Images are processed for use with computing machines, such as a print apparatus. A print apparatus, for example, may use control data based on processed image data to reproduce a physical representation of an image by operating a print fluid ejection system according to the control data. Components of a print apparatus, such as a fluid ejection device, may be serviced to improve print quality and/or the life of the component, for example. Some print apparatus include a mechanism, such as a service station, to perform various service routines.
In the following description and figures, some example implementations of print apparatus, service station systems, and/or methods of operating blades of a wiper system. In examples described herein, a “print apparatus” may be a device to print content on a physical medium (e.g., paper, textile, a layer of powder-based build material, etc.) with a print material (e.g., ink or toner). For example, the print apparatus may be a wide-format print apparatus that prints latex-based print fluid on a print medium, such as a print medium that is size A2 or larger. The physical medium may printed on from sheets or a web roll. In the case of printing on a layer of powder-based build material, the print apparatus may utilize the deposition of print materials in a layer-wise additive manufacturing process. A print apparatus may utilize suitable print consumables, such as ink, toner, fluids or powders, or other raw materials for printing. In some examples, a print apparatus may be a three-dimensional (3D) print apparatus. An example of fluid print material is a water-based latex ink ejectable from a print head, such as a piezoelectric print head or a thermal inkjet print head. Other examples of print fluid may include dye-based color inks, pigment-based inks. solvents, gloss enhancers, fixer agents, and the like.
A print apparatus may include a service station to perform service routines on a component of the print apparatus. For example, a service station may include a wiping system and/or scraping system to remove excess print fluid from the fluid ejection device of the print apparatus. A service station may include a web material to use for wiping the fluid ejection device. The web material may be a consumable that moves used web material out of the way and moves unused web material to use for the subsequent service routine. The web material may be a textile, such as cloth, or made of other material appropriate for wiping a component of the print apparatus. Example textile web material of the service station may be woven fabric, non-woven fabric, fabric with synthetic layers, and the like. The cloth may be impregnated with a cleaning liquid or substantially dry (e.g., without liquid impregnated into the cloth).
The surface of a print head may have different types of serviceable issues. For example, excess print fluid may be wiped from the nozzle plate easier than solidified print substance (e.g., crusting). Various examples described below relate to providing different wiping operations that focus on performing characteristically different issues. A plurality of wipers are implemented on the service station to provide different amounts of force and/or other wiping characteristics. In this manner, the amount of force on the cloth may be adjusted to take care of different types of vice issues using a wiper system, for example.
The terms “include,” “have,” and variations thereof, as used herein, mean the same as the term “comprise” or appropriate variation thereof. Furthermore, the term “based on,” as used herein, means “based at least in part on.” Thus, a feature that is described as based on some stimulus may be based only on the stimulus or a combination of stimuli including the stimulus.
The first wiper blade and the second wiper blade may be made of different materials with different compression attributes. For example, the first wiper blade 2 may be made of a silicone rubber composite and the second wiper blade 4 may be made of a plastic. The first wiper blade and the second wiper blade may a combination of shape, thickness, and material that produces linear deformation. For example, the blade may have a diamond shape with walls of a certain thickness of flexible material to allow for distributed compression along the length of the blade. Example compression amounts may be 2.5 mm when applying 12 newtons or 4 mm when applying 20 newtons, for example. The blade may be extruded with reference to the length of the blade to assist in substantial linear deformation upon receiving a compression force on the blade. The length of the blade may span substantially across the width of the cloth and may be substantially the same length of the cloth width.
The liquid dispenser 8 provides liquid for servicing operations performed by the wiping system. Example cleaning liquids may include distilled water, polyethylene glycol, a combination thereof, and the like. The liquid dispenser 8 may include components that induce liquid to be deposited on to cloth 11. The liquid dispenser 8 may selectively deposit liquid onto the cloth at the areas used by the wiper blades 2 and 4. Liquid may be deposited by the liquid dispenser 8 on the cloth 11 whether or not it is impregnated with a cleaning fluid. For example, the additional fluid may improve the wiping experience of a cloth that already has cleaning fluid on and/or in the cloth. In an example, the liquid dispenser is oriented to eject liquid towards an area of the cloth corresponding to a wiper blade and may also be oriented to not eject liquid towards an area of cloth corresponding to another wiper blade. The liquid may be ejected from the liquid dispenser 8 based on forces applicable by the blades and/or blade positioning. For example, the liquid dispenser may be oriented to eject liquid towards a cloth area across from the second wiper blade 4 when the second wiper blade 4 is in a rest position and the first wiper blade 2 is in a service position. For another example, the liquid dispenser may be oriented to eject liquid over a wiper blade calibrated to place the most force on the cloth 11 (e.g., when that blade is in a rest position). The orientation of the liquid dispenser 8 may also assist proper placement of liquid, such as inducing distribution of the liquid across the width of the cloth. For example, the liquid dispenser 8 may be mounted to a frame 120 in a fixed position oriented to emit a spray pattern that extends across a length of the first wiper blade. The length of the wiper blade may be parallel to the width of the cloth of the service station.
The positions of the blades may assist or hinder placement of the liquid ejected from the liquid dispenser 8 onto the cloth 11. For example, when the first wiper blade 2 is in a service position, it may hinder spray from getting on the cloth across from the first wiper blade. In another example, when the second wiper blade 4 is in a service position, it may hinder spray from getting on the cloth across from the second wiper blade. Though the position of a blade may hinder the liquid dispenser 8 from ejecting liquid towards a cloth area, extending a wiper blade to a service position may assist placement of the liquid on the cloth 11 by raising the cloth away from the liquid dispenser 8, for example.
Another controller 80 may operate movement of a print head 30 used to eject print fluid on media passing along a platen 40. The print head scans or is otherwise moveable between a print zone 50 of the print apparatus and a service zone 60. The print zone 50 includes the area where media is printed on between the platen and lateral scanning positions of the print head 30 over the platen 30. The service zone 60 includes the area between the service station 20 and the lateral scanning positions of the print head 30 over the service station 20. As discussed further herein, in particular with reference to
The controller 70 of the service station 20 may be coupled to control a liquid dispenser 8. The controller 70 may drive a motor to move a first wiper blade to rest position before ejection of liquid and then cause the liquid dispenser 8 to eject a spray pattern on the cloth before a print head is serviced by the cloth (e.g., before the print head carriage passes over the service zone 60). For example, the controller 70 may include instructions that when executed coordinate liquid ejection with position of the first wiper blade and cause the liquid dispenser to eject liquid when a cam coupled to the blades is rotated to an angle corresponding to the second cam position and a print head carriage of a print apparatus is in a print zone of the print apparatus as shown in
In the example of
The cams 106 and 116 are shaped to generate movement of the blades 102 and 104 via the plates 122, 124, 126, and 128. In the example of
As the cams 106 and 116 rotate (as shown by directional arrow 107), plates 122, 124, 126, and 128 may shift the positions of the wiper blades 102 and 104. For example, a first set of plates coupled to the first wiper blade move the first wiper blade to the first wiper position when the cam is rotated to an angle corresponding to the first cam position and a second set of plates move the second wiper blade to the second wiper position when the cam is rotated to an angle corresponding to the second cam position. The amount of lift of a blade may have a linear relationship with an angle of the cam 106. Examples of cam positions are shown in
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
The positions of the blades in example states 8-11 and example service operations discussed herein may be operated by a controller. Referring to
A processor resource is any appropriate circuitry capable of processing (e.g., computing) instructions, such as one or multiple processing elements capable of retrieving instructions from a memory resource and executing those instructions. For example, the processor resource 222 may be a central processing unit (CPU) that enables positioning of blades of a wiper system by fetching, decoding, and executing the blade module 202 and the dispenser module 204. Example processor resources include at least one CPU, a semiconductor-based microprocessor, a programmable logic device (PLD), and the like. Example PLDs include an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC), a field-programmable gate array (FPGA), a programmable array logic (PAL), a complex programmable logic device (CPLD), and an erasable programmable logic device (EPLD). A processor resource may include multiple processing elements that are integrated in a single device or distributed across devices. A processor resource may process the instructions serially, concurrently, or in partial concurrence.
A memory resource represents a medium to store data utilized and/or produced by the system 200. The medium is any non-transitory medium or combination of non-transitory media able to electronically store data, such as modules of the system and/or data used by the system. For example, the medium may be a storage medium, which is distinct from a transitory transmission medium, such as a signal. The medium may be machine-readable, such as computer-readable. The medium may be an electronic, magnetic, optical, or other physical storage device that is capable of containing (i.e., storing) executable instructions. A memory resource may be said to store program instructions that when executed by a processor resource cause the processor resource to implement functionality of the wiper systems described herein. A memory resource may be integrated in the same device as a processor resource or it may be separate but accessible to that device and the processor resource. A memory resource may be distributed across devices.
The controller 200 may be circuitry or a combination of circuitry and executable instructions. Such components may be implemented in a number of fashions. Looking at
In some examples, the controller 200 may include the executable instructions that may be part of an installation package that when installed may be executed by a processor resource to perform operations of the controller 200, such as methods described with regards to
At block 1302 of
At block 1304 of
At block 1402, a cloth of the service station is advanced. For example, an unused portion of cloth is moved by a cloth advancement mechanism, such as cloth advancement mechanism 114, over a wiper blade before a service operation is performed on a print head. The wiping cloth may be advanced before the first wiper blade moves into the service position (e.g., at the beginning of a set of service operations) and may be performed during a printing operation by a fluid ejection device. The liquid dispenser may deposit liquid on the cloth during a printing operation by the fluid ejection system at block 1406. With the cloth placed and prepped before the servicing operation, a service operation is ready to be performed using the area of cloth with liquid sprayed on it before, after, or in between printing operations, at block 1408, for example.
Referring to
Example methods of coordination of operation of a liquid dispenser to eject liquid may generally comprise coordination among components of a print apparatus such as coordinating operations of a service station with operations of a print head carriage. Example methods of coordination by a print apparatus of spray from a liquid dispenser of a service station may generally include causing a cloth advancement, operating a cam to position a plurality of blades, causing the liquid dispenser to spray cloth with cleaning liquid, causing a blade to move to a service position, and driving a print head carriage to cause a wiping operation. Block 1602 is similar to block 1402 of
At block 1604, a cam is operated to position a plurality of blades. For example, a controller may operate a motor to rotate a cam to place the plurality of blades into a state where one of the blades is in a rest position and another blade is in a service position. In that example, the blade in the service position may lift the cloth to be sprayed with liquid by a liquid dispenser. For example, at block 1606, a liquid dispenser is activated to spray cloth with cleaning liquid while the one of the blades in the rest position and another blade is in the service position. For another example, a liquid dispenser may spray the cloth with cleaning liquid over an area corresponding to one of the blades in the rest position calibrated to produce more force on the cloth than another blade (e.g., the blade to be sprayed over is calibrated to be in the highest service position or otherwise provide the most force on the cloth). In that example, the area of the cloth to receive the cleaning liquid is positioned across (e.g., above) from the blade in the rest position calibrated to produce more force than another blade.
At block 1608, the blade in the rest position is moved to a service position. In this manner, the blades are switched positions from a rest position to a service position or vice versa depending on the servicing operation to be performed. For example, a first wiper blade is moved to a rest position at block 1604 to allow for an area of the cloth above the first wiper blade to be sprayed with liquid and is then the first wiper blade is moved at block 1608 to place pressure on the cloth where the liquid was sprayed. At block 1610, a print head carriage is driven to cause a face of a print head to come in contact with the area of the cloth with the cleaning liquid deposited by the liquid dispenser at block 1606. In this manner, a service station may be operated (e.g., via execution of instructions by a controller) to coordinate positions of a plurality of wipers to add liquid to a cloth and coordinate positions of the plurality of wipers to use the wet area to perform a service operation. In other example systems, the service system may be driven to move the cloth against a fixed print head.
At block 1712, the first wiper blade is moved to a rest position and the second wiper blade is moved to service position. For example, at blocks 1706-1710, the one of the blades to be sprayed over is moved to a rest position, sprayed over, moved to a service position, and then moved out of the way to a rest position while a second wiper blade is moved into a service position at block 1712 which may not place force on the same area of the first wiper blade. For example, the second wiper blade may be placed in a service position at block 1712 at an area of the cloth without cleaning liquid from the liquid dispenser (where the first wiper blade was placed in a service position at the area of the cloth with cleaning fluid at block 1708). At block 1714, a print head carriage is driven to cause the second service operation. For example, the print head carriage may be driven by a controller to cause the face of the print head to come in contact with the area of the cloth without the cleaning liquid deposited by the liquid dispenser at block 1706.
In this manner, the wiper blades of the service station may be toggled in a variety of combination of servicing positions and rest positions to perform different types of servicing operations (e.g., one wiper blade performs a service operation with wet area of the cloth and another wiper blade performs another service operation with an area of the cloth drier than the wet area of the cloth). The example methods described herein, including the example method of
Although the flow diagrams of
All of the features disclosed in this specification (including any accompanying claims, abstract and drawings), and/or all of the elements of any method or process so disclosed, may be combined in any combination, except combinations where at least some of such features and/or elements are mutually exclusive.
The present description has been shown and described, with reference to the foregoing examples. It is understood, however. that other forms, details, and examples may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the following claims. The use of the words “first,” “second,” or related terms in the claims are not used to limit the claim elements to an order or location, but are merely used to distinguish separate claim elements.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US17/37210 | 6/13/2017 | WO | 00 |