The present invention relates generally to paper cutting devices, and more particularly to a high speed inserter system, in which individual sheets are cut from a continuous web of printed materials for use in mass-production of mail pieces.
Inserter systems, such as those applicable for use with the present invention, are mail processing machines typically used by organizations such as banks, insurance companies and utility companies for producing a large volume of specific mailings where the contents of each mail item are directed to a particular addressee.
In many respects, the typical inserter system resembles a manufacturing assembly line. Sheets and other raw materials (other sheets, enclosures, and envelopes) enter the inserter system as inputs. Then, a variety of modules or workstations in the inserter system work cooperatively to process the sheets until a finished mail piece is produced. The exact configuration of each inserter system depends upon the needs of each particular customer or installation.
Typically, inserter systems prepare mail pieces by gathering collations of documents on a conveyor. The collations are then transported on the conveyor to an insertion station where they are automatically stuffed into envelopes. After being stuffed with the collations, the envelopes are removed from the insertion station for further processing. Such further processing may include automated closing and sealing the envelope flap, weighing the envelope, applying postage to the envelope, and finally sorting and stacking the envelopes.
The input stages of a typical inserter system are depicted in
In general, web material is driven in move-and-pause cycles, wherein the web material is temporarily paused for a short period to allow the cutter to cut the material into cut sheets. Thus, in each cycle, the web must be accelerated and decelerated.
The high productivity arrangements currently in use, which provide high system throughput performance, will be limited for cut sheets with high aspect ratios (sheet length divided by sheet width). Such sheets must pass enter the inserter system more slowly, and therefore must pass through the right-angle turn (RAT) at a lower speed than cut sheets having higher aspect ratios. Because a cut sheet having a high aspect ratio must enter the RAT at a lower speed, a tip to tail crash at the exit of the cutting device 210 will occur. In other words, the tip of the paper web will collide with the tail of a cut sheet. On older equipment which processes all cut sheets at much slower rates, this problem does not exist.
The present invention overcomes the disadvantages of the prior art by introducing a non-constant velocity profile for cut sheets exiting the cutter, thereby eliminating tip to tail crashes. Without the non-constant velocity profile, the tip of the paper web will crash into the tail of a cut sheet, at the exit of the cutter. The motion profile effectively increases inter-sheet gaps.
The present invention is applicable to cut sheet applications that have high aspect ratios, and minimizes downstream velocities for reliable accumulation. The invention enables increased system throughput performance on customer applications even if high aspect ratios are involved.
The method, apparatus, and software product of the present can be used for accelerating and decelerating a sheet of paper in the paper-cutting system. A web of paper is cut using the cutter, when the paper is substantially stopped. This forms a tail end of the sheet of paper.
The leading end of the sheet of papare is then in a nip, and the nip is operated the nip so as to move the sheet of paper away from the cutter. The nip is then decelerated in order to slow the sheet of paper to a final speed, at least by the time the tail end of the sheet of paper exits the nip.
The final speed of the sheet of paper is low enough to meet requirements for downstream processing of the sheet of paper. The average speed of the sheet of paper, while it is secured in the nip, is greater than the final speed, and the average speed is large enough to avoid contact between the sheet of paper and the web. However, the average speed is small enough to prevent the leading end of the sheet of paper from contacting a downstream sheet. This operation of the nip is subsequently repeated, in order to move further sheets of paper away from the cutter.
The deceleration cause by the nip will be non-zero if and only if the sheet of paper has dimensions exceeding a threshold, and otherwise the sheet of paper will have a substantially constant velocity while being moved by the nip. Preferably, the threshold is a ratio of sheet length divided by sheet width, so that for long and narrow sheets the nip will decelerate the sheet of paper. The final speed, to which the sheet of paper is decelerated, will depend upon the ratio of sheet length divided by sheet width, so that the final speed is further reduced if the ratio is increased.
a is a block diagram showing the input stages of a typical inserter system.
b is a block diagram showing the input stages of a typical inserter system including a right-angle turn.
An embodiment of the present invention will now be described. It is to be understood that this description is for purposes of illustration only, and is not meant to limit the scope of the claimed invention.
A feeder interface module 403 exists at the output of the cutter module 401, in order to deliver sheets to a right angle turn module 405, which then merges the two paths of sheets into a single path. The sheets are then fed to an accumulator module 407. Thus, the architecture in
Paper is cut in the cutter module at the blade line 420, and at least one sheet length (L) later there is a FIM nip line 421 that accepts each piece of paper and moves it forward toward a fixed RAT nip 422. The FIM nip line may be moveable in order to accommodate paper sheets of different lengths “L.” Both the FIM nip and the subsequent nips may be configured similarly to the web driver 100 shown in
In this embodiment of the invention, the speed of the paper web decreases gradually as the paper web moves into position to be cut by the cutter. It is therefore important for a sheet that has already been cut to stay ahead of the web.
In some existing FIM modules 403, the outer path 434 of a split drive operates at a higher velocity than the inner velocity. This is desired to maximize throughput performance, because the differential velocity increases the overlap between same cut sheet pairs that always belong to the same collation, thereby increasing the available time between consecutive collations in the RAT that are generated by different cuts. This guarantees a physical gap between different collations bound for upper and lower accumulation stations 472 and 473 with respective ramps located at sensors 22 and 21, in the accumulator module 407 (these two stations are shown as if in a side view instead of a top view). Upon exiting the accumulation stations, the sheets are propelled at a dump roller nip line 425 and subsequent divert nip line 426.
Newer FIMs are substantially the same as the older FIMs. However, the exact same functionality of a split FIM is not desired in the newer models, as less overlapping is required for separating cut sheet pairs at the high speed nip line 424 that may belong to different collations. The older FIM consisted of flat belts and nips and resided in its own cabinet. The newer FIM consists of two nips, positioned side by side to handle 2-up-format, and may physically reside in the RAT module. These nips are driven by a common servo motor. As mentioned, the paper path dimension between the blade cut line 420 and the FIM nip line 421 is adjustable to be slightly larger than the length of the cut sheet document length (L). The amount that the dimension is greater than L is dependent primarily upon the overshoot of the cutter tractor profile when the advancing web comes to rest.
Equations have been derived, as a function of the cut sheet dimensions, to determine the constant velocities required for the FIM, RAT, HSN and accumulator for both a 25K and a 36K cutter that minimize the required HSN and accumulator velocities. There exists a practical design velocity limit on the accumulator of approximately 300 inches per second, before sheet damage occurs during accumulation upon lead edge impact with the dump roller.
Based on modeling the motion profiles of a 36K cutter, the peak velocity of a paper advance motion profile becomes excessive and can exceed 300 inches/s, depending on the velocity profile shape of the advancing mechanism. It is this high peak velocity that causes an impending cut sheet that is advancing to effectively close the displacement gap between it and a previously cut sheet that is under control of the FIM nip.
Generally, for most cut sheet application dimensions, the required take-away velocity of the FIM is calculated to be less than the calculated velocity of the RAT. For these cases the take-away FIM nips operate at constant velocity. The calculated minimum velocity of this nip is the velocity such that the lead edge of the upstream advancing web never runs into the trail edge of the sheets exiting the cutter (a.k.a. tip-to-tail crash) during full speed cutter operation.
However, there exist customer applications that use cut sheets that are within specification but have a relatively high aspect ratio (length/width). For these cases the take-away velocity must be greater than the calculated RAT velocity that minimizes the HSN and accumulation velocities. It is for these conditions that some solution is necessary in order to maintain high throughput performance. Without such a solution, subsequent downstream velocities would need to be increased, thereby driving the velocity of the accumulator above 300 inches per second, which is a velocity threshold where the accumulator no longer can accumulate reliably without damaging the sheets.
For processing cut sheets that have a relatively high aspect ratio (length/width), the FIM nip (i.e. the take-away nip of the feeder interface module) does not operate at constant velocity. After accepting the lead edge of a sheet at a high velocity, the FIM nip will decelerate to a lower velocity that matches that of the downstream RAT, thereby preventing a tip to tail crash. Once the trail edge of the sheet exits the FIM take-away nip, the nip accelerates back up to the required high take-away velocity before the arrival of the next cut sheet.
For processing sheets with a 36K cutter, this entire motion sequence repeats every 100 ms. The following variables are defined and are used in the equations to follow:
ACCELFIM=acceleration of the first nip of FIM
DECELFIM=deceleration of the first nip of FIM
LDOC=document length
WDOC=document width
LBLADERAT=distance from the first FIM nip to the first RAT nip
LNIP=distance from the first FIM nip to the first RAT nip
LSENSOR=distance between center line of FIM nip and sensors 11 and 10
LDECEL=distance document travels during deceleration
LRAT=distance document travels with VRAT velocity
LVNIPMAX=distance document travels with velocity VNIPMAX
SDOC1=distance from sensor 11 light extinction (LE) to start accel
SDOC2=distance from sensor 11 light extinction (LE) to start accel
SDOC3=distance from sensor 10 light extinction (LE) to start accel
TCYCLE=cycle time between paper cuts
TCLEARNIP=time document is in contact with first nip of the FIM
TRAT=time required for document to travel with velocity VRAT
TINOUT=time between inner and out sheets are cut
VNIPMAX=max velocity of the first nip of the FIM
VRAT=velocity of the RAT nip
VFIM=required average FIM speed to avoid tip to tail crash
VNIP=current velocity of the first nip of the FIM
VBELT=linear velocity of the belts
These variables appear in
Starting at step 501, physical distances LBLADETORAT=0.559 m, LSENSOR=0.027 m are given and LNIP is computed. LSENSOR is a constant for all cut sheet lengths, LDOC, and therefore the sensors 10 (S2) and 11 (S1) travel as an integral assembly with the adjustable FIM nips. At step 503, the control system determines if the calculated velocity, VFIM, required to avoid a tip to tail crash at the exit of the cutter is less than or equal to calculated velocity, VRAT, required to minimize downstream transport velocities while still providing successful sheet separation at the High Speed Nip for subsequent high speed sheet accumulation. If this is true 505, no changing FIM nip motion profile is required and VNIP=VBELT=VRAT and the retractable second nips are “ON” or engaged as shown in
If step 503 is false, a changing FIM nip motion profile is required for successful material handling downstream of the Cutter if it is desired to not degrade the Cutter's cut rate performance, which is the entire objective of the invention. At step 507, VNIPMAX is computed and the second nip should be “OFF” or disengaged by setting it in the down position.
As shown in
In
Referring now to
Step 509 also computes the deceleration of the FIM nips, DECELFIM, to reduce the velocity of these nips to the velocity of the RAT module, VRAT, before the lead edge of the cut sheet(s) reach the RAT nip(s). It is critical for reliable paper handling that control nips have matched velocities while transferring cut sheets between the control nips.
Next in
If the decision to double cut is true, then the velocity of the both the FIM nip and the urge belts are set to calculated value, VNIPMAX 529. After the cut takes place, the lead edge of the inner cut sheet travels downstream and eventually reaches sensor 11 which becomes blocked at step 533. When this occurs, the control system continues to transport both cut sheets by displacement, SDOC1, where upon the deceleration of the FIM nip commences, as illustrated in
If at step 527 the control system determines that a double cut cannot be executed due to downstream conditions, then the control system determines if a single cut can execute at step 511. If this is true, VNIP and VBELT are set to VNIPMAX. Using similar logic as used for the double cut, after sensor 11, becomes blocked and displacement, SDOC1, is achieved, the FIM nips decelerate to velocity, VRAT, at step 521
Once the second single cut occurs at step 522, the velocities at step 523 for the FIM nips and the urge belts are preserved. After the second single cut sheet is released from the Cutter, the lead edge of the outer cut sheet travels downstream and eventually reaches sensor 10, which becomes blocked at step 525. When this occurs, the control system continues to transport the cut sheet by displacement SDOC3, where upon the control system determines if the downstream conditions will accept a double cut at 527.
In any event, whether the threshold is exceeded or not, a downstream nip will be operated at a uniform rate 745 equal to the final rate of the upstream nip. The downstream nip provides 745 the sheet to a right angle turn (RAT).
The embodiment described above can be implemented using a general purpose or specific-use computer system, with standard operating system software conforming to the method described herein. The software is designed to drive the operation of the particular hardware of the system, including the various servo motors, and will be compatible with other system components and I/O controllers. The computer system of this embodiment includes a CPU processor, comprising a single processing unit, multiple processing units capable of parallel operation, or the CPU can be distributed across one or more processing units in one or more locations, e.g., on a client and server. The computer system will advantageously also include a memory unit that includes any known type of data storage and/or transmission media, including magnetic media, optical media, random access memory (RAM), read-only memory (ROM), a data cache, a data object, etc. Moreover, similar to the CPU, the memory may reside at a single physical location, comprising one or more types of data storage, or be distributed across a plurality of physical systems in various forms.
It is to be understood that all of the present figures, and the accompanying narrative discussions of preferred embodiments, do not purport to be completely rigorous treatments of the methods and systems under consideration. A person skilled in the art will understand that the steps of the present application represent general cause-and-effect relationships that do not exclude intermediate interactions of various types, and will further understand that the various structures and mechanisms described in this application can be implemented by a variety of different combinations of hardware and software, and in various configurations which need not be further elaborated herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11607489 | Dec 2006 | US |
Child | 12792962 | US |