In print media handling systems, problems sometimes arise due to low rigidity of the print media. Thin and lightweight print media tend to have low rigidity. In addition, some print media, such as paper, tends to be less rigid in a direction transverse to a grain orientation of the media. That is, short grain media, or media having a grain orientation parallel with a short dimension of the print media, tends to have low rigidity in the long direction of the media. The long direction of the media is typically the direction of media travel in many applications.
A particular problem is manifest when a row of suction cups is used to hold a sheet of print media. The suction cups often tend to deform the sheet into a cup shape, which may cause the print media to bend in a direction transverse to the direction of media travel if the print media is not sufficiently rigid. This bending tends to cause a leading edge of the print media to curl away from the suction cups, thereby increasing the likelihood that the print media will become detached from the cups, such as by peeling. If the print media does become detached from the cups, a print media jam may occur.
Rotating mechanisms 116 and 118 may be used to advance print media from the rotating mechanism 108 to an output 120. As shown, a vacuum source 122 provides a source of low pressure or partial vacuum to the rotating mechanisms 108, 116, and 118 to assist in adhering print media thereto. The vacuum source 122 may be co-housed with the rotating mechanisms 108, 116, and 118 or may be housed separately.
According to an example embodiment, a sheet of print media 110 is advanced onto the drum 104, which rotates. During printing, or imaging, the print media 110 may be maintained on the drum 104 using grippers (
The rotating mechanism 108 includes cups 130 for gripping the print media 110 to pull the print media 110 from the drum 104 and for coupling the print media 110 to the rotating mechanism 108. As discussed below, the cups 130 may comprise suction cups or other suitable members and may be coupled to the vacuum 122 by lines 126 so that the print media 110 is adhered to distal surfaces of the cups by at least a partial vacuum. The cups 130 are staggered relative to each other such that they are not all disposed a same distance from the axis 132 about which the rotating mechanism 108 rotates.
In some embodiments, when the print media 110 is adhered to the staggered cups 130, the print media 110 is bent or corrugated such that the cross-sectional shape of the print media 110 at the cups 130 is non-planar, non-linear (see, e.g.,
The imaging device 100 may also provide for duplexing using the duplex conveyor 106, in some embodiments. The duplex conveyor 106 advances print media 110 from the rotating mechanism 108 back to the drum 104. The drum 104 then grips the print media 110 and rotates so that the print media 110 advances to the print engine 102 for printing on the side opposite the initial printing.
After imaging, or printing, of one or both sides of the print media 110 is complete, the rotating mechanism 108 removes the print media 110 from the drum 104 using the cups 130 and advances the print media 110 to the rotating mechanism 116. The rotating member 116 includes cups 136, which grip the print media 110 from the drum 104 and advance the print media to the rotating mechanism 118. The cups 136 of the rotating mechanism 116 may or may not be staggered in a manner similar to the staggering of the cups 130 of the rotating mechanism 108 and are fluidly coupled with the vacuum source 122 for gripping the print media 110 using at least a partial vacuum. In the embodiment shown in
The rotating mechanism 118 includes cups 138, which may or may not be staggered, that grip, or adhere to, the print media 110 and advance the print media 110 from the rotating mechanism 116 to the output 120. The cups 138 are also fluidly coupled with the vacuum source 12 for gripping the print media 110 using at least a partial vacuum. In the embodiment shown in
Some embodiments of the present invention may be employed in the printing system described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,438,352, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
In one embodiment, the cups 130 are compressed by the drum 104 as cups 130 and the drum come into contact and vacuum is raised on the print media 110. The grippers 204 on the drum 104 move to release the print media 110. The cups 130 may be formed of an elastomeric material or other suitable material. Example materials for the cups 130 include rubber and plastic, although other suitable materials may be used.
The cups 130 are mounted on arms 206, which rotate about the axis 132. The arms 206 may serve as supports for the cups 130. In some embodiments, the staggered configuration of the cups 130 is accomplished by the arms 206 having different lengths. The arms 206 may be resilient such that they may be slightly compressed when the cups 130 are tangent with the drum 104. In other embodiments, the cups 130 may be of different heights. Further, in embodiments where cups 130 are mounted on a common structure, some of the cups 130 are mounted on sections of the common structure having different radii.
Cups 220 may optionally be mounted on the rotating mechanism 108 to advance media to the duplex conveyor 106. The cups 220 may or may not be staggered in a manner similar to the staggering of the cups 130. As shown in
By staggering the cups 130, the print media 110 is corrugated in the area of the print media near the cups 130 and is, thus, more rigid. This added rigidity may be useful in reducing the possibility of the print media 110 becoming prematurely disengaged from the cups 130, such as by peeling off of the cups 130. For example, should the leading edge 202 of the print media 110 contact the print media 110′ moving in a substantially different direction, the contact may tend to cause the print media 110 to become detached from the cups 130. By improving the rigidity of the print media 110 in the direction of media travel, the likelihood of the print media 110 of becoming detached from the cups 130, such as by peeling, is reduced.
In other embodiments (not shown) d1 may be larger than d2. Pursuant to yet additional embodiments, distal ends of arms 206a and 206c may be at a same distance from the axis 132 and the distal ends of 206b and 206d may be at distance from the axis 132 that differs from that of the distal ends of 206a and 206c. Still further embodiments may include at least three cups each having a different distance from the axis 132.
Distal ends of the cups 130 mounted on arms 206b and 206c lie in a first plane that passes through a line having distance d2 from axis 132. Distal ends of the cups 130 mounted on arms 206a and 206d lie in a second plane that passes through a line having distance d1 from the axis 132. In some embodiments, these first and second planes are parallel to each other and are offset by a distance of about 0.3 mm or more. In other embodiments, these first and second planes are parallel to each other and are offset by a distance in the range of about 0.4-2 mm. The distance between d1 and d2 may, of course, vary.
The rotating mechanism 108 may also include cups 220 mounted on arms 306 that rotate separately from the cups 130. The cups 220 in
The arms 206 and 306 are illustrated as being respectively mounted on concentric shafts 310 and 312, respectively. The shafts 310, 312 are configured to rotate separately and independently of each other. A servo mechanism (not shown) or other suitable mechanism may be used to drive the shafts 310, 312. Such mechanisms may employ, for example, one or more of motors, gears, belts, or the like.
In some implementations having a more rigid print media tends to reduce the likelihood that the print media will separate, such as by peeling, from the cups, which comprise coupling members to temporarily couple the media to the associated rotating mechanism.
While the present invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to the foregoing example embodiments, those skilled in the art will understand that many variations may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the following claims. This description of the invention should be understood to include all novel and non-obvious combinations of elements described herein, and claims may be presented in this or a later application to any novel and non-obvious combination of these elements. The foregoing embodiments are illustrative, and no single feature or element is essential to all possible combinations that may be claimed in this or a later application. Where the claims recite “a” or “a first” element of the equivalent thereof, such claims should be understood to include incorporation of one or more such elements, neither requiring nor excluding two or more such elements.