The invention lies in the sheet processing and printing fields and relates, more specifically, to a method for measuring positions of passing sheets with an image generation system for generating at least a sectional projection of a sheet and to a device for measuring positions of sheets for a printing press.
In the printing industry, a wide variety of presses are used, which have different paper paths, i.e. the course over which the sheet, as the printing material, travels in the printing press. In the transport of the sheet, its correct orientation and lay, which must be guaranteed particularly in the print operation, are problematic. The term “orientation” pertains to the angular alignment or relative skew of the sheet. The term “lay” pertains to its vertical and horizontal lay. The term position encompasses the concepts of orientation and lay. Thus, all points in two-dimensional space can be described with the position. An incorrect position of the sheet leads to errors in the printed image, particularly in color printing, in which several color separations are superimposed on one another. The positionally correct overprinting of the color separations, i.e., the proper registration and in-register alignment, determines the sharpness impression and is one of the most important features of the print quality. Besides this, an incorrect position of the sheet in the print operation leads to shifts of the overall image being printed, which is usually composed of several color separations. Various solutions have been proposed for guaranteeing the correct orientation and lay, i.e. the correct position, of the sheet in the printing press. A common technique of the prior art is to utilize measuring marks of various sizes and designs, which are known as register marks (and in German as Registermarken or Passmarken), which are placed on the sheet or on a conveyor belt. With the aid of these register marks, the position of the sheet can be determined various ways, for instance by means of a sensor which determines the margins of the register marks and from these the position of the sheet. The obvious disadvantage of this solution is the expensive application of register marks onto the sheets. In another solution, the printing press utilizes CCD (Charge-Coupled Device) lines to detect positions, which detect the front and side edges of the sheet. This proposed solution is disadvantageous because the edges of the sheet are usually not shaped exactly correctly and therefore distort the measurements.
Another device which is known from the prior art consists in driving the sheet that is to be aligned against one or two sheet stops and aligning it with the aid of these stop edges or lays. But in this technique, deformations of the sheet can arise, on one hand, or, on the other hand, the sheet can rebound from the alignment edge, preventing a positionally exact transfer.
It is accordingly an object of the invention to provide a method and a device for determining a position of a passing sheet, which overcomes the above-mentioned disadvantages of the heretofore-known devices and methods of this general type and which measures the position of sheets and other printing material exactly.
With the foregoing and other objects in view there is provided, in accordance with the invention, a method of measuring a position of a passing sheet, which comprises:
In accordance with a preferred mode of the invention that is specifically adapted to a printing press, the method comprises:
With the above and other objects in view there is also provided, in accordance with the invention, a device for measuring a position of a passing sheet in a sheet-processing device, such as a printing press, a printer, or a copier, the device comprising:
In other words, the objects of the invention are achieved in that margin regions of the sheet are respectively imaged, projection data are transmitted to a computing unit, and the position of the sheet is computed with the aid of the projection data by means of an image recognition algorithm.
In order to create an automatic correction method, the detected positions of the sheet are compared to stored positions in the computing unit, position deviations from the comparison step are calculated, the position deviations are transmitted to the printing press, and these are corrected by a sheet registration device. It is advantageous to utilize at least two digital cameras which are furnished with CCD technology, these being contained in the projection device. The digital projection data can therefore be utilized by the computing unit directly.
The positions of the imaged sheets can already be calculated from the projection data with the aid of the sheet edges. This means that the positions are already computable by determining the x-y coordinates of two points from the projection data in a coordinate system in the computing unit.
To increase the measuring sensitivity, the individual sheet margins are imaged and evaluated multiple times, and then average values are formed from the acquired projection data.
The image recognition algorithm in the computing unit advantageously calculates sections of the margin regions of a projection at the sheet margin; i.e., at the transition of the sheet to the carrier of the sheet, and from the sections it calculates the position of the sheet. This way, the position of the sheet can be determined with little computing expenditure.
An advantageous development further consists in imaging the margin regions of a sheet on a CMOS sensor chip. The basic principle of this consists in a two-dimensional position-sensitive sensor which is built in a pixel matrix, whereby each pixel consists of a photosensitive surface. With the aid of software-supported evaluation electronics with which the rows and columns of the pixels can be compared, the location of the paper's edges can be easily detected. Besides the signal evaluation, with which a voltage which depends on the intensity of the light impinging upon the respective pixel is evaluated, an address logic is additionally employed for determining the local position at which the edge of the paper is located. The progression of the paper's edge during the movement can be identified according to evaluation software, given possible edge speeds up to 0.75 m/s.
According to the pixel matrix, a two-dimensional position detection is also possible with the aid of this sensor, and therefore an alignment of two edges of a rectangular sheet, whereby the alignment benefits from the provision of two sensors positioned at the respective corners of a sheet. The parallelism of the sheet edges, for instance relative to a downstream gripper bar, can be determined more precisely according to this configuration. The downstream gripper bar takes the sheet from the feeder and feeds it to a printing press. When two sensors are positioned at the respective corners of a sheet, the exact size of each sheet can be checked. The result of this measurement can be utilized for statistical purposes, or steps such as sheet rejection can be taken.
The inventive device allows aligning without alignment edges, which avoids the above-mentioned problems and has the additional advantage that the sheet is forwarded to the press without stopping, i.e. continuously. This increases the sheet feeding speed. But it would also be imaginable to allow the sheet to stop during the aligning process.
Other features which are considered as characteristic for the invention are set forth in the appended claims.
Although the invention is illustrated and described herein as embodied in a method and device for measuring positions of passive sheets, it is nevertheless not intended to be limited to the details shown, since various modifications and structural changes may be made therein without departing from the spirit of the invention and within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims.
The construction and method of operation of the invention, however, together with additional objects and advantages thereof will be best understood from the following description of specific embodiments when read in connection with the accompanying drawings.
Referring now to the figures of the drawing in detail and first, particularly, to
The schematic representation according to
Specifically, in addition to the detection of pixels of the margin regions 7,7′ of the sheets 6, utilizing an image recognition algorithm makes possible the additional variations of the step for determining the position of the sheet 6. The projection can capture the sheet 6 as a whole; this makes it possible to ascertain whether the shape of the sheet 6 is flawed, i.e., whether, for example, the margin regions 7,7′ of the sheets 6 are damaged or creased. This situation is then taken into account by the image recognition algorithm in the calculation of the correction values. For example, if a portion of sheet in a margin region 7,7′ is missing from the projection owing to creasing of the sheet 6, the image recognition algorithm interpolates the missing sheet portion and defines the correct pixel of the sheet corner of the margin region 7,7′, i.e. one x-y coordinate per sheet corner. Furthermore, different sheets 6 of the same format have different dimensions; i.e., the lengths, edges and angles of the sheets 6 are not known to the micrometer. In the DIN 476 format, the DIN allows length tolerances of 2 mm. In customary techniques for measuring positions, these high tolerance values are frequently mistaken for position deviations. Given the capture of the whole sheet 6 by the projection system, or of the four margin regions 7,7′ of a sheet 6, the computing unit 20 recognizes deviating dimensions of the sheet 6 with the aid of the projection data, but it does not mischaracterize these as position deviations and does not correct them with the aid of the sheet register unit. The technique and device for measuring positions are described for sheets 6 which are passing through; the measuring takes place with sheets 6 in motion. This disclosure also comprises the stopping of passing sheets 6 and the measuring of the position of the sheets 6 while stationary.
The signals of the sensors 43,43′ are supplied by means of signal lines 46 of a computing unit 20. The computing unit 20 computes the position of the paper edge with the aid of a comparison of the pixels, which are arranged in rows and columns, in the sensors 43,43′. In its most general sense, this algorithm can be considered an image recognition algorithm, though it is substantially simpler and can therefore be performed less expensively in terms of time and computing outlay. The computing unit then undertakes the actuation of the drives 42,42′ and the actuation of the pulling device 44,44′ in alternation. The actuation of the drives 42,42′ and the pulling device 44,44′ occurs via control lines 47,48. In order to guarantee a synchronization of the sheet transport to a downstream printing press (which is not represented), the computing unit 20 receives the current angle position of the printing press, which is determined by an angle resolver 50, over an additional signal line 49.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
101 18 556 | Apr 2001 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4518862 | Dorn | May 1985 | A |
6671386 | Shimizu et al. | Dec 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
32 32 490 | Mar 1983 | DE |
37 10 161 | Oct 1988 | DE |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20020177918 A1 | Nov 2002 | US |