Material-feeding device having direction-correcting function

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6308949
  • Patent Number
    6,308,949
  • Date Filed
    Monday, September 13, 1999
    24 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, October 30, 2001
    22 years ago
Abstract
A material-feeding device (14) includes a base (52), a material passage (54) formed on the base, at least one guide member (56, 58) provided in the material passage and having a material-guide surface (56a, 58a), a direction-correcting roller assembly (60) provided in the material passage, and a conveyor roll mechanism (62) disposed downstream of the direction-correcting roller assembly in relation to a material-feeding direction, for conveying a material along the material passage. The direction-correcting roller assembly (60) includes a pair of integrally rotatable polygonal rollers (76) having a common rotation axis oblique to the material-guide surface and a freely rotatable ball (78) opposed to the pair of polygonal rollers and elastically supported in an operative position closer to the polygonal rollers to define a gap between the ball and each of the polygonal rollers for allowing the material to be inserted into the gap when the ball is in the operative position. The direction-correcting roller assembly (60) holds the material between the pair of polygonal rollers (76) and the ball (78), and intermittently feeds the material toward the guide members (56, 58).
Description




TECHNICAL FIELD




The present invention relates to a material-feeding device for feeding a sheet-like material, such as printing paper, in a predetermined direction. Particularly, the present invention relates to a material-feeding device having a direction-correcting function for correcting a feeding direction of a material.




BACKGROUND ART




Material-feeding devices for feeding a sheet-like material in a predetermined direction have been used in printers which are employed as output devices for on-line terminal units or word processors. It is known that the material-feeding device used in the printer has a direction-correcting function for correcting the feeding direction of an inserted material to be printed, to enable a printing operation to be performed at a correct position on the material.




In printers for industrial use, such as those used for printing on a bankbook or a slip in a bank (hereinafter referred to as a bankbook printer), the printing operation may be carried out sequentially or continuously on various materials to be printed having different thicknesses. Particularly, when a notebook type material such as a bankbook is fed, the material may produce, depending on an opened page to be printed, material parts having different thicknesses, corresponding to the left and right halves relative to a stitching line of the material, so that the oblique movement of the material is liable to occur during the continuous feeding of such material parts having different thickness. Accordingly, to accommodate such a situation, it is required for the material-feeding device to possess a direction-correcting function for correctly and stably feeding various materials to be printed, having different thicknesses, to a printing area.




As a conventional material-feeding device having a direction-correcting function, the U.S. Pat. No. 4,248,151 (Real) discloses a tape guide apparatus which can be used as a printing paper guide in an impact printer. This tape guide apparatus is adapted to feed a tape in a predetermined direction while maintaining an edge of the running tape in contact with a guide reference surface, and includes a pair of rollers arranged obliquely to the reference surface but parallel to each other. The running tape is clamped or held in a nip formed between these rollers.




Also, as a conventional material-clamping device in a material-feeding device of a printer, Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication (Kokai) No. 4-22657 (JP4-22657) discloses a material-clamping device having a function for uniformly locating a front end of a material such as a bankbook or a slip. This material-clamping device is provided with a clamp section including a polygonal roller and a ball biased toward the polygonal roller and an end locating section including a retractable shutter arranged back of the clamp section in relation to the feeding direction of the material. The material is fed by the rotation of the polygonal roller and is abutted against the shutter. When being abutted on the shutter, the material is clamped or held between the ball and a circumferential corner of the polygonal roller. When the polygonal roller further rotates, the polygonal roller becomes out of contact at a circumferential flat surface portion thereof with the ball, and thereby, in this condition, the material can be conveyed toward a printing area of the printer by another conveyor roll.




It is possible that both of the above conventional material-feeding devices cannot correctly and stably feed various materials having different thicknesses. Particularly, if they are used for a thinner material, the pair of rollers or the polygonal roller/ball, acting to hold the material therebetween, may bend the material when the material is abutted against the guide reference surface or the end locating shutter to make the correct transportation of the material difficult, and also may cause creases or folds in the material.




Also, since the polygonal roller disclosed in JP4-22657 is arranged to rotate stepwise by a desired angle by means of a rotary solenoid, it is possible that the polygonal roller cannot correct the feeding direction of the material while continuously feeding the material, unlike the pair of rollers of the material-feeding device described in Real.




Accordingly, it is required to develop a material-feeding device having a direction-correcting function for correctly and stably feeding a material in a predetermined direction even though a thickness of the material might vary. Such a material-feeding device is also required in ink-jet printers which have recently become popular in various fields because of low printing noise and small body size.




As described above, in printers for industrial use, such as a bankbook printer, there is a case where, when a notebook type material is printed, the material parts having different thicknesses may be produced on the left and right sides about a stitching line of the material to be printed, depending on an opened page of the material. In this case, since it is necessary, in, e.g., a dot impact printer conventionally used generally as a bankbook printer, to maintain a distance between a printing head and a surface of the material to be printed, a level of the printing head is sequentially changed, when the material parts with difference thicknesses are subsequently printed, in response to the difference in the thickness. As a result, the conventional bankbook printer tends have a complicated driving structure for the printing head, and to require a relatively longer time from the introduction of the bankbook to its discharge after the printing.




DISCLOSURE OF THE INVENTION




An object of the present invention is to provide a material-feeding device having a direction-correcting function which enables various materials having different thicknesses to be correctly and stably fed in a predetermined direction.




Another object of the present invention is to provide a material-feeding device having a high-performance direction-correcting function which can be applied to a feeding device for materials to be printed incorporated in printers for industrial use and, particularly, in bankbook printers.




A further object of the present invention is to provide an ink-jet printer provided with such a material-feeding device as described above.




A still further object of the present invention is to provide a material-feeding device which can be used in a printer carrying out a printing operation on a notebook-like material to be printed and which can continuously print material parts having different thicknesses without changing a height of a printing head and thus can shorten a time required for the printing operation.




To achieve the above objects, the present invention provides a material-feeding device comprising a base; a material passage formed on the base; at least one guide member provided in the material passage and having a material-guide surface; a direction-correcting roller assembly provided in the material passage, the direction-correcting roller assembly including a pair of integrally rotatable polygonal rollers having a common rotation axis oblique to the material-guide surface of the guide member and a freely rotatable ball opposed to the pair of polygonal rollers and elastically supported in an operative position closer to the polygonal rollers to define a gap between the ball and each of the polygonal rollers for allowing a material to be inserted into the gap when the ball is in the operative position; a driving mechanism for driving the pair of polygonal rollers for rotation; and a conveyor roll mechanism provided downstream, in a material-feeding direction, of the direction-correcting roller assembly, for conveying the material along the material passage.




In a preferred aspect, the direction-correcting roller assembly is arranged to define a minimum gap between the pair of polygonal rollers and the ball when the ball is in the operative position and when the pair of polygonal rollers are in a rotational angular position wherein a circumferential corner of each of the polygonal rollers is opposed to the ball.




It is preferred that the material passage is formed between a first supporting plate statically disposed above the base and a second supporting plate elastically supported on the base to be opposed to the first supporting plate.




In this arrangement, it is advantageous that the first supporting plate and the second supporting plate include an upper support face and a lower support face, respectively, which are opposed to each other to slidably hold the material therebetween, the lower support face acting to elastically urge the material against the upper support face.




It is also advantageous that the guide member comprises a first guide member statically projecting in the material passage and positioning the material-guide surface in parallel to the material-feeding direction, and a second guide member retractably projecting in the material passage and located downstream, in the material-feeding direction, of the direction-correcting roller assembly.




The material-feeding device may further comprise detecting means for detecting a position of the material in the material passage.




The material-feeding device may further comprise an actuating mechanism for shifting the ball elastically supported in the operative position in a direction away from the pair of polygonal rollers.




It is preferred that the driving mechanism rotates the pair of polygonal rollers in cooperation with the conveyor roll mechanism.




The conveyor roll mechanism may include at least one conveyor roll assembly, the at least one conveyor roll assembly including a driving roll rotatable about a stationary axis and a plurality of driven rolls biased toward the driving roll and rotatable about a movable axis.




The material-feeding device may further comprise an actuating mechanism for simultaneously shifting the driven rolls in a direction away from the driving roll.




It is also advantageous that the driving roll is arranged at an upper side of the material passage, and that the driven rolls are arranged at a lower side of the material passage and are individually elastically biased in a direction toward the driving roll.




The present invention also provides an ink-jet printer comprising a machine frame; a printing head provided reciprocatingly movably in a predetermined direction in the machine frame, the printing head including a plurality of nozzles for ejecting ink-droplets and at least one nozzle surface on which the nozzles open; ink-supply means for supplying ink to the printing head; and a material-feeding device for feeding a material to be printed into a printing area opposed to the printing head in the machine frame; wherein the material-feeding device comprises a base placed in the machine frame; a material passage formed on the base; at least one guide member provided in the material passage and having a material-guide surface; a direction-correcting roller assembly provided in the material passage, the direction-correcting roller assembly including a pair of polygonal rollers having a common rotation axis oblique to the material-guide surface of the guide member and a freely rotatable ball opposed to the pair of polygonal rollers and elastically supported in an operative position closer to the polygonal rollers to define a gap between the ball and each of the polygonal rollers to allow the material to be printed to be inserted into the gap when the ball is in the operative position; a driving mechanism for driving the pair of polygonal rollers for rotation; and a conveyor roll mechanism provided downstream, in a material-feeding direction, of the direction-correcting roller assembly, for conveying the material to be printed into the printing area along the material passage.




In the preferred aspect, the direction-correcting roller assembly of the material-feeding device is arranged to define a minimum gap between the pair of polygonal rollers and the ball when the ball is in the operative position and when the pair of polygonal rollers are in a rotational angular position wherein a circumferential corner of each of the polygonal rollers is opposed to the ball.




It is preferred that the guide member of the material-feeding device comprises a first guide member statically projecting in the material passage and positioning the material-guide surface in parallel to the material-feeding direction, and a second guide member retractably projecting in the material passage and located downstream, in the material-feeding direction, of the direction-correcting roller assembly.




It is advantageous that the conveyor roll mechanism of the material-feeding device includes a pair of conveyor roll assemblies arranged at both sides of the printing area in relation to the material-feeding direction, each of the conveyor roll assemblies including a driving roll rotatable about a stationary axis and a plurality of driven rolls biased toward the driving roll and rotatable about a movable axis, and wherein the second guide member is provided to retractably project between upstream one of the conveyor roll assemblies in relation to the material-feeding direction and the printing area.




The present invention further provides an ink-jet printer as defined above, adapted to be used as a bankbook printer, wherein the driving roll is arranged at an upper side of the material passage, and wherein the driven rolls are arranged at a lower side of the material passage and are individually elastically biased in a direction toward the driving roll.




The present invention further provides an ink-jet printer as defined above, adapted to be used as a bankbook printer, wherein the material passage of the material-feeding device is formed between a first supporting plate statically disposed above the base and a second supporting plate elastically supported on the base to be opposed to the first supporting plate.




In this arrangement, it is advantageous that the first supporting plate and the second supporting plate include an upper support face and a lower support face, respectively, which are opposed to each other to slidably hold the material therebetween, the lower support face acting to elastically urge the material against the upper support face.




The present invention also provides a material-feeding device comprising a base; a first supporting plate statically arranged above the base; a second supporting plate elastically supported on the base to be opposed to the first supporting plate, to form a material passage between the first and second supporting plates; and a conveyor roll mechanism provided in the material passage for conveying the material along the material passage; wherein the first supporting plate and the second supporting plate include an upper support face and a lower support face, respectively, which are opposed to each other to slidably hold the material therebetween, the lower support face acting to elastically urge the material against the upper support face; and wherein the conveyor roll mechanism includes a driving roll arranged at an upper side of the material passage to be rotatable about a stationary axis and a plurality of driven rolls arranged at a lower side of the material passage to be rotatable about a movable axis, the driven rolls being individually elastically biased in a direction toward the driving roll.




The present invention also provides an ink-jet printer comprising a material-feeding device as defined above.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




The above and other objects, characteristics and advantages of the present invention will be explained in more detail with reference to the embodiments illustrated in the attached drawings, wherein:





FIG. 1

is a schematic perspective view showing an ink-jet printer provided with a material-feeding device, according to one embodiment of the present invention, wherein several main components of the ink-jet printer are visibly illustrated in a perspective manner;





FIG. 2

is a schematic perspective view of a printing head of the ink-jet printer shown in

FIG. 1

;





FIG. 3

is a schematic perspective view showing the appearance and arrangement of a material-feeding device according to one embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 4

is a schematic plan view of the material-feeding device shown in

FIG. 3

;





FIG. 5A

is a schematic sectional view taken along line V—V in

FIG. 4

;





FIG. 5B

is a schematic plan view of a ball-actuating mechanism in the material-feeding device shown in

FIG. 3

;





FIG. 6A

is an enlarged front view of a direction-correcting roller assembly in the material-feeding device shown in

FIG. 3

;





FIG. 6B

is a partially cut-out enlarged side view of the direction-correcting roller assembly in the material-feeding device shown in

FIG. 3

, wherein first and second supporting plates are omitted;





FIG. 6C

is a partially cut-out enlarged side view of the direction-correcting roller assembly in the material-feeding device shown in

FIG. 3

, showing a condition different from that shown in

FIG. 6B

;





FIG. 7A

is a view corresponding to

FIG. 6C

, illustrating a mode of operation of the direction-correcting roller assembly in connection with a thinner material;





FIG. 7B

is a view corresponding to

FIG. 6C

, illustrating a mode of operation of the direction-correcting roller assembly in connection with a thicker material;





FIG. 8

is a schematic perspective view illustrating various actuating mechanisms in the material-feeding device shown in

FIG. 3

;





FIG. 9A

is a schematic front view of a roller-actuating mechanism in the material-feeding device shown in

FIG. 3

;





FIG. 9B

is a schematic plan view of the roller-actuating mechanism in the material-feeding device shown in

FIG. 3

;





FIG. 10

is a schematic sectional view of the material-feeding device taken along line X—X in

FIG. 4

, wherein a printing head and a material to be printed are also shown;





FIG. 11A

is a schematic front view of a shutter-actuating mechanism in the material-feeding device shown in

FIG. 3

;





FIG. 11B

is a schematic plan view of the shutter-actuating mechanism in the material-feeding device shown in

FIG. 3

; and





FIG. 12

illustrates timing charts of the operation of various actuating mechanisms of the material-feeding device shown in FIG.


3


.











BEST MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION




Referring now to the drawings,

FIG. 1

is a schematic perspective view of an ink-jet printer


10


according to one embodiment of the present invention, wherein several main components thereof are visibly illustrated in a perspective manner, and

FIG. 2

is a schematic perspective view of a printing head assembly


12


(hereinafter referred to as a “printing head


12


”) of the ink-jet printer


10


.

FIG. 3

is a schematic perspective view showing the appearance and arrangement of a material-feeding device


14


according to one aspect of the present invention,

FIG. 4

is a schematic plan view of the material-feeding device


14


, and

FIG. 5A

is a schematic sectional view of the material-feeding device


14


. It should be noted that the material-feeding device according to the present invention is applicable not only to an ink-jet printer but also to other printers as well as various apparatuses for handling sheet-like materials.




Referring to

FIG. 1

, the ink-jet printer


10


is provided with a machine frame


18


including an openable/closable housing


16


and a machine body (not shown), a printing head


12


provided reciprocatingly movably in a predetermined direction (usually in a horizontal direction relative to a reference plane on which the printer is installed) in the machine frame


18


, ink-supply means


20


for supplying ink to the printing head


12


, a material-feeding device


14


for feeding a material to be printed M (see

FIG. 5A

) into a printing area P opposed to the printing head


12


in the machine frame


18


, and maintenance means


22


including a plurality of functional stations arranged to be distributed in opposite end regions of the reciprocation range of the printing head


12


in the machine frame


18


.




The printing head


12


is fixed to a carriage


24


which in turn is carried on a guide bar


26


extending in the horizontal direction in the machine frame


18


so as to be movable in the axial direction of the bar. During the printing operation, the printing head


12


is reciprocated in the horizontal direction along the guide bar


26


by means of a driving mechanism not shown.




As schematically shown in

FIG. 2

, the printing head


12


is provided with a plurality of nozzles


28


for ejecting ink-droplets, a nozzle surface


30


on which the nozzles


28


open, and an actuator


32


composed of piezoelectric elements for making the nozzles


28


eject ink-droplets. In the illustrated embodiment, the printing head


12


includes separate three subheads


36


, each of which is provided with the plural nozzles


28


, the nozzle surface


30


and the actuator


32


. Between the three subheads


36


of the printing head


12


and the ink-supply means


20


, a pressure-fluctuation damping unit or damper


34


is provided for suppressing the pressure fluctuation of ink in an ink-supply path and thus stabilizing a meniscus of ink entering the respective nozzles


28


. A flexible circuit board


38


for applying a driving voltage onto the actuators


32


is shown in

FIGS. 1 and 2

. Also, as shown in

FIG. 1

, the printing head


12


is usually hidden by an openable/closable cover


39


attached to the carriage


24


.




The ink-supply means


20


is provided with an ink-storage section


40


arranged at a position apart from the printing head


12


in the machine frame


18


, and an ink-supply conduit


42


connecting the printing head


12


with the ink-storage section


40


, to supply a quick-dry type pigment ink to the printing head


12


during the printing operation. In the illustrated embodiment, the ink-supply conduit


42


is formed of a sufficiently flexible tube so as not to interfere with the reciprocating motion of the printing head


12


.




Also in the illustrated embodiment, the ink-supply means


20


includes separate three ink-storage sections


40


and separate three ink-supply conduits


42


connecting the respective ink-storage sections


40


to the respective subheads


36


of the printing head


12


(FIG.


2


). Accordingly, the ink-jet printer


10


is usable as a color printer. Further, in the illustrated embodiment, the three ink-storage sections


40


are formed in a cartridge type ink tank


44


detachably mounted at a predetermined position on the machine frame


18


.




The plural functional stations constituting the maintenance means


22


include a sealing station


46


for substantially sealing and covering the plural nozzles


28


opening on the nozzle surface


30


of the printing head


12


when the printer does not operate, so as to prevent the ink in the nozzles


28


from drying, a discharging station


48


for making the nozzles


28


of the printing head


12


discharge the ink with increased viscosity in the nozzles


28


when the printer does not operate, and a cleaning station


50


for sucking and removing the ink with increased viscosity in the nozzles


28


when the printer does not operate, washing the nozzle surface


30


and wiping the nozzle surface


30


. In the illustrated embodiment, the sealing station


46


and the discharging station


48


are disposed in one end region (a right end region in the drawing) of the reciprocation range of the printing head, and the cleaning station


50


is disposed in another end region (a left end region in the drawing) of the reciprocation range of the printing head.




Such a distributive arrangement of the various functional stations facilitates the effective utilization of an idle space in the machine frame


18


of the ink-jet printer


10


. That is, in the general ink-jet printer, since the printing operation is carried out on the material to be printed while the printing head reciprocates in the predetermined direction, the reciprocation range of the printing head is determined to be wider than a dimension of the material-feeding device disposed opposite to the printing head. As a result, an idle space is inevitably formed around the material-feeding device. Therefore, in the ink-jet printer


10


, the above-mentioned functional stations for establishing a multifunctional maintenance system are distributively arranged in the idle space, so as to effectively prevent a machine size from being enlarged. Further, the ink-jet printer


10


having such a multifunctional maintenance system can safely use the quick-drying pigment ink, and thus can be suitably applied to printers for industrial use, e.g., to a bankbook printer.




As shown in

FIGS. 3

to


5


A, the material-feeding device


14


according to one aspect of the present invention arranged beneath the reciprocation range of the printing head


12


includes a hollow box-shaped base


52


statically placed in the machine frame


18


, a material passage


54


formed on the base


52


, guide members


56


,


58


provided in the material passage


54


and having material-guide surfaces


56




a


,


58




a


, a direction-correcting roller assembly


60


provided in the material passage


54


for correcting the feeding direction of the material to be printed M by intermittently feeding the material M inserted into the material passage


54


toward the guide members


56


,


58


, and a conveyor roll mechanism


62


disposed downstream of the direction-correcting roller assembly


60


as seen in the material-feeding direction, for holding the material M and conveying the latter into the printing area P of the ink-jet printer


10


and for releasing the material M from the printing area P.




In this regard, the material to be printed M can be used in this embodiment on the assumption that it has such a shape that at least front and left edges of the surface to be printed are generally orthogonal to each other as seen in a direction where the material M is inserted into the material passage


54


.




The material passage


54


is formed between a first supporting plate


64


statically disposed above the base


52


and a second supporting plate


68


elastically supported on the base


52


via a plurality of bearing springs


66


at a position beneath the first supporting plate


64


. The first supporting plate


64


is fixedly connected to, e.g., the machine frame


18


. The first supporting plate


64


and the second supporting plate


68


are generally rectangular-shaped planar rigid plates having flat support faces


64




a


and


68




a


opposed to each other, and slidably hold the material to be printed M in the material passage


54


formed therebetween under the elastic urging force of the bearing springs


66


.




The second supporting plate


68


can be shifted in a floating manner beneath the first supporting plate


64


by the elastic support of the bearing springs


66


, so that an angle of the support face


68




a


relative to the support face


64




a


can be varied. As a result, the first and second supporting plates


64


,


68


can slidably hold therebetween various materials to be printed M having different thicknesses, such as a bankbook or a slip, while properly varying a space of the material passage


54


. Also, it is possible to hold therebetween a notebook-like material to be printed M, such as a bankbook, which is in an opened state at a desired page and thereby produces material parts having different thickness on left and right sides about a stitching line of the material M, under a generally entirely uniform pressure. In this state, the upper surface of the material to be printed M, i.e., the surface to be printed, is kept at a constant level in the machine frame


18


by the support face


64




a


of the first supporting plate


64


, whereby a distance between the nozzle surface


30


of the printing head


12


and the surface to be printed of the material M is always maintained at a constant value irrespective of the variation of a thickness of the material to be printed M.




The guide members


56


,


58


includes a first guide member


56


statically projecting in the material passage


54


and positioning the material-guide surface


56




a


in parallel to the material-feeding direction (

FIG. 4

, an arrow A), and a second guide member


58


located downstream, in the material-feeding direction, of the direction-correcting roller assembly


60


to project in the material passage


54


in a retractable manner. The first guide member


56


is constituted by one of a pair of walls


64




b


extending from the opposite edges of the first supporting plate


64


toward the second supporting plate


68


. The second supporting plate


68


is always located between the pair of walls


64




b


when shifting in a floating manner above the base


52


. The second guide member


58


is constituted by a plurality of shutters


70


arranged close to the conveyor roll mechanism


62


, each of which includes a material-guide surface


58




a


generally orthogonal to the material-guide surface


56




a


of the first guide member


56


. These shutters


70


are integrally connected to each other under the second supporting plate


68


to form a comb-teeth plate


72


(see

FIG. 8

) as described later.




The second supporting plate


68


has an extension


68




b


of a comb-teeth shape at a plate end near a material inlet


54




a


of the material passage


54


. The extension


68




b


is combined in a non-contact manner with a shelf member


74


of a similar comb-teeth shape fixed to the base


52


, so as to constitute a platform on which the material to be printed M is placed.




A plurality of sensors


55




a


to


55




c


are provided in the material passage


54


for detecting a position of the material to be printed M put in the material passage


54


. An inlet sensor


55




a


located in the vicinity of the material inlet


54




a


of the material passage


54


detects that the material M is inserted into the material passage


54


. A first guide sensor


55




b


located in the vicinity of the material-guide surface


56




a


of the first guide member


56


and upstream of the conveyor roll mechanism


62


as seen in the material-feeding direction detects that the material M passing through the direction-correcting roller assembly


60


comes into contact with the material-guide surface


56




a


. A plurality of second guide sensors


55




c


located in the vicinity of the plural material-guide surfaces


58




a


of the second guide member


58


and downstream of the first guide sensor


55




b


as seen in the material-feeding direction detect that the material M passing through the direction-correcting roller assembly


60


comes into contact with the material-guide surfaces


58




a


. These sensors


55




a


to


55




c


may be formed from a well-known proximity sensor, photoelectric sensor or the like.




The direction-correcting roller assembly


60


is constituted by a pair of integrally rotatable polygonal rollers


76


having a common rotation axis


76




a


oblique to the material-guide surfaces


56




a


,


58




a


of the first and second guide members


56


,


58


, and a freely rotatable ball


78


located opposite to and in the vicinity of the pair of polygonal rollers


76


. The pair of polygonal rollers


76


are arranged near the upper side of the first supporting plate


64


, and the ball


78


is arranged near the lower side of the second supporting plate


68


. Openings


64




c


and


68




c


are formed in the first supporting plate


64


and the second supporting plate


68


at positions corresponding to the pair of polygonal rollers


76


and the ball


78


, respectively (see FIG.


6


A), to allow the pair of polygonal rollers


76


and the ball


78


to approach each other through the openings


64




c


,


68




c


.




As shown in

FIGS. 6A

to


6


C, the pair of polygonal rollers


76


are constructed by respectively fitting a pair of O-rings


82


into a pair of grooves


80




a


axially spaced from each other and circumferentially formed on the outer surface of a triangular prismic roller body


80


with rounded corners. The roller body


80


is coaxially fixed to one end of a shaft


84


having the rotation axis


76




a


. The shaft


84


is rotatably supported above the first supporting plate


64


and generally parallel to the latter, by a bearing member


86


(

FIG. 4

) fixedly connected to a stationary part such as a machine frame


18


.




Referring again to

FIGS. 3

to


5


A, a bevel gear


88


is secured to the other end of the shaft


84


. The bevel gear


88


is meshed with a counterpart second bevel gear


90


which is in turn secured to one end of a second shaft


92


rotatably held above the first supporting plate


64


. The second shaft


92


extends obliquely to the shaft


84


, and also extends parallel to the first supporting plate


64


and, preferably, to the material-guide surfaces


58




a


of the second guide member


58


. A gear


94


constituting a part of a driving mechanism for the pair of polygonal rollers


76


is secured to the other end of the second shaft


92


.




The ball


78


is supported on a ball pedestal


96


in a freely rotatable manner. As shown in

FIGS. 5A and 5B

, the ball pedestal


96


is fixedly located on a free end


98




a


of a first rocking arm


98


arranged beneath the second supporting plate


68


. The first rocking arm


98


is arranged inside the base


52


and is pivotably supported at the other end thereof on a pivot shaft


100


connected to the base


52


. The rocking arm


98


is elastically connected at the generally longitudinally center thereof to an upper plate


52




a


of the base


52


via a suspension spring


102


. The suspension spring


102


elastically urges the ball


78


toward the pair of polygonal rollers


76


through the rocking arm


98


and the ball pedestal


96


. The ball


78


is positioned on the rocking arm


98


so that one point on the outer circumferential surface of the ball nearest to the roller body


80


is equidistant from each of the pair of polygonal rollers


76


.




Also, the rocking arm


98


is engaged with a ball-actuating cam


104


at a location between the free end


98




a


and the suspension spring


102


. The ball-actuating cam


104


is secured to a cam driving shaft


106


rotatably supported on the base


52


. The ball-actuating cam


104


maintains a condition wherein a circumferential cam surface


104




a


is abutted to the upper surface of the rocking arm


98


as the cam is rotated by the cam driving shaft


106


, and thereby makes the rocking arm


98


pivot about the shaft


100


against the biasing force of the suspension spring


102


.




When a minimum radius portion of the cam surface


104




a


is brought into contact with the rocking arm during the rotation of the ball-actuating cam


104


, the ball


78


is located at an operative position nearest to the pair of polygonal rollers


76


under the elastic biasing force of the suspension spring


102


. At this time, a part of the ball


78


projects into the material passage


54


through the opening


68




c


of the second supporting plate


68


. When the ball


78


is in this operative position and, as shown in

FIGS. 6A and 6B

, the pair of polygonal rollers


76


are located at a rotational angle wherein circumferential flat portions thereof, i.e., linear sections of the respective O-rings


82


, are opposed to the ball


78


, sufficient gaps G


1


are defined between the pair of polygonal rollers


76


and the ball


78


. The gaps G


1


allow the material to be printed M having a possible maximum thickness to freely pass through between the pair of polygonal rollers


76


and the ball


78


.




Also, as shown in

FIG. 6C

, when the ball


78


is in the operative position and the pair of polygonal rollers


76


are located at a rotational angle wherein circumferential corner portions thereof, i.e., bent sections of the respective O-rings


82


, are opposed to the ball


78


, minimum gaps G


2


are defined between the pair of polygonal rollers


76


and the ball


78


, and a part of the ball


78


enters a space between the polygonal rollers


76


. The gaps G


2


allow the material to be printed M having a relatively small thickness (such as a slip) or the material M having a low stiffness to pass through between the pair of polygonal rollers


76


and the ball


78


in such a state that the material M is not clamped between the polygonal rollers


76


and the ball


78


but is bent in conformity with the circumferential surface of the ball (see FIG.


7


A). On the other hand, when a relatively thicker material to be printed M (such as a bankbook) or the material M having a high stiffness is inserted between the pair of polygonal rollers


76


and the ball


78


, the ball


78


is slightly depressed against the biasing force of the suspension spring


102


due to the stiffness of the material M (see FIG.


7


B). As a result, the pair of polygonal rollers


76


and the ball


78


substantially clamp the material to be printed M under the elastic biasing force of the suspension spring


102


.




Moreover, when the ball-actuating cam


104


is rotated and the maximum radius portion of the cam surface


104




a


is brought into contact with the rocking arm


98


, the ball


78


is located in a non-operative position spaced from the pair of polygonal rollers


76


under the elastic biasing force of the suspension spring


102


. In this state, even when the pair of polygonal rollers


76


are located at a rotational angle wherein bent sections of the respective O-rings


82


are opposed to the ball


78


, sufficient gaps are defined between the pair of polygonal rollers


76


and the ball


78


, which allow the material to be printed M having a maximum possible thickness to freely pass through the gaps.




It can be understood that, to establish the above-mentioned characteristic operation of the direction-correcting roller assembly


60


, the pair of polygonal rollers


76


need not be limited to the above-mentioned triangular shape but may have any other polygonal shapes. It is important for every shapes that, when the ball


78


is in the operative position, the minimum gap G


2


is defined between the pair of the polygonal rollers


76


and the ball


78


at a rotational angular position wherein the circumferential corner portions of the polygonal rollers


76


are opposed to the ball


78


.




The conveyor roll mechanism


62


is provided with two conveyor roll assemblies


108


A and


108


B spaced apart from each other in the material-feeding direction. Each of the conveyor roll assemblies


108


A and


108


B includes a driving roll


110


rotatable about a stationary rotation axis


110




a


extending vertically to the material-feeding direction and a plurality of driven rolls


112


independently biased toward the driving roll


110


to contact the latter and independently rotatable about a movable rotation axis


112




a


extending parallel to the stationary rotation axis


110




a


. Each driving roll


110


is arranged at the upper side of the first supporting plate


64


, and each driven roll


112


is arranged at the lower side of the second supporting plate


68


. Openings


64




d


and


68




d


are formed at positions corresponding to the respective driving rolls


110


and the respective driven rolls


112


(see FIG.


4


), and each driving roll


110


can contact each driven roll


112


through the openings


64




d


and


68




d


.




Each driving roll


110


is secured to a shaft


114


having a stationary rotation axis


110




a


. In the illustrated embodiment, each driving roll


110


is axially divided into a plurality of subsections. Each shaft


114


extends orthogonal to the material-guide surface


56




a


of the first guide member


56


and is rotatably supported above the first supporting plate


64


and generally parallel to the latter. Pulleys


116


having the same outer diameters are secured to one end of each respective shaft


114


axially extending from each respective driving roll


110


. The pulleys


116


are connected to an output shaft of a driving source


120


such as an electric motor via a belt


118


. Thus, the respective driving rolls


110


are simultaneously driven by the driving source


120


at the same speed in the same direction. In this regard, instead of these pulleys


116


and the belt


118


, well-known power transmitting systems such as a chain and sprocket or gear trains may be employed.




A gear


122


is secured to the shaft


114


of the upstream driving roll


110


, in relation to the material-feeding direction, at a position between the driving roll


110


and the pulley


116


. The gear


122


is meshed with the gear


94


secured to the other end of the second shaft


92


in the direction-correcting roller assembly


60


. As a result, a torque from the output shaft of the driving source


120


is transmitted to the second shaft


92


via the belt


118


, the pulleys


116


, the gear


122


and the gear


94


, and further transmitted to the pair of polygonal rollers


76


via the bevel gears


90


,


88


and the shaft


84


. In this manner, the driving mechanism including the driving source


120


for the driving rolls


110


of the conveyor roll mechanism


62


also constitutes the driving mechanism for the pair of polygonal rollers


76


, and thus rotates the pair of polygonal rollers


76


synchronously with the conveyor roll mechanism


62


.




As shown in

FIGS. 5A

,


8


,


9


A and


9


B, the plural driven rolls


112


of the conveyor roll assembly


108


A arranged upstream in the material-feeding direction respectively have movable rotation axis


112




a


and are individually supported on plural roll pedestals


124


. The roll pedestals


124


are fixedly provided on respective free ends


126




a


of plural second rocking arms


126


arranged beneath the second supporting plate


68


. Similar to the first rocking arm


98


supporting the ball


78


, the second rocking arms


126


are arranged inside the base


52


and are pivotably supported at the other ends thereof on a second pivot shaft


128


connected to the base


52


. Also, similar to the first rocking arm


98


, each of the second rocking arms


126


is elastically connected at the generally longitudinally center thereof to the upper plate


52




a


of the base


52


via a suspension spring


130


. Each suspension spring


130


elastically urges each driven roll


112


toward the driving roll


110


to contact therewith through the rocking arm


126


and the roll pedestal


124


. rocking arm


126


and the roll pedestal


124


.




Also, each of the second rocking arms


126


is engaged with a roll-actuating cam


132


at a location between the free end


126




a


and the suspension spring


130


. Each roll-actuating cam


132


is secured to the cam driving shaft


106


rotatably supported on the base


52


. The plural roll-actuating cams


132


respectively engaged with the plural rocking arms


126


are fixed to the cam driving shaft


106


in the same phase. The roll-actuating cams


132


maintain a condition wherein circumferential cam surfaces


132




a


are abutted to the upper surfaces of the respective rocking arms


126


as the cams are simultaneously rotated by the cam driving shaft


106


, and thereby make the rocking arms


126


synchronously pivot about the shaft


128


against the biasing force of the suspension springs


130


.




When a minimum radius portion of the cam surface


132




a


is brought into contact with each rocking arm


126


during the rotation of each roll-actuating cam


132


, each driven roll


112


is located at an operative position to contact with the driving roll


110


under the elastic biasing force of the suspension spring


130


. In this state, the upstream conveyor roll assembly


108


A, in the material-feeding direction, can hold the material to be printed M between the driving roll


110


and the plural driven rolls


112


under the mutually independent biasing force of the plural suspension springs


130


. Further, when each roll-actuating cam


132


is rotated and the maximum radius portion of the cam surface


132




a


is brought into contact with each rocking arm


126


, each driven roll


112


is located in a non-operative position spaced from the driving roll


110


under the elastic biasing force of the suspension spring


130


. In this state, sufficient gaps are defined, between the driving roll


110


and the plural driven rolls


112


, to allow the material to be printed M having a possible maximum thickness to freely pass through the gaps.




On the other hand, the plural driven rolls


112


of the conveyor roll assembly


108


B arranged downstream in the material-feeding direction respectively have movable rotation axis


112




a


and are individually supported on plural roll pedestals


134


. The roll pedestals


134


are fixedly provided on respective free ends


136




a


of plural third rocking arms


136


arranged beneath the second supporting plate


68


. The third rocking arms


136


are aligned respectively with the second rocking arms


126


inside the base


52


and are pivotably supported at the other ends thereof on the first pivot shaft


100


connected to the base


52


. Also, similar to the second rocking arms


126


, each of the third rocking arms


136


is elastically connected at a distal end thereof to the upper plate


52




a


of the base


52


via a suspension spring


138


. Each suspension spring


138


elastically urges each driven roll


112


toward the driving roll


110


to contact therewith through the rocking arm


136


and the roll pedestal


134


.




The third rocking arm


136


is not provided with means for displacing the same, such as the roll-actuating cam


132


engaged with the second rocking arm


126


. Therefore, each driven roll


112


carried by the third rocking arm


136


is always located in the operative position to contact with the driving roll


110


under the elastic biasing force of the suspension spring


138


. As a result, the downstream conveyor roll assembly


108


B, in the material-feeding direction, can always hold the material to be printed M between the driving roll


110


and the plural driven rolls


112


under the independent biasing force of the plural suspension springs


138


.




The printing area P of the ink-jet printer


10


is defined between the two conveyor roll assemblies


108


A and


108


B. Accordingly, an opening


64




e


is formed in the first supporting plate


64


in a region between the two conveyor roll assemblies


108


A and


108


B, which extend over substantially the entire transverse length of the material passage


54


(FIG.


4


). The printing head


12


of the ink-jet printer


10


moves to-and-fro along the guide bar


26


above the printing area P and scans the material to be printed M introduced into the printing area P, to form letters or images on the material M with ink droplets ejected from the plural nozzles


28


.




As already described, the material-feeding device


14


employs an arrangement wherein the upper surface of the material to be printed M, i.e., the surface to be printed, is held at a uniform height by the support face


64




a


of the first supporting plate


64


, while, when using the materials M having different thicknesses, the second supporting plate


68


is shifted in a floating manner on the bearing springs


66


, so as to displace the support face


68




a


of the second supporting plate


68


as a bottom face of the material passage


54


.




For example, when the printing operation is carried out on the notebook type material M such as a bankbook, and if the material parts with different thicknesses are produced on the left and right sides relative to the stitching line of the material M, the plural driven rolls


112


, in the respective areas of the conveyor roll assemblies


108


A,


108


B, are independently urged toward the operative positions under the elastic biasing force of the respective suspension springs


130


,


138


, whereby the material parts with different thicknesses are surely held between the driving rolls


110


and the driven rolls


112


positionally corresponding to the respective material parts, as diagrammatically shown in

FIG. 10

in connection with the conveyor roll assembly


108


B. It will be understood that this mode of operation of the driven rolls


112


as independent suspensions is effective in such a condition not only that the material to be printed M is fed in a direction generally parallel to the stitching line thereof but also that the material M is fed in a direction generally orthogonal to the stitching line.




In this manner, according to the material-feeding device


14


, the printing surface of the material to be printed M is always maintained at a constant height when the printing operation is sequentially or continuously carried out on various materials M having different thicknesses or when the printing operation is continuously carried out on a desired opened page(s) of the notebook type material M such as a bankbook. Accordingly, even if the thickness of the material M varies during the continuous printing operation, it is unnecessary to change the height of the printing head


12


relative to the first supporting plate


64


, and a predetermined printing quality can be surely maintained. As a result, according to the material-feeding device


14


, it is possible to simplify the driving unit for the printing head


12


and to improve a printing speed without deteriorating the printing quality. In this respect, such a constitution and effects of the material-feeding device


14


are not easily established in an impact printer wherein the bottom side of the material to be printed M must be statically supported during the printing operation, but are especially effectively established in an ink-jet printer wherein the bottom side of the material to be printed M does not need to be statically supported during the printing operation.




As shown in

FIGS. 5A

,


8


,


11


A and


11


B, the above-mentioned plural shutters


70


constituting the second guide member


58


are integrally connected to each other under the second supporting plate


68


to form the comb-teeth plate


72


. The comb-teeth plate


72


is arranged downstream of and closer to the plural driven rolls


112


of the upstream conveyor roll assembly


108


A in the material-feeding direction.




The comb-teeth plate


72


is fixed to a free end


140




a


of a rocking frame


140


arranged beneath the second supporting plate


68


. The rocking frame


140


is arranged inside the base


52


, similar to the second rocking arms


126


supporting the driven rolls


112


, and is pivotably supported at the other end thereof on the second pivot shaft


100


connected to the base


52


. Also, similar to the second rocking arms


126


, the rocking frame


140


is elastically connected at the generally center of the longitudinal portion thereof, which is generally orthogonal to the comb-teeth plate


72


, to the upper plate


52




a


of the base


52


via a suspension spring


142


. The suspension spring


142


elastically urges the plural shutters


70


of the comb-teeth plate


72


toward the second supporting plate


68


through the rocking frame


140


.




Also, the rocking frame


140


is engaged with a shutter-actuating cam


144


at a location between the free end


140




a


and the suspension spring


142


. The shutter-actuating cam


144


is secured to the cam driving shaft


106


rotatably supported on the base


52


. The shutter-actuating cam


144


maintains a condition wherein a circumferential cam surface


144




a


is abutted to a projection


146


laterally projecting from the rocking frame


140


as the cam is rotated by the cam driving shaft


106


, and thereby makes the rocking frame


140


pivot about the shaft


128


against the biasing force of the suspension spring


142


.




The above-mentioned openings


68




d


and further openings


68




e


are formed in the second supporting plate


68


at positions corresponding to the plural shutters


70


of the comb-teeth plate


72


. Also, the above-mentioned openings


64




d


are formed in the first supporting plate


64


at positions corresponding to the plural shutters


70


of the comb-teeth plate


72


.




When a minimum radius portion of the cam surface


144




a


is brought into contact with the projection


146


of the rocking frame


140


during the rotation of the shutter-actuating cam


144


, the plural shutters


70


of the comb-teeth plate


72


project into the material passage


54


through the respective openings


64




d


,


68




d


and


68




e


of the first and second supporting plates


64


and


68


under the elastic biasing force of the suspension spring


142


. In this state, the plural shutters


70


interrupt the forward movement of the material to be printed M passing through the upstream conveyor roll assembly


108


A, in the material-feeding direction, to act as the second guide member


58


. Moreover, when the shutter-actuating cam


144


is rotated and a maximum radius portion of the cam surface


144




a


is brought into contact with the projection


146


of the rocking frame


140


, the plural shutters


70


are located in the non-operative position where the shutters are retracted from the material passage


54


to a location beneath the second supporting plate


68


under the elastic biasing force of the suspension spring


142


. In this state, the material to be printed M is movable in the material passage


54


toward the downstream conveyor roll assembly


108


B in the material-feeding direction.




The above-mentioned various actuating mechanisms arranged beneath the second supporting plate


68


are located in a mutual positional relationship as diagrammatically shown in FIG.


8


. The cam driving shaft


106


, on which the ball-actuating cam


104


, the plural roll-actuating cams


132


and the shutter-actuating cam


144


are secured, is provided with a gear


148


fixed to an end of the shaft extending outward from the base


52


. The gear


148


is connected to a driving source


152


such as an electric motor via a gear train


150


. Accordingly, an output torque from the driving source


152


is transmitted to the ball-actuating cam


104


, the plural roll-actuating cams


132


and the shutter-actuating cam


144


via the gear train


150


, the gear


148


and the cam driving shaft


106


, so as to simultaneously rotate these cams and pivot, in a predetermined timing as shown in

FIG. 12

, the first and second rocking arms


98


,


126


and the rocking frame


140


in accordance with the profiles of the respective cam surfaces


104




a


,


132




a


and


144




a.






Further, a wheel


154


having a notch (not shown) at a predetermined circumferential position is secured to the cam driving shaft


106


. The wheel


154


defines a starting point of the operation of the ball-actuating cam


104


, the roll-actuating cams


144


and the shutter-actuating cam


144


in cooperation with a sensor


156


provided in the base


52


.




The mode of operation of the material-feeding device


14


with the above-mentioned constitution will be described below.




First, in a resetting operation, the ball-actuating cam


104


, the plural roll-actuating cams


132


and the shutter-actuating cam


144


are located at predetermined rotational angle positions rotated from the starting point of operation, so as to set the ball


78


of the direction-correcting roller assembly


60


in the operative position, the plural driven rolls


112


of the conveyor roll assembly


108


A in the non-operative position, and the plural shutters


70


of the second guide member


58


in the operative position.




Then, when the user manually inserts the material to be printed M into the material passage


54


from the material inlet


54




a


, the inlet sensor


55




a


detects the insertion of the material M to start the driving source


120


. Thereby, the pair of polygonal rollers


76


of the direction-correcting roller assembly


60


and the respective driving rolls


110


of the conveyor roll mechanism


62


start to rotate. The material M is forcibly inserted by hand until the material M reaches the direction-correcting roller assembly


60


.




Once the material to be printed M is inserted between the pair of polygonal rollers


76


and the ball


78


of the direction-correcting roller assembly


60


, the material M is fed toward the guide members


56


,


58


by the rotation of the pair of polygonal rollers


76


. In this step, the direction-correcting roller assembly


60


holds the material M between the pair of polygonal rollers


76


and the ball


78


at a rotational angle in which the bent sections, i.e., the radially outermost sections, of the respective O-rings


82


of the polygonal rollers


76


are opposed to the ball


78


(FIG.


6


C), while it releases the material M at a rotational angle in which the linear sections of the respective O-rings


82


are opposed to the ball


78


(FIGS.


6


A and


6


B). Accordingly, the material to be printed M is subjected to an intermittent feeding action by the continuous rotation of the pair of polygonal rollers


76


, irrespective of the thickness of the material, and is gradually fed toward the guide members


56


and


58


.




More specifically, once the material to be printed M reaches the pair of rotating polygonal rollers


76


, a leading edge of the material M is moved toward the first guide member


56


. Consequently, the material M is moved forward while rotating in a counterclockwise direction as seen in

FIG. 4

, until it comes into contact with the first guide member


56


. Once an intersection of the leading and leftward edges of the material M comes into contact with the first guide member


56


, the material M is restricted in the rotational motion thereof and is fed in its entirety toward the first guide member


56


and, thereafter the leftward edge thereof becomes parallel to the first guide member


56


, and finally the material M reaches the second guide member


58


while maintaining the parallel condition. In this manner, the material to be printed M is correctly oriented to a predetermined material-feeding direction A, whereby all the first and second guide sensors


55




b


and


55




c


output abutment-completion signals.




It should be noted that there is a case where the leftward edge of the material to be printed M does not become parallel with the first guide member


56


even when the material M reaches the second guide member


58


, depending on the posture and position of the material M upon insertion thereof. In this case, either of the first and second guide sensors


55




b


and


55




c


detects an incomplete contact state, and thereby the material M is ejected by, e.g., the reverse rotation of the polygonal rollers


76


.




It will be understood that at least one of the first guide sensor


55




b


and the second guide sensor


55




c


must be plural, for the purpose of accurately correcting the direction of the material M.




During the incomplete contact state, if the pair of polygonal rollers


76


continue to rotate in such a condition that the material to be printed M is abutted with the first and second guide members


56


,


58


, the radially outermost sections of the polygonal rollers


76


act to force the material M onto the first and second guide members


56


,


58


, and thereby strain is caused in the material M. However, as the pair of polygonal rollers


76


rotate, a contact pressure between the rollers


76


and the material M decreases as already described and thus a frictional driving force for the material M is reduced, so that the material M can relieve the strain. As a result, even if the material M in abutment with the first and second guide members


56


,


58


continues to be subjected to the driving force of the pair of polygonal rollers


76


, the material M is prevented from being folded or creased.




Also, in a case where the material to be printed M is a relatively thin one (e.g., a slip) or has a lower stiffness, there is a risk, during the above direction-correcting step, that the material M cannot bear the abutting force against the first and second guide members


56


,


58


and thus is folded or creased, if there is an instant when the material M is clamped between the pair of polygonal rollers


76


and the ball


78


during the intermittent feeding operation of the direction-correcting roller assembly


60


. According to the material-feeding device


14


of the present invention, as already described, the minimum gaps G


2


are formed between the pair of polygonal rollers


76


and the ball


78


at a rotational angle where the bent sections of the respective O-rings


82


of the pair of polygonal rollers


76


are opposed to the ball


78


located in the operative position (FIG.


6


C), so as to allow the material M to pass through between the pair of polygonal rollers


76


and the ball


78


while being bent in conformity with the outer circumferential surface of the ball (

FIG. 7A

) without being clamped between the pair of polygonal rollers


76


and the ball


78


. Therefore, even if the material M is intermittently subjected to the abutting force against the first and second guide members


56


,


58


, the material M is slidable between the pair of polygonal rollers


76


and the ball


78


under the abutting force, and therefore is effectively prevented from being bent or generating creases due to the abutting force.




After the feeding direction of the material to be printed M has been corrected in this manner, the driving source


152


starts to simultaneously rotate the ball-actuating cam


104


, the plural roll-actuating cams


132


and the shutter-actuating cam


144


through the cam driving shaft


106


, and makes the first rocking arm


98


, the second rocking arms


126


and the rocking frame


140


pivot in accordance with a predetermined timing shown in FIG.


12


.




As shown in

FIG. 12

, from the resetting position, the plural roll-actuating cams


132


first decrease radius of the cam surfaces


132




a


thereof abutted to the rocking arms


126


. Thereby, the plural driven rolls


112


of the conveyor roll assembly


108


A are put into the operative position under the elastic biasing force of the respective suspension springs


130


to comes into contact with the driving roll


110


. Next, the ball-actuating cam


104


increases a radius of the cam surface


104




a


thereof abutting to the rocking arm


98


. Thereby, the ball


78


of the direction-correcting roller assembly


60


is put into the non-operative position away from the pair of polygonal rollers


76


under the elastic biasing force of the suspension spring


102


. Finally, the shutter-actuating cam


144


increases a radius of the cam surface


144




a


thereof abutting to the rocking frame


140


. Thereby, the plural shutters


70


of the second guide member


58


is put into the non-operative position retracted from the material passage


54


under the elastic biasing force of the suspension spring


142


.




In this state (at a cam rotational angle 180°), the material to be printed M is fed by the conveyor roll mechanism


62


into the printing area P, and the printing operation is carried out by the printing head


12


. After the completion of the desired printing operation, the driving source


120


rotates in reverse to eject the material M from the printing area P by the conveyor roll mechanism


62


. At that time, both the shutter


70


and the ball


78


are located in the non-operative position, so as not to interrupt the ejection of the material M.




After the material to be printed M is withdrawn from the material passage


54


by a user, the cam driving shaft


106


further rotates to increase the radius of the cam surfaces


132




a


of the roll-actuating cams


132


abutting to the rocking arms


126


, so that the driven rolls


112


are put into the respective non-operative positions apart from the driving roll


110


under the elastic biasing force of the suspension springs


130


. Thereafter, the shutters


70


and the ball


78


are sequentially shifted to the operative positions by the respective rotations of the shutter-actuating cam


144


and the ball-actuating cam


104


, so as to reach the resetting position.




INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY




The present invention provides a material-feeding device having a direction-correcting function for correctly and stably feeding various materials with different thicknesses in a predetermined direction. The material-feeding device of the present invention is suitable for printers of industrial use and, particularly, for bankbook printers. Further, according to the present invention, an ink-jet printer including such a high-performance material-feeding device is provided.



Claims
  • 1. A material-feeding device comprising:a base; a material passage formed on said base; at least one guide member provided in said material passage and having a material-guide surface; a direction-correcting roller assembly provided in said material passage, said direction-correcting roller assembly including a pair of integrally rotatable polygonal rollers having a common rotation axis oblique to said material-guide surface of said guide member and a freely rotatable ball opposed to said pair of polygonal rollers and elastically supported in an operative position closer to said polygonal rollers to define a gap between said ball and each of said polygonal rollers for allowing a material to be inserted into said gap when said ball is in said operative position; a driving mechanism for driving said pair of polygonal rollers for rotation; and a conveyor roll mechanism provided downstream, in a material-feeding direction, of said direction-correcting roller assembly, for conveying the material along said material passage.
  • 2. A material-feeding device as defined in claim 1, wherein said direction-correcting roller assembly is arranged to define a minimum gap between said pair of polygonal rollers and said ball when said ball is in said operative position and when said pair of polygonal rollers are in a rotational angular position wherein a circumferential corner of each of said polygonal rollers is opposed to said ball.
  • 3. A material-feeding device as defined in claim 1, wherein said material passage is formed between a first supporting plate statically disposed above said base and a second supporting plate elastically supported on said base to be opposed to said first supporting plate.
  • 4. A material-feeding device as defined in claim 3, wherein said first supporting plate and said second supporting plate include an upper support face and a lower support face, respectively, which are opposed to each other to slidably hold the material therebetween, said lower support face acting to elastically urge the material against said upper support face.
  • 5. A material-feeding device as defined in claim 1, wherein said guide member comprises a first guide member statically projecting in said material passage and positioning said material-guide surface in parallel to said material-feeding direction, and a second guide member retractably projecting in said material passage and located downstream, in said material-feeding direction, of said direction-correcting roller assembly.
  • 6. A material-feeding device as defined in claim 1, further comprising detecting means for detecting a position of the material in said material passage.
  • 7. A material-feeding device as defined in claim 1, further comprising an actuating mechanism for shifting said ball elastically supported in said operative position in a direction away from said pair of polygonal rollers.
  • 8. A material-feeding device as defined in claim 1, wherein said driving mechanism rotates said pair of polygonal rollers in cooperation with said conveyor roll mechanism.
  • 9. A material-feeding device as defined in claim 1, wherein said conveyor roll mechanism includes at least one conveyor roll assembly, said at least one conveyor roll assembly including a driving roll rotatable about a stationary axis and a plurality of driven rolls biased toward said driving roll and rotatable about a movable axis.
  • 10. A material-feeding device as defined in claim 9, further comprising an actuating mechanism for simultaneously shifting said driven rolls in a direction away from said driving roll.
  • 11. A material-feeding device as defined in claim 9, wherein said driving roll is arranged at an upper side of said material passage, and wherein said driven rolls are arranged at a lower side of said material passage and are individually elastically biased in a direction toward said driving roll.
  • 12. An ink-jet printer comprising:a machine frame; a printing head provided reciprocatingly movably in a predetermined direction in said machine frame, said printing head including a plurality of nozzles for ejecting ink-droplets and at least one nozzle surface on which said nozzles open; ink-supply means for supplying ink to said printing head; and a material-feeding device for feeding a material to be printed into a printing area opposed to said printing head in said machine frame; wherein said material-feeding device comprises: a base placed in said machine frame; a material passage formed on said base; at least one guide member provided in said material passage and having a material-guide surface; a direction-correcting roller assembly provided in said material passage, said direction-correcting roller assembly including a pair of polygonal rollers having a common rotation axis oblique to said material-guide surface of said guide member and a freely rotatable ball opposed to said pair of polygonal rollers and elastically supported in an operative position closer to said polygonal rollers to define a gap between said ball and each of said polygonal rollers for allowing the material to be printed to be inserted into said gap when said ball is in said operative position; a driving mechanism for driving said pair of polygonal rollers for rotation; and a conveyor roll mechanism provided downstream, in a material-feeding direction, of said direction-correcting roller assembly, for conveying the material to be printed into said printing area along said material passage.
  • 13. An ink-jet printer as defined in claim 12, wherein said direction-correcting roller assembly of said material-feeding device is arranged to define a minimum gap between said pair of polygonal rollers and said ball when said ball is in said operative position and when said pair of polygonal rollers are in a rotational angular position wherein a circumferential corner of each of said polygonal rollers is opposed to said ball.
  • 14. An ink-jet printer as defined in claim 12, wherein said guide member of said material-feeding device comprises a first guide member statically projecting in said material passage and positioning said material-guide surface in parallel to said material-feeding direction, and a second guide member retractably projecting in said material passage and located downstream, in said material-feeding direction, of said direction-correcting roller assembly.
  • 15. An ink-jet printer as defined in claim 14, wherein said conveyor roll mechanism of said material-feeding device includes a pair of conveyor roll assemblies arranged at both sides of said printing area in relation to said material-feeding direction, each of said conveyor roll assemblies including a driving roll rotatable about a stationary axis and a plurality of driven rolls biased toward said driving roll and rotatable about a movable axis, and wherein said second guide member is provided to retractably project between upstream one of said conveyor roll assemblies in relation to said material-feeding direction and said printing area.
  • 16. An ink-jet printer as defined in claim 15, adapted to be used as a bankbook printer, wherein said driving roll is arranged at an upper side of said material passage, and wherein said driven rolls are arranged at a lower side of said material passage and are individually elastically biased in a direction toward said driving roll.
  • 17. An ink-jet printer as defined in claim 12, adapted to be used as a bankbook printer, wherein said material passage of said material-feeding device is formed between a first supporting plate statically disposed above said base and a second supporting plate elastically supported on said base to be opposed to said first supporting plate.
  • 18. An ink-jet printer as defined in claim 17, wherein said first supporting plate and said second supporting plate include an upper support face and a lower support face, respectively, which are opposed to each other to slidably hold the material therebetween, said lower support face acting to elastically urge the material against said upper support face.
  • 19. A material-feeding device comprising:a base; a first supporting plate statically arranged above said base; a second supporting plate elastically supported on said base to be opposed to said first supporting plate, to form a material passage between said first and second supporting plates; and a conveyor roll mechanism provided in said material passage for conveying a material along said material passage; wherein said first supporting plate and said second supporting plate include an upper support face and a lower support face, respectively, which are opposed to each other to slidably hold the material therebetween, said lower support face acting to elastically urge the material against said upper support face; and wherein said conveyor roll mechanism includes a driving roll arranged at an upper side of said material passage to be rotatable about a stationary axis and a plurality of driven rolls arranged at a lower side of said material passage to be rotatable about a movable axis, said driven rolls being individually elastically biased in a direction toward said driving roll.
  • 20. An ink-jet printer containing a material-feeding device as defined in claim 19.
  • 21. A material-feeding device as defined in claim 19, wherein said driven rolls of said conveyor roll mechanism are disposed in an axially side-by-side arrangement.
  • 22. A material-feeding device as defined in claim 19, wherein said driven rolls of said conveyor roll mechanism are individually elastically biased independently of said second supporting plate.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
PCT/JP98/02366 May 1998 JP
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind 102e Date 371c Date
PCT/JP98/03858 WO 00 9/13/1999 9/13/1999
Publishing Document Publishing Date Country Kind
WO99/61358 12/2/1999 WO A
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