Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6174045
-
Patent Number
6,174,045
-
Date Filed
Friday, October 29, 199925 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, January 16, 200124 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 347 2
- 347 43
- 347 103
- 347 104
- 347 101
- 347 176
- 347 187
- 347 213
- 346 45
- 346 125
- 346 132
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
A color printer (10) for printing a color images comprising a vacuum imaging drum (300) for supporting a first receiver and a dye donor material (26) in registration with the first receiver. A motor rotates the vacuum imaging drum (300). An optical printhead directs energy on the dye donor material (26), which transfers colorant from the dye donor material (26) to the first receiver forming color images as the optical printhead is transported parallel to a surface of the vacuum imaging drum (300). After the dye donor material (26) and the first receiver have been removed from the vacuum imaging drum (300), an inkjet printhead (602) applies ink to a second receiver mounted on the vacuum imaging drum (300) as the inkjet printhead (602) is transported parallel to the surface of the vacuum imaging drum (300).
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to printers in general and more particularly to a color printer using an inkjet printhead and a laser thermal printhead to print color images.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
A number of imaging technologies are used in the high-quality color printing market. Among the leading imaging technologies used for pre-press color proofing are laser thermal printers, disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,268,708, and inkjet color printers.
Each of these imaging technologies has inherent advantages and disadvantages. Laser thermal printing provides high-quality images that are often used as final proofs for emulating the output of a four-color offset printing system. Laser thermal printing uses laser energy to transfer colorant from a dye donor material to a receiver media. Because the laser printhead can focus a laser beam on an area of donor that is only a few microns in diameter, laser thermal printing is ideally suited for halftone dot reproduction on a color proof, emulating an offset printer's halftone dots by “pixelization,” printing onto a receiver medium a grouping of tiny, adjacent microdots that taken together give the appearance of a halftone dot. Because the exposure energy used for printing these microdots can be varied over a range of values, laser thermal imaging allows a printer to emulate an offset printer's ink density.
A limitation of laser thermal printing is that media costs are high due to the use of separate donors in addition to the receiver media. Dye donor material is typically provided in sheet or roll form with the colorant embedded on a film base and several different color sheets are used to print one image. Another problem with laser thermal printing is use of specialty colors, which are used for corporate identity logos and packaging. Specialty colors are separately formulated inks. Rather than the “subtractive” process, which uses Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and black, or CMYK inks, specialty colors emulate colors in halftone color offset printing. Because of the number of specialty inks required in commercial printing, it would be impracticable to make rolls of dye donor material for all the specialty colors in use.
Inkjet printers are also used for color proofing. Inkjet printing operates by applying ink in tiny discrete droplets to a receiver. Inkjet devices may operate using A continuous flow of ink where droplets are continuously produced during printing and unneeded droplets are deflected into a waste collector, or “drop-on-demand” printing wherein droplets are emitted by the printhead only when needed. Inkjet imaging technology can be used for generating color proofs by emulating halftone dots, or by printing continuous tone color areas.
Inkjet imaging, however, does not offer the advantages of variable density afforded by varying exposure energy with laser thermal printing. However, inkjet has other advantages, including generally lower media costs. A significant advantage of inkjet technology is that specialty color inks can be formulated at lower expense than is possible for laser thermal technology. A comparison of laser thermal and inkjet printing shows that the strengths of one technology often complement the weaknesses of the other.
Color proofing saves customers time and money when preparing high-quality printed materials. The more closely a color proof emulates the end-result of a printing press, the more likely a print job will run smoothly, minimize waste, and provide customers with a pleasing product. The final proof is typically treated as a contractual instrument, to be carefully examined and approved by the customer before the costly process of printing system setup and operation is initiated.
For high-quality print jobs, color proofing typically proceeds in stages. Early in the pre-press process, a “draft-quality” color proof may be sufficient for establishing final layout arrangement and overall appearance. As pre-press work progresses, successively better, intermediate-quality proofs are often desirable for showing the effectiveness of a color image and for refining its appearance. Then, as a job nears completion and is ready for final sign-off by the customer, a high-quality proof is needed, to show, as closely as possible, how the job will print. To match the workflow requirements of this process, a pre-press operator may prepare an early “draft-quality” proof inexpensively, using a low-cost inkjet printer. Then, for the final proof, the pre-press operator may prepare a final quality proof on a high-quality laser thermal printer. It would be advantages if a single printer could both provide draft and intermediate quality color proofs as well as a final color proof.
It can be appreciated by those familiar with digital imaging that, for both laser thermal and inkjet printers, the mechanical subsystem needed for handling paper or other receiver media must be able to feed the media correctly from a source roll or sheet feeder to a writing mechanism, and to support the media securely during printing for accurate resolution. The method predominantly employed for large-format printers is to mount the receiver on an imaging drum and use vacuum to attach the media to the imaging drum for printing. Thus, for acquiring and supporting the receiver for printing, the media handling subsystem for a laser thermal printer must perform many of the same tasks as the media handling subsystem for an inkjet printer.
It will also be appreciated by those familiar with digital imaging that the mechanical subsystem needed for printing a proof using an inkjet printhead must also perform the same tasks as the mechanical subsystem for printing a proof using laser thermal technology. For both, a printhead is passed over the surface of a receiver and the image is applied, either directly to the receiver or to an intermediate. The imaging drum rotates as the printhead moves in a line along the imaging drum parallel to the drum axis, applying the image to the receiver in a helical swath. It would be more efficient to use the same precision printhead positioning mechanism to perform both laser thermal imaging and inkjet imaging.
It is known that the use of multiple printheads in a single printer can provide certain advantages. Using multiple printheads of the same type, using the same printing technology, has been a strategy employed to boost printer efficiency. U.S. Pat. No. 5,677,719 (Granzow) teaches use of multiple inkjet printheads, each printing on a specific area of a receiver to increase printer speed and facilitate ink drying. U.S. Pat. No. 5,184,900 (Eisner et al) discloses a high-volume, high-speed printer having multiple dot matrix printheads to allow concurrent printing of an address and a bar code on envelopes for mailing. U.S. Pat. No. 5,488,397 (Nguyen et al.) discloses an arrangement of multiple inkjet printheads to effectively provide a wider print swath for improved printer throughput.
In addition to improving efficiency, multiple printheads have also been employed to improve image quality. As an example, multiple identical inkjet printheads are employed for pixel interleaving, effectively increasing the resolution available from a printer, as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,889,534 (Johnson et al.) and in U.S. Pat. No. 5,428,375 (Simon et al.). U.S. Pat. No. 5,764,254 (Nicoloff, Jr. et al.) discloses a printer having multiple inkjet printheads with different resolutions, wherein a black printhead is at a higher resolution than a color printheads, to provide black text characters at a higher resolution than is available for color inks.
There are other image quality benefits when a printer uses two or more printheads of different types, wherein each printhead has specific advantages for its intended use. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 4,595,303 (Kuzuya et al.) discloses a monochrome printer with a first type-printing printhead for producing crisp, clear text characters and a second dot matrix printhead for printing raster images or providing alternate font characters on the same output sheet. U.S. Pat. No. 5,167,456 (Murakoshi et al.) discloses a color thermal printer having a first text character printer using a black ink film and a second thermal wax transfer printer for printing Cyan, Magenta, and Yellow colors onto the same output sheet. U.S. Pat. No. 5,081,596 (Vincent et al.) discloses a text and color image printing system in which a first inkjet printhead applies color and a second laser printer prints text onto the same output sheet. U.S. Pat. No. 5,785,435 (Koo) discloses a text and color image printing system in which a first dye sublimation printhead prints a color image and a second inkjet printer or laser printer prints text on the same output sheet. U.S. Pat. No. 5,611,629 (Paranjpe) discloses a printer that employs a first dye-diffusion thermal printhead for printing Cyan, Magenta, and Yellow colors and a second thermal ink transfer printhead for printing black on the same output sheet.
While printers having multiple printheads are known, no printers combine the advantages provided by a laser thermal printhead and an inkjet printhead. The printers disclosed in the patents noted above use multiple printheads to print to the same receiver. None of these printers provide the option to print the same color image using either one printhead or the other. There is no option to print on a first receiver using the first printhead, and on a second receiver using a second printhead, while also allowing the option to print on a third receiver using both first and second printheads. None of the printers disclosed above employs the same printhead translation subsystem for both first and second printheads. The patents listed above require separate printhead stations and, in some cases, even separate receiver handling apparatus for applying the image to the receiver.
It would be advantageous to provide a printer that combines the advantages of both a laser thermal printhead and a inkjet printhead housed within a single apparatus.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of the present invention to provide a color printer that provides the benefits of both laser thermal printing and inkjet printing.
According to one aspect of the present invention a color printer for printing color images comprises a vacuum imaging drum for supporting a first receiver and a dye donor material in registration with the first receiver. A motor rotates the vacuum imaging drum. An optical printhead directs energy on the dye donor material, which transfers colorant from the dye donor material to the first receiver, forming a first color image as the optical printhead is transported parallel to a surface of the vacuum imaging drum. After the dye donor material and the first receiver have been removed from the vacuum imaging drum, an inkjet printhead applies ink to a second receiver, mounted on the vacuum imaging drum, to create a second color image as the inkjet printhead is transported parallel to the surface of the vacuum imaging drum. In the preferred embodiment, the optical printhead is a laser printhead.
In a preferred embodiment, both an optical printhead for laser thermal printing and an inkjet printhead are attached to the same movable platform which is moved along the surface of the imaging drum. The receiver is positioned on the imaging drum, allowing an image to be written using either laser thermal colorant, inkjet colorant, or both laser thermal and inkjet colorants. The present invention also provides an output color print having images created using both laser thermal and inkjet printing.
An advantage of the present invention is that the use of a single printhead translation and positioning subsystem for use with both laser thermal and inkjet printheads leverages common design solutions and saves cost.
It is also an advantage of the present invention that it provides a single apparatus which allows an operator to produce a color print using either inkjet or laser thermal printing technologies, to suit the requirements of a pre-press proofing job.
It is a further advantage of the present invention that it allows an operator to produce a color print using both inkjet and laser thermal printing technologies on the same machine.
The invention and its objects and advantages will become more apparent in the detailed description of the preferred embodiment presented below.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1
shows a view in vertical section of a prior art laser thermal printer;
FIG. 2
shows a perspective view of a printhead translation subsystem for a prior art laser thermal printer;
FIG. 3
shows a perspective view of an apparatus according to the present invention showing key components of a combined laser thermal and inkjet printer with covers removed for visibility;
FIG. 4
shows an alternate arrangement of printhead components using ink cartridges combined with a laser thermal printer; and
FIG. 5
shows an output print having a representation of a color halftone image printed using a laser thermal printhead and an ink image printed using an inkjet printhead.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The present description is directed in particular to elements forming part of, or cooperating more directly with, apparatus in accordance with the invention. It is to be understood that elements not specifically shown or described may take various forms well known to those skilled in the art.
For the description that follows, the term “receiver” describes medium onto which colorant is applied. By way of example only, and not by way of limitation, receiver material can be any of the following: Paper, whether provided in sheet or roll form. A wide variety of paper stocks can be used for digital prepress proofing. The receiver may be provided in sheet or roll form. As one example, a film-based receiver is used. The image is transferred from the receiver onto paper by applying heat and pressure using a separate apparatus.
The term “colorant” applies to inks, dyes, or other colored material that is applied to the receiver in the printing operation.
FIG. 1
shows a cross-sectional view of a prior art color printer
10
employing laser thermal imaging technology. This type of system is more completely described in commonly assigned U.S. Pat. No. 5,268,708. However, for purposes of description of the present invention, salient components and operational aspects of this system, particularly with respect to media handling, are described below.
Color printer
10
according to the present invention has a housing
12
which provides a protective cover. A movable, hinged door
14
is attached to the front portion of housing
12
permitting access to a lower sheet material tray
50
a
and an upper sheet material tray
50
b
. Material trays
50
a
and
50
b
are positioned in the interior portion of housing
12
for supporting thermal print media
32
. Lowe sheet material tray
50
a
dispenses thermal print media
32
to create an intended image thereon. The alternate upper sheet material tray
50
b
either holds an alternative type of media, additional thermal print media
32
, or functions as a back-up sheet material tray. More specifically, lower sheet material tray
50
a
includes a lower media lift cam
52
a
for lifting lower sheet material tray
50
a
and ultimately thermal print media
32
, upwardly toward a rotatable, lower media roller
54
a
and also toward a second rotatable, upper media roller
54
b
. When both rollers
54
a
and
54
b
are rotated, rollers
54
a
and
54
b
enable thermal print media
32
in lower sheet material tray
50
a
to be pulled upwardly towards a movable media guide
56
. Upper sheet material tray
50
b
includes an upper media lift cam
52
b
for lifting upper sheet material tray
50
b
and, ultimately, its sheet media towards upper media roller
54
b
which directs it towards media guide
56
.
Media guide
56
directs thermal print media
32
under a pair of media guide rollers
58
. Media guide rollers
58
engage thermal print media
32
for assisting upper media roller
54
b
, so as to direct thermal print media
32
onto a media staging tray
60
. An end of media guide
56
is rotated downwardly, as illustrated in the position shown, and the direction of rotation of upper media roller
54
b
is reversed. Reversing direction of rotation of upper media roller
54
b
moves thermal print media
32
, which is resting on media staging tray
60
, to a position under the pair of media guide rollers
58
, upwardly through an entrance passageway
204
and around a rotatable vacuum imaging drum
300
. At this point, thermal print media
32
rest on vacuum imaging drum
300
.
A generally cylindrical dye media spool
24
of dye donor material
26
is connected to a media carousel
100
in a lower portion of housing
12
. Preferably, four media spools
24
are used, but only one is shown for clarity. Each of the four media spools
24
includes a dye donor material
26
of a different color, such as Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, and BlacK (CMYK). Also, it may be understood from the teachings herein that media spool
24
may have a receiver material wrapped thereabout, rather than dye donor material
26
, for use in a printer having the appropriate structure to accept such a spool wrapped with receiver. Dye donor material
26
is ultimately cut into donor sheet materials
36
and passed to vacuum imaging drum
300
for forming the donor medium from which colorant imbedded therein is passed to the thermal print media
32
.
A media drive mechanism
110
is attached to each media spool
24
and includes three media drive rollers
112
through which dye donor material
26
is metered upwardly into a media knife assembly
120
. After the dye donor material
26
reaches a predetermined position, media drive rollers
112
cease driving dye donor material
26
. At this point, two media knife blades
122
positioned at a bottom portion of media knife assembly
120
cut dye donor material
26
into donor sheet materials
36
. Lower media roller
54
a
and upper media roller
54
b
along with media guide
56
then pass donor sheet material
36
onto media staging tray
60
and ultimately to vacuum imaging drum
300
. Donor sheet materials
36
are passed in registration with the thermal print media
32
. At this point, donor sheet material
36
now rests atop thermal print media
32
. This process of passing donor sheet material
36
onto vacuum imaging drum
300
is substantially the same process as described hereinabove for passing thermal print media
32
onto vacuum imaging drum
300
.
Referring to
FIGS. 1 and 2
, a laser assembly, generally referred to as
400
includes a quantity of laser diodes
402
. Laser diodes
402
are connected by means of fiber optic cables
404
to a distribution block
406
and ultimately to an optical printhead
500
. In the preferred embodiment optical printhead
500
is a laser printhead. Optical printhead
500
directs thermal energy received from laser diodes
402
and causes donor sheet material
36
to pass the desired color to thermal print media
32
. Optical printhead
500
is movable with respect to vacuum imaging drum
300
and is arranged to direct a beam of light to donor sheet material
36
. For each laser diode
402
, the beam of light from optical printhead
500
is individually modulated by modulated electronic signals, which signals are representative of the shape and color of the original image. In this manner, donor sheet material
36
is heated to cause volatilization only in those areas of thermal print media
32
necessary to reconstruct the shape and color of the original image.
Optical printhead
500
is attached to a lead screw
250
by means of a lead screw drive nut
254
and a drive coupling (not shown) for axial movement along the longitudinal axis of vacuum imaging drum
300
for transferring the data to create the intended image onto thermal print media
32
.
For writing, vacuum imaging drum
300
rotates at a constant velocity. Travel of optical printhead
500
begins at one end of thermal print media
32
and traverses the entire length of thermal print media
32
for completing the colorant transfer process for donor sheet material
36
resting on thermal print media
32
. After optical printhead
500
has completed the transfer process for donor sheet material
36
resting on thermal print media
32
, donor sheet material
36
is then removed from vacuum imaging drum
300
and transferred out of housing
12
by means of an ejection chute
16
. Donor sheet material
36
eventually comes to rest in a waste bin
18
for removal by the operator of color printer
10
. The above described process is then repeated for the other three media spools
24
of dye donor materials
26
.
After colorants from the four media spools
24
have been transferred and donor sheet materials
36
have been removed from vacuum imaging drum
300
, thermal print media
32
is removed from vacuum imaging drum
300
and transported by means of a transport mechanism
80
to a color binding assembly
180
. A media entrance door
182
of color binding assembly
180
is opened for permitting thermal print media
32
to enter color binding assembly
180
, and shuts once thermal print media
32
comes to rest in color binding assembly
180
. Color binding assembly
180
processes thermal print media
32
for further binding the transferred colors on thermal print media
32
. After the color binding process has been completed, media exit door
184
is opened and thermal print media
32
with the intended image thereon passes out of binding assembly
180
and housing
12
and comes to rest against a media stop
20
.
Referring to
FIG. 2
, a perspective view of a lathe bed scanning subsystem
200
, includes vacuum imaging drum
300
, optical printhead
500
and lead screw
250
assembled in a lathe bed scanning frame
202
. Vacuum imaging drum
300
is mounted for rotation about an axis X in lathe bed scanning frame
202
.
Optical printhead
500
is mounted on a movable translation stage member
220
which, in turn, is supported for low friction slidable movement on a rear translation bearing rod
206
and a front translation bearing rod
208
. Translation bearing rods
206
and
208
are sufficiently rigid so as not to sag or distort and are arranged to be as parallel as possible with the axis X of the vacuum imaging drum
300
with the axis of the optical printhead
500
at a normal to axis X of the vacuum imaging drum
300
. Front translation bearing rod
208
locates a translation stage member
220
in the vertical and the horizontal directions with respect to axis X of vacuum imaging drum
300
. Rear translation bearing rod
206
locates translation stage member
220
only with respect to rotation of translation stage member
220
about front translation bearing rod
208
so that there is no over-constraint condition of translation stage member
220
which might cause it to bind, chatter, or otherwise impart undesirable vibration or jitters to optical printhead
500
during the generation of an intended image.
Optical printhead
500
travels in a path along vacuum imaging drum
300
, moved by lead screw drive nut
254
while being moved at a speed synchronous with vacuum imaging drum
300
rotation and proportional to the width of a writing swath, in which a plurality of aligned laser diodes are capable of being energized simultaneously. The pattern that optical printhead
500
transfers to the thermal print media
32
along vacuum imaging drum
300
, is a helix.
FIG. 3
shows a combined laser thermal and inkjet printer according to the present invention, generally numbered
600
, that employs both optical printhead
500
and an inkjet printhead
602
. For clarity,
FIG. 3
shows a perspective view, with cover removed, of key components. (Numerous support components, familiar to those working in the printer art, are not shown to allow visibility of components and structures for the present invention. Specifically, media handling components are not shown, but are described subsequently.)
Similar structures to those described above for the laser thermal color printer
10
are used for combined laser thermal and inkjet printer
600
. That is, lathe bed scanning subsystem
200
includes lathe bed scanning frame
202
that supports front translation bearing rod
208
and rear translation bearing rod
206
, along with lead screw
250
for controlling movement of translation stage member
220
. An imaging media sheet
630
is wrapped about vacuum imaging drum
300
. As vacuum imaging drum
300
rotates, translation stage member
220
is moved in a direction parallel to the axis of vacuum imaging drum
300
, writing the image in a continuous, helical pattern.
Translation stage member
220
provides a mount mechanism for both types of printhead. As was described above, optical printhead
500
provides the optical assembly for focusing laser energy from laser assembly
400
, with laser signals routed to optical printhead
500
by means of fiber optic cables
404
. Translation stage member
220
also supports inkjet printhead
602
. Inks are supplied from ink reservoirs
608
a
-
608
d
. Typically, these inks are the four CMYK process colors. A corresponding pump input tube
610
a
-
610
d
, pump
612
a
-
612
d
, and pump output tube
614
a
-
614
d
routes each color ink to inkjet printhead
602
, using established techniques known in the inkjet printer art.
Inkjet printhead
602
maintenance is provided at a cleaning station
606
, shown on the left side of lathe bed scanning frame
202
. A cleaning solution dispenser
604
provides the required cleaning solution for maintaining proper printhead performance. A waste bottle
616
collects spent cleaning fluid and waste ink, routed by means of waste tube
618
. Optical printhead
500
calibration is provided by a calibration sensor
310
, mounted on the right side of lathe bed scanning frame
202
. In cooperation with a machine logic control processor
622
that controls low-level operation of laser thermal and inkjet printer
600
functions, calibration sensor
310
allows measurement and subsequent adjustment of the output power provided by laser assembly
400
.
For printing, machine control logic processor
622
operates according to an appropriate program for the printhead selected. When instructed to print using optical printhead
500
, machine control logic processor
622
controls the motion of translation stage assembly
220
as described for the prior art system shown in FIG.
1
. When instructed to print using inkjet printhead
602
, machine control logic processor
622
controls the motion of translation stage assembly
220
in a similar fashion, making the necessary timing adjustments for different swath width, vacuum imaging drum
300
speed, and writing pattern that applies for inkjet printhead
602
.
FIG. 3
shows the preferred embodiment, where inkjet components use continuous-flow technology. An alternate arrangement for inkjet printhead
602
using drop-on-demand (impulse) technology is shown in FIG.
4
. Here, an ink cartridge
624
a
-
624
d
is used for each color, typically CMYK, as shown. This arrangement provides a less costly method for producing inkjet prints using the same scanning subsystem.
The present invention allows a number of options for media handling, depending on the output desired from combined laser thermal and inkjet printer
600
. The preferred embodiment employs the apparatus described in
FIG. 1
above for imaging using optical printhead
500
, with lower sheet material tray
50
a
supplying thermal print media
32
. For imaging using inkjet printhead
602
, alternate upper sheet material tray
50
b
holds inkjet receiver media
620
. A similar sequence of operation for loading inkjet receiver media
620
applies as is described above for loading thermal print media
32
. The sequence needed to load donor sheet material
36
is not used, since inkjet printhead
602
images directly onto the receiver.
One option available using the present invention is to use laser thermal and inkjet printer
600
to provide an inkjet print, such as might be used during early prepress stages of color proofing. Later, the same laser thermal and inkjet printer
600
is used during final stages of color proofing to provide a laser thermal print. This gives the benefit of a single printer that provides a customer with the quality of output print needed at a specific stage in the prepress color proofing process.
In an alternate embodiment, a laser thermal printhead and inkjet printhead are used for imaging onto the same print. As an example, laser thermal and inkjet printer
600
would be instructed to image onto thermal print media
32
using laser thermal printing, using the printing sequence described for color printer
10
above. But, instead of ejecting the imaged thermal print media
32
from vacuum imaging drum
300
after applying the last dye donor color, laser thermal and inkjet printer
600
would complete the print by imaging using one or more inks applied by means of inkjet printhead
602
after the sheet of dye donor material has been removed These inks applied could be, for example, specialty color inks applying colors not available in dye donor material
26
. In this way, a sheet of thermal print media
32
output from laser thermal and inkjet printer
600
would have colors applied using both laser thermal and inkjet technologies.
In operation, a laser thermal and inkjet printer would operate in the following fashion. A first receiver is mounted on the vacuum imaging drum and the vacuum imaging drum is rotated. An inkjet image is printed on the first receiver, usually at low resolution, to produce a color proof. The low resolution color image is removed from the vacuum imaging drum and a second receiver is mounted on the vacuum imaging drum. A sheet of dye donor material is mounted in registration with the second receiver and the vacuum imaging drum is rotated. The laser printhead prints a second image, typically at a higher resolution, on the second receiver to produce a color proof that more closely approximates the output from a four plate printing press.
Referring to
FIG. 5
there is shown an output print
650
having a halftone image
654
printed using optical printhead
500
and also having a corporate logo
652
printed using inkjet printhead
602
. Corporate logo
652
is printed using a specialty color ink, such as an ink formulated to print PANTONE Color 812 C, for example.
While the invention has been described with particular reference to its preferred embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements in the preferred embodiments without departing from the scope of the invention. For example, while the preferred embodiment uses a vacuum imaging drum, alternative support structure for the receiver medium could be used, such as a flat platen. The inkjet printhead itself could be configured to use a single color or to use multiple color inks, as needed for the color print. The print pattern used by the inkjet printhead could be modified to use other than a helical pattern such as is employed for the laser thermal printhead. For example, the print sequence could use a “index-stop-print” sequence in which the printhead is advanced (indexed) to a linear position and stopped there, printing in place as the drum is rotated. Or, the inkjet printhead could be advanced to print in horizontal bands, with the imaging drum successively indexed to a position and stopped there until the horizontal band is completely printed. Therefore, what is provided is a printer having both inkjet and laser thermal printheads and an output print having both inkjet and laser thermal images.
The invention has been described in detail with particular reference to certain preferred embodiments thereof, but it will be understood that variations and modifications can be effected within the scope of the invention.
|
PARTS LIST
|
|
|
10.
Color printer
|
12.
Housing
|
14.
Door
|
16.
Ejection chute
|
18.
Waste bin
|
20.
Media stop
|
24.
Media spool
|
26.
Dye donor material
|
32.
Thermal print media
|
36.
Donor sheet material
|
50a.
Lower sheet material tray
|
50b.
Upper sheet material tray
|
52a.
Lower media lift cam
|
52b.
Upper media lift cam
|
54a.
Lower media roller
|
54b.
Upper media roller
|
56.
Media guide
|
58.
Media guide rollers
|
60.
Media staging tray
|
80.
Transport mechanism
|
100.
Media carousel
|
110.
Media drive mechanism
|
112.
Media drive rollers
|
120.
Media knife assembly
|
122.
Media knife blades
|
180.
Color binding assembly
|
182.
Media entrance door
|
184.
Media exit door
|
200.
Lathe bed scanning subsystem
|
202.
Lathe bed scanning frame
|
204.
Entrance passageway
|
206.
Rear translation bearing rod
|
208.
Front translation bearing rod
|
220.
Translation stage member
|
250.
Lead screw
|
254.
Lead screw drive nut
|
300.
Vacuum imaging drum
|
310.
Calibration sensor
|
400.
Laser assembly
|
402.
Laser diode
|
404.
Fiber optic cables
|
406.
Distribution block
|
500.
Optical printhead
|
600.
Laser thermal and inkjet printer
|
602.
Inkjet printhead
|
604.
Cleaning solution dispenser
|
606.
Cleaning station
|
608a.
Ink reservoirs
|
608b.
Ink reservoirs
|
608c.
Ink reservoirs
|
608d.
Ink reservoirs
|
610a.
Pump input tube
|
610b.
Pump input tube
|
610c.
Pump input tube
|
610d.
Pump input tube
|
612a.
Pump
|
612b.
Pump
|
612c.
Pump
|
612d.
Pump
|
614a.
Pump output tube
|
614b.
Pump output tube
|
614c.
Pump output tube
|
614d.
Pump output tube
|
616.
Waste bottle
|
618.
Waste tube
|
620.
Inkjet receiver media
|
622.
Machine logic control processor
|
624a.
Ink cartridge
|
624b.
Ink cartridge
|
624c.
Ink cartridge
|
624d.
Ink cartridge
|
630.
Imaging media sheet
|
650.
Output print
|
652.
Corporate logo
|
654.
Halftone image
|
|
Claims
- 1. A color printer for printing color images comprising:a vacuum imaging drum for supporting a first receiver and a dye donor of material in registration with said first receiver; a motor which rotates said vacuum imaging drum; an optical printhead for directing exposure energy onto said dye donor material, thereby transferring colorant from said dye donor material to said first receiver as said optical printhead is transported parallel to a surface of said vacuum imaging drum to create a first color image; an inkjet printhead which applies ink directly to a second receiver mounted on said vacuum imaging drum as said inkjet printhead is transported parallel to said surface of said vacuum imaging drum to create a second color image.
- 2. The color printer of claim 1 wherein said dye donor material and said first receiver are removed from said vacuum imaging drum prior to mounting said second receiver on said vacuum imaging drum.
- 3. The color printer of claim 1 wherein said optical printhead is a laser printhead.
- 4. The color printer of claim 1 wherein said inkjet printhead uses continuous-flow ink delivery.
- 5. The color printer of claim 1 wherein said inkjet printhead uses drop-on-demand ink delivery.
- 6. The color printer of claim 1 wherein said optical printhead and said inkjet printhead are mounted on a common translation stage.
- 7. The color printer of claim 1 wherein said optical printhead and said inkjet printhead use a common machine control logic processor.
- 8. The color printer of claim 1 wherein said first receiver is paper.
- 9. The color printer of claim 1 wherein said first color image has a higher resolution than said second color image.
- 10. A printhead translation assembly for a color printer for applying colorant onto receivers, whereby images are printed on said receiver, said printhead translation assembly comprising:a common translation stage which moves parallel to a surface of a first receiver; an optical printhead attached to said common translation stage which directs energy onto a dye donor material in registration with said first receiver and applies donor colorant to said first receiver; an inkjet printhead, attached to said common translation stage, which applies ink to a second receiver.
- 11. The printhead translation assembly of claim 10 wherein said optical printhead is a laser printhead.
- 12. The printhead translation assembly of claim 10 wherein said inkjet printhead is a continuous-flow inkjet printhead.
- 13. The printhead translation assembly of claim 10 wherein said inkjet printhead is a drop-on-demand inkjet printhead.
- 14. The printhead translation assembly of claim 10 wherein said common translation stage is moved by a lead screw.
- 15. A method for printing color images comprising the steps of:mounting a first receiver on a vacuum imaging drum; rotating said vacuum imaging drum; moving an inkjet printhead parallel to a surface of said vacuum imaging drum while printing a low resolution color image; removing said first receiver from said vacuum imaging drum; mounting a second receiver on said vacuum imaging drum; mounting a first sheet of dye donor material in registration with said second receiver; and moving a laser printhead parallel to said surface of said vacuum imaging drum while printing a first high resolution color image on said second receiver.
- 16. A method for printing color images as in claim 15 comprising the additional steps of:removing said first sheet of dye donor material from said vacuum imaging drum; mounting a second dye donor sheet on said vacuum imaging drum in registration with said second receiver; moving said laser printhead parallel to said surface of said vacuum imaging drum while printing a second high resolution color image to said second receiver.
- 17. A method for printing color images as in claim 15 wherein said first receiver is paper.
- 18. A method for printing color images as in claim 15 wherein said second receiver is a film used for transferring images to paper.
- 19. A method for printing color images as in claim 15 wherein said inkjet printhead applies ink using continuous-flow printing.
- 20. A method for printing color images as in claim 15 wherein said inkjet printhead applies ink using drop-on-demand printing.
- 21. A method for printing color images as in claim 15 wherein said inkjet printhead and said laser printhead are mounted on a common translation stage.
- 22. A method for printing color images as in claim 15 wherein said laser printhead and said inkjet printhead use a common machine control logic processor.
- 23. A method for printing color images comprising the steps of:mounting a receiver on a vacuum imaging drum; rotating said vacuum imaging drum; moving an inkjet printhead parallel to a surface of said vacuum imaging drum while printing a low resolution color image; mounting a first sheet of dye donor material in registration with said receiver; and moving a laser printhead parallel to said surface of said vacuum imaging drum while printing a first high resolution color image on said receiver.
- 24. A method for printing color images as in claim 23 comprising the additional steps of:removing said first sheet of dye donor material from said vacuum imaging drum; mounting a second sheet of dye donor material on said vacuum imaging drum in registration with said receiver; moving said laser printhead parallel to said surface of said vacuum imaging drum while printing a second high resolution color image to said receiver.
US Referenced Citations (12)
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
6-64246 |
Mar 1994 |
JP |