid container into the main body of the printing apparatus.
  • 13. The removable liquid container as claimed in claim 1, wherein a height of said connecting portion from the side surface of said main container body on which said connecting portion is provided is different for each type of a plurality of types of removable liquid containers.
  • 14. A printing apparatus comprising:the removable liquid container as claimed in claim 13; and a connecting base connected to said connecting portion, wherein a height of said connecting base connected to said connecting portion is different for each type of the plurality of types of removable liquid containers in correspondence with the height of said connecting portion of said removable liquid container.
  • 15. A printing apparatus comprising the removable liquid container as claimed in claim 1.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
11-250881 Sep 1999 JP
US Referenced Citations (8)
Number Name Date Kind
4568954 Rosback Feb 1986 A
4775871 Abe et al. Oct 1988 A
5155502 Kimura et al. Oct 1992 A
5701995 Higuma et al. Dec 1997 A
5852459 Pawlowski, Jr. et al. Dec 1998 A
5917524 Kimura et al. Jun 1999 A
6065824 Bullock et al. May 2000 A
6132036 Abe et al. Oct 2000 A
Foreign Referenced Citations (4)
Number Date Country
27 09 730 Sep 1978 DE
791463 Aug 1997 EP
878307 Nov 1998 EP
891865 Jan 1999 EP