This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119 from Japanese Patent Application No. 2020-166224, filed on Sep. 30, 2020, the entire subject matter of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The present disclosure relates to a liquid discharging apparatus capable of performing a discharging action to discharge liquid at a sheet.
A liquid discharging apparatus, which may discharge liquid at a sheet, is known. The liquid to be discharged may be supplied from a reservoir section through a liquid supplying path and discharged from nozzles of a head at the sheet. The reservoir section may have an injection port, through which the liquid may be injected, and an atmosphere communication path. During a discharging action by the head, the injection port may be closed by a lid. Meanwhile, during the discharging action, the liquid supplying path and the atmosphere communication path may be open to outside atmosphere through a valve unit, which may operate in conjunction with a user's operations. On the other hand, for injecting the liquid while no discharging action is being performed, the liquid supplying path and the atmosphere communication path may be closed by the valve unit, and the lid may be removed from the injection port. Through the injection port being open, the liquid may be injected into the reservoir section.
Occasionally, during the discharging action, a sheet may jam in the liquid discharging apparatus, and the jammed sheet may undesirably contact the head. The sheet contacting the head may lead the liquid to leak outside from the nozzles of the head and stain the sheet. In this regard, when the liquid supplying path and the atmosphere communication path are open during the discharging action, the air may keep entering the reservoir section through the atmosphere communication path while the liquid leaks out from the reservoir section, and the liquid may continuously leak out and spread to a larger extent.
In order to restrain leakage of the liquid to a smaller extent, it may be considered that the liquid supplying path and the atmosphere communication path should be closed. However, with the liquid supplying path and the atmosphere communication path being closed, as the discharging action continues, the air pressure in the reservoir section may be lowered shortly, depending on an amount of the liquid stored in the reservoir section. As a result, the air may be inhaled into the head through the nozzles, and the liquid may not be discharged correctly.
The present disclosure is advantageous in that a liquid discharging apparatus, in which leakage of liquid to a larger extent and liquid discharging failure that may occur during a discharging action may be restrained, is provided.
According to an aspect of the present disclosure, a liquid discharging apparatus, having a head, a reservoir section, a valve, a switching assembly, and a controller, is provided. The head is configured to discharge liquid. The reservoir section has a liquid reservoir chamber, an air chamber connected with the liquid reservoir chamber, an injection port connecting the liquid reservoir chamber and outside of the reservoir section, and an atmosphere communication path connecting the air chamber and the outside of the reservoir section. The valve is configured to open and close the atmosphere communication path. The switching assembly is configured to switch states of the valve between an opening state, in which the valve opens the atmosphere communication path, and a closing state, in which the valve closes the atmosphere communication path. The controller configured to control the valve through the switching assembly to close the atmosphere communication path, control the head to discharge the liquid after closing the atmosphere communication path, and control the valve through the switching assembly to close the atmosphere communication path before the liquid is injected through the injection port.
According to an aspect of the present disclosure, a liquid discharging apparatus, having a head, a reservoir section, a valve, a switching assembly, and a controller, is provided. The head is configured to discharge liquid. The reservoir section has a liquid reservoir chamber, an injection port connecting the liquid reservoir chamber and outside of the reservoir section, and an atmosphere communication path connecting the liquid reservoir chamber and the outside of the reservoir section through a cavity. The valve is configured to open and close the atmosphere communication path. The switching assembly is configured to switch states of the valve between an opening state, in which the valve opens the atmosphere communication path, and a closing state, in which the valve closes the atmosphere communication path. The controller is configured to control the valve through the switching assembly to close the atmosphere communication path, control the head to discharge the liquid after closing the atmosphere communication path, and control the valve through the switching assembly to close the atmosphere communication path before the liquid is injected through the injection port.
In the following paragraphs, with reference to the accompanying drawings, an embodiment of the present disclosure will be described. It is noted that various connections may be set forth between elements in the following description. These connections in general and, unless specified otherwise, may be direct or indirect and that this specification is not intended to be limiting in this respect.
In the following description, directivity indicated by a pointing arrow, from a root of a stem toward a pointing head, will be expressed by a term “orientation,” whereas back or forth movability along a line extending through a stem and a pointing head of an arrow will be expressed by a term “direction.”
Moreover, positional relation within the printer 100 and each part or item included in the printer 100 will be mentioned on basis of a posture of the printer 100 in an ordinarily usable condition as indicated by the bi-directionally pointing arrows in
[Overall Configuration of Printer 100]
The printer 100 as shown in
The printer 100 has a housing 300, a cover 400, and a user interface (UI) 500.
[Housing 300]
The housing 300 may have a shape of an approximately rectangular cuboid. As shown in
As shown in
[Cover 400]
As shown in
A frontward part of the cover 400 may be moved by a user to pivot in a circumferential direction 3A of the shafts 410. A lower-limit position P11 being a lowermost position to the frontward part of the cover 400 in a pivotable range may be delimited by the upper end of the housing 300. An upper-limit position P12 being an uppermost position to the frontward part of the cover 400 in the pivotable range may be delimited by a length of an arm 420 connecting the housing 300 and the cover 400. When the frontward part is at the lower-limit position P11, the cover 400 may close the opening 310 and conceal an inner structure, including a reservoir section 220, arranged inside the housing 300. When the frontward part of the cover 400 is at the upper-limit position P12, on the other hand, the cover 400 may expose the opening 310 and reveal the inner structure including the reservoir section 220 externally.
[Cover Sensor 430]
As shown in
[UI 500]
As shown in
[Internal Configuration of Printer 100]
As shown in
[Feeder Tray 110]
The feeder tray 110 as shown in
[Ejection Tray 120]
In the housing 300, at a position above the feeder tray 110, a sheet outlet 370 is formed. Through the sheet outlet 370, the sheet M, on which an image is recorded through a liquid-discharging action by the printer 100, may be ejected. The sheet M with the image recorded thereon may be called as a printed material M. The ejection tray 120 is arranged at a lower-frontward position with respect to the sheet outlet 370. The ejection tray 120 may support the printed material M.
[Feeder 130]
The feeder 130 includes a shaft 131, a feeder arm 132, a feeder roller 133, and a driving-force transmission assembly 134.
The shaft 131 is supported by a frame, which is not shown, and extends in the widthwise direction 9 at a position above the bottom 111. The feeder arm 132 is supported by the shaft 131 at a basal end part thereof. The feeder arm 132 is pivotable in a circumferential direction 3B of an axis of the shaft 131. The feeder arm 132 extends lower-rearward from the basal end part. The feeder roller 133 is attached to a tip end part of the feeder arm 132. The feeder roller 133 is rotatable in a circumferential direction 3C of a shaft 135, which is parallel to the shaft 131. The driving-force transmission assembly 134 may include a gear train and a driving belt and may be arranged inside the feeder arm 132.
Overall behaviors of the feeder 130 are herein described. The feeder roller 133 may contact an uppermost one of the sheets M stacked on the bottom 111 of the feeder tray 110. The driving-force transmission assembly 134 may transmit a force, generated by a feeder motor 271 (see
[Conveyer Path P]
As shown in
[Outer Guide 140, Inner Guide 150]
The outer guide 140 and the inner guide 150 delimit an outermost part and an innermost part of the curved path P1, respectively.
Conveyance of the sheet M is herein described. The sheet M fed to the sheet inlet P0 may be guided by the outer guide 140 and the inner guide 150 to be conveyed in the curved path P1. Thereafter, the sheet M may be passed to the conveyer roller pair 160.
[Registration Sensor 151]
On the inner guide 150 at a registration position, which is in proximity to a downstream end of the curved path P1, a registration sensor 151 is arranged. The registration sensor 151 is supported by the inner guide 150 and extends inside the curved path P1. The registration sensor 151 may swing in a conveying orientation 4, which is an orientation of the sheet M being conveyed in the curved path P1, and in a reverse orientation. The sheet M being conveyed in the curved path P1 may contact the registration sensor 151. The registration sensor 151 may output different-leveled signals depending on whether the sheet M is in contact with the registration sensor 151 or the sheet M is not in contact with the registration sensor 151 to the controller 270 (see
[Conveyer Roller Pair 160]
As shown in
The driving roller 161 may rotate by a force generated by a conveyer motor 272 (see
[Ejection Roller Pair 170]
As shown in
The driving roller 171 may rotate by the force generated by the conveyer motor 272. The spur roller 172 may be rotated by the rotation of the driving roller 171. The driving roller 171 and the spur roller 172 may nip the sheet M and rotate to convey the sheet M further downstream in the conveying orientation 4. Thereby, the sheet M may be ejected outside through the sheet outlet 370.
[Platen 180]
The platen 180 is located between the conveyer roller pair 160 and the ejection roller pair 170 in the front-rear direction 8. The platen 180 has a supporting surface 181 spreading in the front-rear direction 8 and the widthwise direction 9. The supporting surface 181 delimits a lowermost part of the linear path P2 and may support the sheet M from below. The supporting surface 181 may be formed of upper-end faces of a plurality of ribs protruding upward from the platen 180 and longitudinally extending in the front-rear direction 8. Optionally, however, the supporting surface 181 may be a plain upper surface of the platen 180. The platen 180 may be colored in, for example, black, or a color which may absorb light emitted from the sheet sensor 205.
As shown in
[Carriage 190]
The printer 100 further has guide rails 191A, 191B arranged inside the housing 300. As shown in
The carriage 190, as shown in
[Head 200]
As shown in
The head 200 accommodates piezoelectric devices (not shown), which correspond to the nozzles 203 on one-to-one basis. Driving waveforms modulated by the controller 270 may be applied to the piezoelectric devices, and thereby the head 200 may discharge the ink and consume the ink stored therein through the nozzles 203 in a discharging orientation 7D, i.e., downward.
[Conveyer 210]
The conveyer 210 as shown in
The head 200 may move above an ink dischargeable range R11 (see
[Linear Encoder 193]
As shown in
[Sheet Sensor 205]
As shown in
[Reservoir Section 220, Lid 230]
The reservoir section 220, as shown in
The reservoir section 220 may store ink therein. A color of the ink may be, for example, black. The ink in the reservoir section 220 may be supplied to the head 200 through an outflow port 221L and the ink flow path 204. The reservoir section 220 has, as shown in
As shown in
The outer wall 221 includes a bottom wall 221A, a first left-side wall 221B, a right-side wall 221C, a first upper wall 221D, a second upper wall 221E, a second left-side wall 221F, a front wall 221G (see
The bottom wall 221A spreads on the upper face 202 of the head 200. A frontward edge and a rearward edge of the bottom wall 221A are substantially parallel to the front-rear direction 8, and a leftward edge and a rightward edge of the bottom wall 221A are substantially parallel to the widthwise direction 9.
The first left-side wall 221B and the right-side wall 221C extend upward from the leftward edge and the rightward edge of the bottom wall 221A, respectively. An extended end, i.e., an upper end, of the first left-side wall 221B is located to be lower than an extended end of the right-side wall 221C.
The first upper wall 221D spreads between the upper end of the first left-side wall 221B and an intermediate position, which is between the first left-side wall 221B and the right-side wall 221C. The second upper wall 221E spreads between an upper end of the right-side wall 221C and a position above an extended end, or a rightward end, of the first upper wall 221D.
As shown in
As shown in
The front wall 221G (see
As shown in
The crosswise divider wall 222A is separated below from the vertical divider wall 222B and above from the upper index 223U. The crosswise divider wall 222A is located between a position, which is separated rightward from the rightward edge of the upper wall 221D, and the right-side wall 221C. The crosswise divider wall 222A spreads in the front-rear direction 8 and the widthwise direction 9 substantially in parallel with the second upper wall 221E. A frontward edge and a rearward edge of the crosswise divider wall 222A are continuous with the front wall 221G and the rear wall 221H, respectively.
Optionally, however, the crosswise divider wall 222A may not necessarily spread in parallel the second upper wall 221E, or the frontward edge and the rearward edge of the crosswise divider wall 222A may not necessarily be continuous with the front wall 221G and the rear wall 221H, respectively.
The vertical divider wall 222B spreads in the vertical direction 7 and the front-rear direction 8 between a position leftward from the right-side wall 221C and a position above the crosswise divider wall 222A.
The ink reservoir chamber 220B is a space enclosed by the bottom wall 221A, the first left-side wall 221B, the right-side wall 221C, the first upper wall 221D, the front wall 221G, the rear wall 221H, and the crosswise divider wall 222A. The ink reservoir chamber 220B may store the ink.
The air chamber 220C is enclosed by the right-side wall 221C, the second upper wall 221E, the second left-side wall 221F, the front wall 221G, the rear wall 221H, and the crosswise divider wall 222A. The air chamber 220C is located at an upper position with respect to the upper index 223U. The air may be drawn into the air chamber 220C. Optionally, the air chamber 220C may be a so-called labyrinth flow path delimited by another divider wall(s).
The valve placement space 220D is a space delimited by the second upper wall 221E, the right-side wall 221C, and the vertical divider wall 222B and accommodates the valve unit 240. A lower side of the valve placement space 220D is open downward. Therefore, an atmosphere communication path 221K is connected with the air chamber 220C through the valve placement space 220D.
As shown in
The lower index 223L is arranged on the outer surface of the front wall 221G at a position in proximity to the lower edge of the front wall 221G and has a linear form extending in the widthwise direction 9. The lower index 223L may be a sign indicating a surface level of the ink, at which the ink reservoir chamber 220B should be refilled with the ink. Moreover, on the outer surface of the first left-side wall 221B, a lower index 233L may be arranged at the same position in the vertical direction as the lower index 223L.
The upper index 223U, the lower index 223L, the upper index 233U, and the lower index 233L may be marked by engraving, embossing, or painting in a colorant.
As shown in
The lid 230 shown in
As shown in
The atmosphere communication path 221K is a through hole formed through the right-side wall 221C in the widthwise direction 9 at a position coincident with the vertical divider wall 222B in the widthwise direction 9. Through the atmosphere communication path 221K, the air chamber 220C and the outside of the reservoir section 220 communicate. The atmosphere communication path 221K is formed at an upper position with respect to the injection port 224A.
A cross-sectional area of the inner communication path 220E along the front-rear direction 8 and the widthwise direction 9 may be preferably smaller than a cross-sectional area of the air chamber 220C along the front-rear direction 8 and the widthwise direction 9. An area of the opening of the inner communication path 220E at the lower edge may be preferably smaller than an area of the opening of the atmosphere communication path 221K. In this arrangement, the air may flow from the atmosphere communication path 221K through the air chamber 220C into the inner communication path 220E smoothly.
The outflow port 221L is a through hole formed vertically through the bottom wall 221A and is continuous with the ink flow path 204. The air chamber 220C is at least partly located at an upper position with respect to the outflow port 221L. In other words, the air chamber 220C may be located to be higher entirely than the outflow port 221L, or at least a part of the air chamber 220C may be located to be higher than the outflow port 221L.
[Liquid Amount Sensor 216]
As shown in
The printer 100 has the liquid amount sensor 216 being an optical sensor. A light-emitting device in the liquid amount sensor 216, arranged on a rightward side of the protrusive portion 221M, may emit light at a position substantially equal to the lower index 223L in the vertical direction 7 in a direction substantially parallel to the widthwise direction 9. A light-receiving device in the liquid amount sensor 216 is arranged on a leftward side of the protrusive portion 221M to face toward the light-emitting device across the protrusive portion 221M and may output different-leveled signals depending on an amount of received light to the controller 270. The different-leveled signals from the liquid amount sensor 216 may be hereinafter called as liquid amount signals V12 (see
[Valve Unit 240, Opener Member 250]
As shown in
The spring 241 may be a compressive coil spring, of which natural length is substantially equal to or larger than a distance between the right-side wall 221C and the vertical divider wall 222B in the widthwise direction 9. The spring 241 is accommodated in the valve placement space 220D with an axis thereof aligning in parallel with the widthwise direction 9. A leftward end of the spring 241 is fixed to the vertical divider wall 222B. To a rightward end of the spring 241, the valve body 242 is fixed.
The valve body 242 is located at an upper position with respect to the injection port 224A. The valve body 242 may, when the opener member 250 is not contacting the valve body 242, with an inner surface of the right-side wall 221C serving as a valve seat, close the atmosphere communication path 221K by an urging force of the spring 241.
A frame 301, as shown in
[Cap 260]
As shown in
The cap 260 is supported by a frame 302, which spreads in the front-rear direction 8 and the widthwise direction 9, through a lift assembly 261. The lift assembly 261 may move the cap 260 vertically between a capping position P31 and an uncapping position P32 by a driving force generated under control of the controller 270 by a lift motor 274 (see
On a bottom 262 (see
[Controller 270]
As shown in
The ASIC is electrically connected with the motors 271-274. The ASIC may generate and output controlling signals V21, V22, V23, V24 to rotate the feeder motor 271, the conveyer motor 272, the carriage motor 273, and the lift motor 274, respectively. The ASIC is electrically connected with the cover sensor 430, the liquid amount sensor 216, the registration sensor 151, the linear encoder 193, and the sheet sensor 205 and may receive the cover signals V11, the liquid amount signals V12, the registration signals V13, the position signals V15, and the sheet signals V16 from the cover sensor 430, the liquid amount sensor 216, the registration sensor 151, the linear encoder 193, and the sheet sensor 205, respectively. Moreover, the ASIC may transmit displayable image data, which is data describing information to be displayed, to the UI 500 and receive execution commands C11 from the UI 500.
The controller 270 has a total consumed amount counter in, for example, the EEPROM. The total consumed amount counter may be used to cumulatively estimate consumed ink amount in the reservoir section 220. The cumulation by the total consumed amount counter may start immediately after an ink injecting process. In the following paragraphs, a counter value indicated by the total consumed amount counter may be called as a counter value J.
[Image Recording Process by Controller 270]
When the printer 100 is standing by for image recording, the head 200, the cap 260, and the valve unit 240 are at positions shown in
When the printer 100 is standing by or running an image recording process, the controller 270 may receive a print job and store the received print job in, for example, the RAM. A sender of the print job may be a personal computer or a smartphone which may communicate with the printer 100. The print job is an execution command for an image recording process and includes at least image data and setting information. The image data describes an image to be recorded in the image recording process. The image data may describe an image to be recorded on a single sheet M or a plurality of images to be recorded on a plurality of sheets M. The setting information describes settings for the image recording process including, for example, a size of the sheet(s) M, margins on the sheet(s) M, and resolutions of the image(s).
The controller 270 may select one of print jobs stored in the RAM and start an image recording process (see
As shown in
In S102, the controller 270 conducts a cumulation process for an estimated consumable amount. The estimated consumable amount is an amount of the ink to be consumed by the head 200 with the piezoelectric devices driven by the driving signals generated in S101. Moreover, in S102, the controller 270 adds the estimated consumable amount to the counter value J in the total consumed amount counter.
In S103, the controller 270 determines whether the current counter value J exceeds a volume threshold value. The volume threshold value indicates a predetermined amount of the ink storable in the ink reservoir chamber 220B between the lower index 223L and the upper index 223U. When the controller 270 determines that the current counter value J exceeds the volume threshold value, the controller 270 proceeds to S117. When the controller 270 determines that the current counter value J does not exceed the volume threshold value, the controller 270 proceeds to S104.
In S104, the controller 270 determines whether an empty flag in the RAM or the EEPROM is off. The empty flag may be set off after an ink injecting process (S117-S120), which will be described further below. The empty flag may be set on in a remaining amount verifying process in S115 (see
In S105, the controller 270 conducts a flushing process. In particular, as an earlier step in the flushing process, the controller 270 conducts a separating step, in which the controller 270 determines whether the cap 260 is located at the capping position P31 (see
As a latter step in the flushing process, the controller 270 moves the head 200 in the widthwise direction 9 to the flushing position P22. In particular, the controller 270 outputs the controlling signals V23 to the carriage motor 273 to control the conveyer 210 to move the carriage 190 in the widthwise direction 9. While the carriage 190 is being moved, the controller 270 determines an updated position of the head 200 based on the position signals V15 from the linear encoder 193. Until the updated position matches the flushing position P22, the controller 270 continues moving the head 200 in the widthwise direction 9 toward the flushing position P22. When the updated position of the head 200 matches the flushing position P22, the controller 270 stops the head 200 at the flushing position P22 and controls the head 200 staying over the ink receiver 194 to discharge the ink at the ink receiver 194. The flushing process is thus conducted.
After the flushing process, further in S105, the controller 270 conducts a moving process, in which the controller 270 outputs the controlling signals V23 to the carriage motor 273 and moves the head 200 from the flushing position P22 to the home position, i.e., the capped position P21. Meanwhile, the controller 270 monitors updated positions of the head 200 periodically and, when the updated position matches the capped position P21, the controller 270 stops outputting the controlling signals V23. The process in S105 ends thereat.
In S106, the controller 270 selects a part of the driving signals stored in the RAM for a pass to be run in an ink discharging process in S110 (see
In S107, the controller 270 conducts a cueing process and controls one of the sheets M in the feeder tray 110 to be conveyed to a cueing position, which is a position in the linear path P2 straight below the sheet sensor 205. In particular, the controller 270 outputs the controlling signals V21 to the feeder motor 271 to control the feeder roller 133 to convey the sheet M in the curved path P1. While outputting the controlling signals V21, the controller 270 obtains the registration signals V13 periodically and stops outputting the controlling signals V21 in response to a change of the levels of the registration signals V13. Thus, the sheet M may pause at the conveyer roller pair 160.
In the cueing process, moreover, after stopping the controlling signals V21, the controller 270 outputs the controlling signals V22 to the conveyer motor 272 to control the conveyer roller pair 160 to convey the sheet M to a cueing position in the linear path P2. While outputting the controlling signals V22, the controller 270 obtains the sheet signals V16 periodically and stops outputting the controlling signals V22 in response to a change of the levels of the sheet signals V16. Thus, the sheet M may pause on the supporting surface 181 with a frontward edge of the sheet M located at the cueing position.
In S108, the controller 270 determines an ink dischargeable range R11 (see
In S109, the controller 270 conducts a first closing process including a moving process. In particular, the controller 270 outputs the controlling signals V23 to the carriage motor 273 to move the head 200 from the capped position P21 to a position straight above a discharge-start position in the ink dischargeable range R11. The discharge-start position is an initial position for the head 200 when an image for a single pass is to be recorded on the sheet M on the supporting surface 181.
Before S109, in other words, when the head 200 is located at the capped position P21, as shown in
In S109, moreover, in accordance with start of outputting the controlling signals V23, in other words, in accordance with the head 200 starting to move from the capped position P21, the controller 270 activates a timer contained therein to start measuring time.
In S110 (see
After the first closing process (S109), the ink discharging process may be conducted with the atmosphere communication path 221K being closed and while the controlling signals V23 are being output in the scanning process. In particular, while the head 200 is moving above the ink dischargeable range R11, the controller 270 applies the driving signals selected in either S106 (see
Having finished outputting the driving signal in the pass, the controller 270 stops outputting the controlling signals V23 and exits S110.
In S111, the controller 270 determines whether the elapsed time measured by the timer reaches a time threshold value. The time threshold value may be determined by a manufacturer in advance through calculations and experiments. The time threshold value indicates a time, which is shorter than a time determined by the manufacturer based on the experiments that may cause menisci at the nozzles 203 to collapse due to a negative pressure in the inner space 220A. When the elapsed time does not reach the time threshold value, the controller 270 proceeds to S113, or when the elapsed time reached the time threshold value, the controller 270 proceeds to S112.
In S112, the controller 270 conducts an opening process to move the head 200 to reciprocate in the scanning direction between the updated position and the capped position P21. In particular, the controller 270 obtains the position signals V15 from the linear encoder 193, obtains the updated position of the head 200 based on the position signals V15, and saves the updated position in, for example, the RAM, as a resume position for the ink discharging process. Moreover, the controller 270 may move the head 200 rightward toward the capped position P21, similarly to S105 (see
In S113, the controller 270 determines whether an entire image for the sheet M is completely recorded. When the controller 270 determines that the image recording is not completed, the controller 270 proceeds to S114, or when the controller 270 determines that the image recording is completed, the controller 270 proceeds to S115.
In S114, the controller 270 selects another part of the driving signals for a next pass. Moreover, the controller 270 outputs the controlling signals V22 to the conveyer motor 272 to control the conveyer roller pair 160 to convey the sheet M in the conveying orientation 4, e.g., frontward, by a distance equal to a single pass in the conveying orientation 4. The controller 270 proceeds to S110.
In S115, the controller 270 conducts an ejecting process to eject the printed material M. In particular, the controller 270 may output the controlling signals V22 to the conveyer motor 272 to control the conveyer roller pair 160 and the ejection roller pair 170 to eject the printed material M through the sheet outlet 370 at the ejection tray 120.
In S115, the controller 270 conducts the remaining amount verifying process and, when the controller 270 determines that the level of the liquid amount signals V12 indicates the surface of the ink being higher than the lower index 223L, the controller 270 sets the empty flag off. On the other hand, when the controller 270 determines that the level of the liquid amount signals V12 indicates the surface of the ink being lower than or equal to the lower index 223L, the controller 270 determines that the amount of the ink in the reservoir section 220 reaches an injection threshold amount and sets the empty flag on.
In S116, the controller 270 determines whether image recording to record the entire images on the sheets M is completed. When the controller 270 determines that the image recording is not completed, the controller 270 proceeds to S104 (see
[Ink Injecting Process (S117-S120)]
As shown in
In S117, the controller 270 conducts a displaying process to display a guidance image 510 (see
The user may follow the instructions and operate the first operation button 501 in advance to injecting the ink. In S118, the controller 270 may receive an execution command C11 passed from the UI 500 in response to the user's operation to the first operation button 501.
In S119, the controller 270 conducts a second closing process in response to receiving of the user's operation through the first operation button 501. In the second closing process, the atmosphere communication path 221K may be closed by the valve body 242 through the switching assembly. In particular, the controller 270 outputs the controlling signals V23 to the carriage motor 273 and controls the conveyer 210 to convey the carriage 190 leftward. The controller 270 continuously outputs the controlling signals V23 until the updated position obtained from the position signals V15 matches the injection position P22. The head 200 stops at the injection position P22. In the present embodiment, the injection position P22 is located leftward with respect to the platen 180. However, location of the injection position P22 may not be limited as long as the injection position P22 is separated leftward from the capped position P21. The head 200 moving from the capped position P21 toward the injection position P22 separates leftward from the opener member 250 (see
After the operation to the first operation button 501, the user following the instructions (see
The controller 270, after stopping the controlling signals V23 in S119, proceeds to S120. In S120, the controller 270 obtains the cover signals V11 periodically. In response to the cover 400 shifting from the opening state to the closing state, i.e., change of the levels of the cover signals V11, and receiving of the user's operation through the second operation button 502, the controller 270 initializes the counter value J to zero (0). In S120, moreover, the controller 270 sets the empty flag off. Thereafter, the controller 270 proceeds to S105.
[Benefits]
In the printer 100, while the controller 270 is conducting the ink discharging process in S110 (see
In S110, as the ink is discharged from the head 200, the air pressure in the inner space 220A may be lowered. However, in the printer 100, following S110, the opening process is conducted in S112 (see
While the ink injecting process is being conducted in S117-S120 (see
The air chamber 220C is located at an upper position with respect to the upper index 223U. Therefore, the air may stay in the air chamber 220C easily.
The inner communication path 220E is located at an upper position with respect to the upper index 223U. Therefore, the ink may not reach the inner communication path 220E easily. Moreover, with the ink not being able to reach the inner communication path 220E easily, the ink may not form a meniscus in the inner communication path 220E easily. Furthermore, during the ink discharging process, the ink may be supplied to the head 200 steadily.
Meanwhile, the injection port 224A is closed by the lid 230. Therefore, during the ink discharging process, the air may not be drawn into the ink reservoir chamber 220B through the injection port 224A.
The air chamber 220C is at least partly located to be higher than the outflow port 221L. Therefore, even if the user fails to close the injection port 224A after refilling the ink reservoir chamber 220B with the ink, the ink in the ink reservoir chamber 220B may be consumed completely in the image recording process(es).
The second closing process may be conducted in response to receiving of the user's operation to the first operation button 501 through the UI 500. Therefore, it may be likely that the user refills the reservoir section 220 after operating the first operation button 501. Accordingly, the initialization of the counter value J and the empty flag being off may reflect the condition of the ink reservoir chamber 220B after refilling correctly.
In this regard, for example, the user after opening the cover 400 may occasionally conduct an act, e.g., clearing the sheet jam, other than refilling the reservoir section 220. Therefore, if, for example, the second closing process is to be conducted based on the opening/closing acts of the cover 400, the initialized counter value J and/or the empty flag being off may not reflect the condition of the ink reservoir chamber 220B after refilling correctly.
For another example, if the inner communication path 220E is located to be higher than the upper index 223U, the space in the ink reservoir chamber 220B lower than the upper index 223U may be in a shape of an approximately rectangular cuboid. In this arrangement, when the ink is being injected, the surface of the ink may rise slowly.
The atmosphere communication path 221K is arranged in the right-side wall 221C, and the inner communication path 220E is arranged in the air chamber 220C in proximity to the second left-side wall 221F. In this arrangement, when the atmosphere communication path 221K is open, the air may flow into the inner communication path 220E from the atmosphere communication path 221K through the air chamber 220C without stagnating. Therefore, debris, e.g., paper dust, may be restrained from accumulating at corners of the air chamber 220C over time.
Although an example of carrying out the invention has been described, those skilled in the art will appreciate that there are numerous variations and permutations of the liquid discharging apparatus that fall within the spirit and the scope of the invention as set forth in the appended claims. It is to be understood that the subject matter defined in the appended claims is not necessarily limited to the specific features or act described above. Rather, the specific features and acts described above are disclosed as example forms of implementing the claims. In the meantime, the terms used to represent the components in the above embodiment may not necessarily agree identically with the terms recited in the appended claims, but the terms used in the above embodiment may merely be regarded as examples of the claimed subject matters. Below will be described modified examples of the present embodiment.
For example, the inner communication path 220E may not necessarily be located to at the upper position with respect to the upper index 223U entirely, but, as shown in
In this arrangement, while the user may visually recognize the surface of the ink in the ink reservoir chamber 220B and the inner communication path 220E through the front wall 221G with the upper index 223U formed thereon, the surface of the ink may be aligned with the upper index 223U and the lower end of the inner communication path 220E easily. Accordingly, the controller 270 may determine whether the current counter value J exceeds the volume threshold value in S103 (see
For another example, as shown in
In this arrangement, when the user views the upper index 223U, the upper index 223U may overlap the inner communication path 220E, which is visible through the front wall 221G. Therefore, visibility of the upper index 223U may be improved.
In the embodiment described above, the second closing process in S119 (see
For example, the controller 270 may conduct S119 based on a condition that the cover sensor 430 detects absence of the frontward part of the cover 400 at the lower-limit position P11. In particular, in S118, the controller 270 may determine the level of the cover signals V11 changed, e.g., from a higher level to a lower level, and in response to the frontward end of the cover 400 leaving the lower-limit position P11, the controller 270 may conduct S119.
For another example, the controller 270 may conduct S119 based on a condition that the liquid amount sensor 216 detects the surface of the ink in the ink reservoir chamber 220B descends to the position of the lower index 223L or lower.
For another example, the switching assembly may not necessarily have the conveyer 210, the valve unit 240, and the opener member 250 but may consist of, for example, an electromagnetic valve. The electromagnetic valve may include a solenoid and a valve body made of, for example, iron. The controller 270 may apply current to the solenoid, and thereby the valve body may be attracted to the solenoid. Accordingly, the atmosphere communication path 221K may open. On the other hand, when the controller 270 does not apply current to the solenoid, the valve body may separate from the solenoid and close the atmosphere communication path 221K.
In the embodiment described above, the opening process in S112 (see
For example, the opening process may be conducted after image recording for a pass is completed and before image recording for a next pass starts. For another example, the opening process may be conducted after image recording for a predetermined number of passes is completed and before image recording for a next pass starts. The predetermined number may be greater than or equal to 2 and may either be a fixed number or a variable number.
For another example, the opening process may be conducted between sheets M, i.e., between recording images on two consecutive sheets M. For example, the opening process may be conducted after an image is completely recorded on a sheet M and before another image is recorded on another sheet M. For another example, the opening process may be conducted after images are completely recorded on a predetermined number of sheets M and before another image is recorded on another sheet M. The predetermined number may be greater than or equal to 2 and may either be a fixed number or a variable number.
For another example, the opening process may be conducted between print jobs, i.e., after recording of the entire image(s) contained in the image data in the print job is completed. In particular, when the printer 100 executes a plurality of print jobs stored in the RAM sequentially, the opening process may be conducted between two consecutive print jobs. For another example, the opening process may be conducted after images for a predetermined number of print jobs are completely recorded and before another image for another print job is recorded. The predetermined number may be greater than or equal to 2 and may either be a fixed number or a variable number.
For another example, a rotary encoder may be attached to the driving roller 161 (see
For another example, the controller 270 may obtain an updated position of the head 200 in the scanning direction based on the position signals V15 from the linear encoder 193 and may conduct the opening process in accordance with the updated position of the head 200 matching a predetermined position.
Moreover, when the switching assembly consists of an electromagnetic valve, the opening process may be conducted similarly at any timing between passes, between sheets, or between jobs. Further, while the controller 270 may conduct S111 and S112 in parallel with S110 (see
In the embodiment described above, the air chamber 200C and the ink reservoir chamber 220B in the reservoir section 220 are delimited mutually by the crosswise divider wall 222A (see
In the embodiment described above, the opener member 250 protrudes from the frame 301 toward the valve body 242 (see, for example,
For another example, the printer 100 may not necessarily be limited to the monochrome image recording apparatus but may be a printer capable of recording a full-colored or multicolored image on the sheet M. When the printer 100 is a full-color or multicolor printer, the inner space 220A in the reservoir section 220 may be divided by, for example, divider walls, into a plurality of ink reservoir chambers 220B, each of which may contain a different-colored ink.
For another example, the liquid discharging apparatus may not necessarily be limited to the printer 100 as described above but may be a multifunction peripheral machine, a copier, and a facsimile machine. The multifunction peripheral machine may be an apparatus equipped with a plurality of functions among a printing function, a copying function, and a facsimile transmitting/receiving function.
For another example, when the printer 100 is standing by, the head 200 may not necessarily stand by at the capped position P21 to receive the contacting force from the opener member 250 and open the atmosphere communication path 221K, but the head 200 may stand by at a home position different from the capped position P21. The home position may be, for example, located between the platen 180 and the cap 260 in the widthwise direction 9 or may be, for another example, located rightward with respect to the cap 260. When the head 200 is at the home position, the valve body 242 may close the atmosphere communication path 221K by the urging force of the spring 241.
In order to place the head 200 to stand by at the home position, the controller 270 may move the head 200 to the home position in accordance with the affirmative determination in S116 (S116: YES in
For another example, the printer 100 may have a line-formation printing head in place of the serial-formation printing head 200 when the switching assembly consists of an electromagnetic valve. In the printer 100 with the line-formation printing head 200, the head 200 may not be conveyed in the scanning direction but may stay still in the widthwise direction 9 at a position above the platen 180 while discharging the ink.
For another example, the printer 100 may not necessarily be limited to the on-carriage printer but may be a so-called off-carriage printer, in which the reservoir section 220 may not be mounted on the carriage 190 but may be located separately from the carriage 190. When the printer 100 is the off-carriage printer, the reservoir section 220 may not move in the widthwise direction 9 inside the housing 300; therefore, the switching assembly may preferably consist of an electromagnetic valve.
For another example, the reservoir section 220 may not necessarily be the ink tank fixed to the head 200 but may be a cartridge detachably attached to the head 200.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2020-166224 | Sep 2020 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
6007192 | Ahn | Dec 1999 | A |
20030132980 | Yamazaki et al. | Jul 2003 | A1 |
20060170739 | Koga | Aug 2006 | A1 |
20070024682 | Inoue | Feb 2007 | A1 |
20080252670 | LaBar | Oct 2008 | A1 |
20110057971 | Yokoyama | Mar 2011 | A1 |
20170120617 | Matsumura et al. | May 2017 | A1 |
20200101752 | Horade | Apr 2020 | A1 |
20200247135 | Higuchi | Aug 2020 | A1 |
20200290362 | Tajima et al. | Sep 2020 | A1 |
20200369038 | Miyazawa et al. | Nov 2020 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2010-105189 | May 2010 | JP |
2012-011643 | Jan 2012 | JP |
2017-077705 | Apr 2017 | JP |
2017-081077 | May 2017 | JP |
2017-081120 | May 2017 | JP |
2017-081121 | May 2017 | JP |
2019-055597 | Apr 2019 | JP |
2020106283 | May 2020 | WO |
Entry |
---|
International Search Report and Written Opinion dated Nov. 30, 2021 from related PCT/JP2021/035143. |
International Search Report and Written Opinion dated Nov. 30, 2021 from related PCT/JP2021/035168. |
Official Action dated Jan. 6, 2023 in a related application, namely, U.S. Appl. No. 17/488,361 dated Sep. 29, 2021. |
Final Official Action dated Apr. 17, 2023 in a related application, namely, U.S. Appl. No. 17/488,361 dated Sep. 29, 2021. |
Office Action dated Oct. 6, 2023 received in U.S. Appl. No. 17/488,361. |
Office Action dated Mar. 5, 2024 received in U.S. Appl. No. 17/488,361. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20220097407 A1 | Mar 2022 | US |