This invention pertains to the field of inkjet printing and more particularly to a method for allocating communication addresses in a modular printhead assembly including a plurality of removable jetting modules.
In the field of high speed inkjet printing, it is desirable to be able to print across the width of the print media in a single pass of the print media past a print station. However, for many applications the desired print width exceeds the width of the available printheads. It is therefore necessary to arrange an array of printheads such that each printhead in the array prints a print swath, and the set of print swaths cover the desired print width. Such arrays of printheads are commonly configured in lineheads that include alignment hardware to maintain the desired relative alignment of the printheads, as well as fluid and electronic hardware to support the printheads within the linehead. As new applications are being developed for the use of high speed inkjet printing technology, such as the printing of labels, books, magazines, packaging materials, and décor (such as wallpaper, and laminate material for flooring and countertops), there is a need to develop an increasing number of lineheads to accommodate the increasing number of desired print widths.
To simplify the development of the various lineheads, it is desirable to employ a modular design approach for printhead alignment hardware and the supporting fluid and electronic hardware. In an exemplary configuration, each of the modules includes three printheads together with their supporting fluid and electrical hardware. By combining different numbers of modules together, lineheads of different sizes can be created.
Even though the printheads are assembled into modules within the lineheads, it is still desirable to be able to separately control and communicate each of the individual printheads within the linehead. There is also a need to be able to remove and replace individual printheads within the lineheads without shutting down the other printheads in the linehead. To achieve these goals, there is a need to automatically and adaptively assign communication addresses to facilitate communication of control signals and data with the various system components.
The present invention represents a method for assigning communication addresses to devices within a production system, includes:
providing a system controller for controlling the production system, the system controller including a communication port;
providing a plurality of communication distribution devices, each of the communication distribution devices including:
connecting the plurality of communication distribution devices together using the first and second primary communication ports in a daisy chain arrangement to form a connected sequence of communication distribution devices, wherein a first communication distribution device in the sequence of communication distribution devices is connected to the system controller via one of its first and second primary communication ports such that each communication distribution device is enabled to communicate with the system controller;
providing a plurality of secondary devices;
connecting each of the secondary devices to one of the secondary communication ports of one of the communications distribution boards;
specifying a first set of communication addresses from which communication addresses can be assigned to each of the communication distribution devices, the communication addresses of the first set of communication addresses having a prescribed sequence;
specifying a second set of communication addresses distinct from the first set of communication addresses, from which communication addresses can be assigned to each of the secondary devices, the communication addresses of the second set of communication addresses having a prescribed sequence;
wherein the system controller provides a signal to a first communication distribution device in the connected sequence of communication distribution devices via one of its first and the second primary communication ports;
upon detecting the signal from the system controller by the first communication distribution device, the first communication distribution board:
upon receiving the communicated information from the previous communication distribution device in the connected sequence of communication distribution devices each subsequent communication distribution device in the connected sequence of communication distribution devices:
transmitting information from each communication distribution device in the connected sequence of communication distribution devices communicate to the system controller, the information specifying the communication addresses assigned to each communication distribution device and the communication addresses assigned to each of the secondary devices connected to each communication distribution device.
This invention has the advantage that it enables a plurality of secondary devices to be connected through communication distribution devices to a system controller and automatically assigned communication addresses in a manner that provides the system controller with unambiguous location information for the individual secondary devices.
It has the additional advantage that it provides a means for detecting when individual secondary devices or communication distribution devices are either connected to or disconnected from the communication network. Furthermore, the method enables communication addresses to be assigned or unassigned to the newly connected or disconnected devices, while not interfering with communication to other devices that are connected to the communication network.
It is to be understood that the attached drawings are for purposes of illustrating the concepts of the invention and may not be to scale. Identical reference numerals have been used, where possible, to designate identical features that are common to the figures.
The present description will be directed in particular to elements forming part of, or cooperating more directly with, apparatus in accordance with the present 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. References to “a particular embodiment” and the like refer to features that are present in at least one embodiment of the invention. Separate references to “an embodiment” or “particular embodiments” or the like do not necessarily refer to the same embodiment or embodiments; however, such embodiments are not mutually exclusive, unless so indicated or as are readily apparent to one of skill in the art. The use of singular or plural in referring to the “method” or “methods” and the like is not limiting. It should be noted that, unless otherwise explicitly noted or required by context, the word “or” is used in this disclosure in a non-exclusive sense.
The example embodiments of the present invention are illustrated schematically and not to scale for the sake of clarity. One of the ordinary skills in the art will be able to readily determine the specific size and interconnections of the elements of the example embodiments of the present invention.
The present invention is directed at providing an effective means for a controller to communicate with individual devices that are part of a production system. In particular, the invention is directed toward assigning communications addresses in a production system in which some of the devices are communication hubs or communication distribution devices through which the controller can communicate with a plurality of secondary devices. The invention supports configurations in which a particular secondary device in the production system may be deactivated or removed from the production system while other secondary devices in the production system are still active and in communications with the system controller.
The invention will be described in terms of an embodiment in which the production system is an inkjet printing system including a plurality of inkjet printheads in communications with a system controller. The invention, however, is not limited to inkjet printing, but can also be used for other types of production devices. Another exemplary embodiment of a production system includes a plurality of robotic devices, in which at least some of the robotic devices are equipped with a plurality of specialty end of arm devices that each can communicate with the system controller via the robotic device. The system controller must be able to communicate both with the robotic device and also with the plurality of end of arm devices.
As described herein, exemplary embodiments of the present invention provide a printhead or printhead components typically used in inkjet printing systems. However, many other applications are emerging which use printheads to emit liquids (other than inks) that need to be finely metered and deposited with high spatial precision. As such, as described herein, the terms “liquid” and “ink” refer to any material that can be ejected by the printhead or printhead components described below.
Referring to
Print medium 32 is moved relative to the printhead 30 by a print medium transport system 34, which is electronically controlled by a media transport controller 36 in response to signals from a speed measurement device 35. The media transport controller 36 is in turn is controlled by a micro-controller 38. The print medium transport system 34 shown in
Ink is contained in an ink reservoir 40 under pressure. In the non-printing state, continuous inkjet drop streams are unable to reach print medium 32 due to an ink catcher 72 that blocks the stream of drops, and which may allow a portion of the ink to be recycled by an ink recycling unit 44. The ink recycling unit 44 reconditions the ink and feeds it back to the ink reservoir 40. Such ink recycling units are well known in the art. The ink pressure suitable for optimal operation will depend on a number of factors, including geometry and thermal properties of the nozzles and thermal properties of the ink. A constant ink pressure can be achieved by applying pressure to the ink reservoir 40 under the control of an ink pressure regulator 46. Alternatively, the ink reservoir 40 can be left unpressurized, or even under a reduced pressure (vacuum), and a pump can be employed to deliver ink from the ink reservoir 40 under pressure to the printhead 30. In such an embodiment, the ink pressure regulator 46 can include an ink pump control system. The ink is distributed to the printhead 30 through an ink channel 47. The ink preferably flows through slots or holes etched through a silicon substrate of printhead 30 to its front surface, where a plurality of nozzles and drop-forming transducers, for example, heaters, are situated. When printhead 30 is fabricated from silicon, the drop-forming transducer control circuits 26 can be integrated with the printhead 30. The printhead 30 also includes a deflection mechanism 70 which is described in more detail below with reference to
Referring to
Jetting module 48 is operable to cause liquid drops 54 to break off from the liquid stream 52 in response to image data. To accomplish this, jetting module 48 includes a drop stimulation or drop-forming transducer 28 (e.g., a heater, a piezoelectric actuator, or an electrohydrodynamic stimulation electrode), that, when selectively activated, perturbs the liquid stream 52, to induce portions of each filament to break off and coalesce to form the drops 54. Depending on the type of transducer used, the transducer can be located in or adjacent to the liquid chamber that supplies the liquid to the nozzles 50 to act on the liquid in the liquid chamber, can be located in or immediately around the nozzles 50 to act on the liquid as it passes through the nozzle, or can be located adjacent to the liquid stream 52 to act on the liquid stream 50 after it has passed through the nozzle 50.
In
Typically, one drop-forming transducer 28 is associated with each nozzle 50 of the nozzle array. However, in some configurations, a drop-forming transducer 28 can be associated with groups of nozzles 50 or all of the nozzles 50 in the nozzle array.
Referring to
The break off time of the droplet for a particular printhead can be altered by changing at least one of the amplitude, duty cycle, or number of the stimulation pulses to the respective resistive elements surrounding a respective resistive nozzle orifice. In this way, small variations of either pulse duty cycle or amplitude allow the droplet break off times to be modulated in a predictable fashion within ±one-tenth the droplet generation period.
Also, shown in
The voltage on the charging electrode 62 is controlled by the charging-electrode waveform source 63, which provides a charging-electrode waveform 64 operating at a charging-electrode waveform 64 period 80 (shown in
With reference now to
An embodiment of a charging-electrode waveform 64 is shown in part B of
Returning to a discussion of
Deflection occurs when drops 54 break off from the liquid stream 52 while the potential of the charging electrode 62 is provided with an appropriate voltage. The drops 54 will then acquire an induced electrical charge that remains upon the droplet surface. The charge on an individual drop 54 has a polarity opposite that of the charging electrode 62 and a magnitude that is dependent upon the magnitude of the voltage and the coupling capacitance between the charging electrode 62 and the drop 54 at the instant the drop 54 separates from the liquid jet. This coupling capacitance is dependent in part on the spacing between the charging electrode 62 and the drop 54 as it is breaking off. It can also be dependent on the vertical position of the breakoff point 59 relative to the center of the charge electrode 62. After the charged drops 54 have broken away from the liquid stream 52, they continue to pass through the electric fields produced by the charge plate. These electric fields provide a force on the charged drops deflecting them toward the charging electrode 62. The charging electrode 62, even though it cycled between the first and the second voltage states, thus acts as a deflection electrode to help deflect charged drops away from the initial trajectory 57 and toward the ink catcher 72. After passing the charging electrode 62, the drops 54 will travel in close proximity to the catcher face 74 which is typically constructed of a conductor or dielectric. The charges on the surface of the non-printing drops 68 will induce either a surface charge density charge (for a catcher face 74 constructed of a conductor) or a polarization density charge (for a catcher face 74 constructed of a dielectric). The induced charges on the catcher face 74 produce an attractive force on the charged non-printing drops 68. The attractive force on the non-printing drops 68 is identical to that which would be produced by a fictitious charge (opposite in polarity and equal in magnitude) located inside the ink catcher 72 at a distance from the surface equal to the distance between the ink catcher 72 and the non-printing drops 68. The fictitious charge is called an image charge. The attractive force exerted on the charged non-printing drops 68 by the catcher face 74 causes the charged non-printing drops 68 to deflect away from their initial trajectory 57 and accelerate along a non-print trajectory 86 toward the catcher face 74 at a rate proportional to the square of the droplet charge and inversely proportional to the droplet mass. In this embodiment, the ink catcher 72, due to the induced charge distribution, comprises a portion of the deflection mechanism 70. In other embodiments, the deflection mechanism 70 can include one or more additional electrodes to generate an electric field through which the charged droplets pass so as to deflect the charged droplets. For example, an optional single biased deflection electrode 71 in front of the upper grounded portion of the catcher can be used. In some embodiments, the charging electrode 62 can include a second portion on the second side of the jet array, denoted by the dashed line charging electrode 62′, which supplied with the same charging-electrode waveform 64 as the first portion of the charging electrode 62.
In the alternative, when the drop-formation waveform 60 applied to the drop-forming transducer 28 causes a drop 54 to break off from the liquid stream 52 when the electrical potential of the charging electrode 62 is at the first voltage state 82 (
As previously mentioned, the charge induced on a drop 54 depends on the voltage state of the charging electrode at the instant of drop breakoff. The B section of
Each of the jetting modules 200 includes a plurality of inkjet nozzles arranged in nozzle array 202, and is adapted to print a swath of image data in a corresponding printing region 132. Commonly, the jetting modules 200 are arranged in a spatially-overlapping arrangement where the printing regions 132 overlap in overlap regions 134. Each of the overlap regions 134 has a corresponding centerline 136. In the overlap regions 134, nozzles from more than one nozzle array 202 can be used to print the image data.
Stitching is a process that refers to the alignment of the printed images produced from jetting modules 200 for the purpose of creating the appearance of a single page-width line head. In the exemplary arrangement shown in
The two lines of nozzle arrays 202 in the staggered arrangement are separated by a nozzle array spacing 138. It has been found that larger nozzle array spacing 138 result in large amplitudes of the stitching variation, even after stitching correction algorithms are applied. Therefore, it is desirable to reduce the nozzle array spacing 138 as much as possible. With prior art arrangements for mounting the nozzle arrays 202, such as that described in the aforementioned, commonly-assigned U.S. Pat. No. 8,226,215 to Bechler et al. there is a limit to how small the nozzle array spacing 138 can be. These methods also get expensive and cumbersome when it is necessary to use increasing numbers of jetting modules in the line head to accommodate larger and larger print widths. These limitations are addressed with the modular inkjet printhead assembly illustrated in
In the illustrated configuration, the printhead assembly 190 includes three printhead modules 260, with one being mounted on a downstream side 226 of the beam 222, and two being mounted on an upstream side 228 of the beam 222. An advantageous feature of this modular printhead assembly 190 design is that wider print media 32 can be supported by simply extending the length of the rail assembly 220 and adding additional printhead modules 260. By alternating the printhead modules 260 between the downstream side 226 and the upstream side 228 of the beam 222, the associated nozzle arrays 202 can be stitched together with appropriate overlap regions 134 (see
Fluid system connectors 216 and electrical connectors 217 are provided for each of the printhead modules 260 to make connections with external system components. While not shown in
As new applications are being developed for the use of high speed inkjet printing technology, such as the printing of labels, books and magazines, packaging materials, and décor (such as wallpaper, and laminate material for flooring and countertops), there is a need to develop an increasing variety of linehead configurations to accommodate the increasing number of desired print widths. To simplify the development of the various lineheads, it is desirable to employ a modular design architecture for printhead alignment hardware and the supporting fluid and electronic hardware. In an exemplary architecture, each of the modular printhead assemblies 190 is designed to accommodate three printhead modules 260 along with their supporting fluid and electrical hardware. By combining different numbers of modular printhead assemblies 190 together, lineheads having different print widths can be created as illustrated in
In
The linehead 348 of
The linehead 348 of
In each of the configurations in
In keeping with the modular printhead assembly architecture, the fluid system components associated with each printhead module 260 are preferably configured as fluid component modules, where each fluid component module is positioned in close proximity to the corresponding printhead module 260. Similarly, the electronic components associated an individual printhead module 260 are preferably located on one or more electronics boards within the modular printhead assembly 190. Accordingly, in the illustrated embodiment, each modular printhead assembly 190, which can include up to three printhead modules 260, includes a fluid component module and printhead electronics boards (PHE) 358 for each printhead module 260.
As a linehead 348 can include from one to eight or more modular printhead assemblies 190, each with one to three printhead modules 260 and associated printhead electronics boards 358, an efficient method must be provided to enable the system controller 354 to communicate with the printhead electronics board 358 associated with a particular printhead module 260 for all the possible linehead configurations. To facilitate communicating with the individual printhead electronic boards 358 within the linehead 348 and distribution of power to the printhead modules 260, each modular printhead assembly 190 includes a power communication distribution board (PCD) 350 through which power and communication are provided to the one or more electronics boards associated with an individual printhead modules 260, as shown in
Each power communication distribution board 350 has two primary communication ports 352 (a first primary communication port 352A and a second primary communication port 352B) through which it can be connected to other power communication distribution boards 350, or to the system controller 354. In the illustrated configuration, each power communication distribution board 350 also has three secondary communication ports 356 through which communication and power can pass to secondary devices 364 (e.g., the individual printhead electronics boards 358). The secondary communication ports 356 are arranged on the PCD 350 in a defined order (i.e., A, B and C starting nearest to the first primary communication port 352A). The communication via the PCD 350 with each PHE 358 does not include print data. The high data-rate print data are supplied directly to the PHEs 358 by a print data source 366 via optical fibers 368.
The exemplary configuration of
The system controller 354 is connected by an umbilical cable 370 to the first primary communication port 352A of a first PCD 350 in the linehead 348. The second primary communication port 352B of the first PCD 350 is connected by a primary cable 372 to the first primary port 352A of a second PCD 350. Similarly, additional primary cables 372 connect the adjacent primary communication ports 352 of adjacent PCDs 350. In this manner, the PCDs 350 within the linehead 348 are connected to each other in a daisy chain arrangement to form a connected sequence of PCDs 350, with a first PCD 350 (i.e., the rightmost PCD 350 in the illustrated configuration) being connected to the system controller 354.
Each PHE 358 (also referred to as secondary device 364), which is located in proximity to a corresponding secondary communication port 356 of the associated PCD 350, is connected to the adjacent secondary port 356 via a secondary cable 374.
Communication between the system controller 354 and the PCDs 350 and the PHE 358 are via serial links included in the umbilical cable 370, the primary cables 372 and the secondary cables 374. To facilitate communications using the serial links, each device (i.e., each PCD 350 and each PHE 358) must be assigned a distinct communication address. In the printing system environment, it is important that the system controller 354 know, for each of the PHEs 358, the printhead position or print swath position for the associated printhead module 260. To facilitate this, the present invention provides a method for assigning communication addresses to the printhead electronics (i.e., the PHEs 358) in an order that is clearly linked to the physical position of the printhead modules 260. It does this independent of whether the system controller 254 is connected to the rightmost PCD 250 in the connected sequence of PCDs as shown in
The process for assigning communication addresses is carried out each time the printing system 300 is powered on. At power on, each of the PCDs 350 within the linehead 348 detect whether it is the PCD 350 at an end of the linehead 348 that is directly connected to the system controller 354, whether it is the PCD 350 at the opposite end of the linehead 348 from the system controller 354 with one of its primary communication ports 352 not connected to anything, or whether it is a PCD 350 somewhere between the two ends. The PCD 350 that is directly connected via the umbilical cable 370 to the system controller 354 also determines whether the system controller 354 is connected to the first primary communication port 352A or to the second primary communication port 352B. Each PCD 350 also determines whether secondary devices 364 are attached to any of its secondary communication ports 356. The process by which a PCD 350 detects attached devices will be described later.
The communication addresses that can be assigned to the PCDs 350 and to the secondary devices 364 (e.g., the PHEs 358) come from separate pools or sets of addresses. The first set of communication address consists of addresses that can be assigned to the individual communications distribution devices (i.e., the PCDs 350). These addresses have a prescribed order, typically a consecutive number order. In an exemplary embodiment, the first set of communication address has address values ranging from #32 to #39. (For clarity in this description, address values will be denoted with a “#” sign prefix to distinguish them from drawing reference numbers.)
The second set of communication addresses, which is distinct from the first set of communication addresses, are those that can be assigned to the individual secondary devices 364. These addresses will also have prescribed order, typically a numeric order. In an exemplary embodiment, the second set of communication addresses includes two subsets of communication addresses: the first subset includes the values ranging from #1 to #24, and the second subset includes the values ranging from #40 to #63.
The PCD 350 that is connected to the system controller 354 can be referred to as the first communication distribution device or the first PCD 350. Upon detecting that it is connected directly to the system controller 354, the first PCD 350 assigns itself the first address in the first set of communication addresses (i.e., the address #32). This assignment to the first PCD 350 of the first communication address in the first set of communication addresses is independent of whether the system controller is attached to the first primary communication port 352A or the second primary communication port 352B. However, the assignment of the communication addresses for the attached secondary devices 364 preferably depends on which primary communication port 352 is connected to the system controller 354.
If the system controller 354 is connected to the first primary communication port 352A of the first PCD 350, then first PCD 350 will assign the first (lowest) address in the second set of communication addresses to the secondary device 364 (i.e., the PHE 358) attached to the secondary port 356 closest to the first primary communication port 352A. This lowest communication address of the second set of communication addresses is #1 in the exemplary embodiment. Continuing along the sequence of secondary communication ports, the first PCD 350 sequentially assigns communication addresses in ascending order (i.e., #2 and #3) to the other secondary devices 358 (i.e., the PHEs 358) attached to the B and C secondary communication ports 356.
On the other hand, if the system controller 354 is connected to the second primary communication port 352B of the leftmost PCD 350 as shown in
As the PCD 350 is assigning communication addresses to the secondary devices 364, the communication addresses are allocated sequentially, either upward or downward, based on the order of the secondary communication ports 356. If any of the secondary communication ports 356 are open (i.e., it is detected that they don't have an attached secondary device 364), the communication address is held in reserve for allocation to a secondary device 364 that is attached to that secondary communication port 356 at a later time. If a secondary device 364 is subsequently attached to that open secondary communication port 356, the communication address held in reserve can be assigned to that secondary device 364 without needing to reassign communication addresses to the other attached secondary devices 364. After assigning communication addresses to itself and to the attached secondary devices 364, the first PCD 350 creates a table of assigned communication address for subsequent transmission to the system controller 354. On the other hand, after the communication addresses have been assigned, if one of the secondary devices 364 is disconnected from a secondary communication port 356, the communication address that had been assigned to the removed secondary device 364 is unassigned by the PCD 350, but is held in reserve so that it can be reassigned to any secondary device 364 that is later attached to that secondary communication port 356.
After assigning communication addresses to itself and to the attached secondary devices 364, the first PCD 350 communicates address information to the next PCD 350 in the connected sequence of PCDs 350 via one of its primary communication ports 352. In an exemplary embodiment, the address information communicated to the next PCD 350 specifies next communication address in the prescribed sequence of the first set of communication addresses (which the next PCD 350 can assign to itself) and also specifies the next available communication address in the prescribed sequence of the second set of communication addresses that the next PCD 350 can assign to the secondary devices 364 connected to it.
For example, consider the case where the first PCD 350 is connected to the system controller 354 using the first primary communication port 352A as in
If, on the other hand, the first PCD 350 is connected to the system controller 354 using the second primary communication port 352B, then it would have assigned the communication address #63-#61 from the second subset of the second set of communication addresses to its attached secondary devices 364. In this case, the first PCD 350 would notify the next PCD 350 that the next available communication address from the second subset of the second set of communication addresses is address #60.
Upon being notified as to the next available communication address in both the first and the second sets of communication addresses, the next PCD 350 in the connected sequence would in a similar manner assign the received next available communication address in the first set of communication addresses to itself, and would sequentially assign the next available addresses in the second set of communication addresses to the secondary devices 364 attached to its sequence of secondary communication ports 356. If the next available communication addresses were received through the first primary communication port 352A (as in
After assigning communication addresses to itself and to its attached secondary devices 364, the PCD 350 creates a table of assigned communication address for subsequent transmission to the system controller 354 and continues the process of assigning communication addresses by communicating the next available communication addresses to the next PCD 350 in the connected sequence. This process continues until the last PCD 350 in the connected sequence is reached, in which case the process is terminated since communication addresses have been assigned all of the PCDs 350 and their connected secondary devices 364.
As each PCD 350 assigns communication addresses to itself and to its attached secondary devices 364, it notifies the system controller 354 that it has completed the assignment of communication addresses. The system controller 354 can then send a query to the PCD 354 to have it transmit its address assignment table to the system controller 354. Upon receipt of the address assignment tables from each of the PCDs 350, the system controller can begin communicating with any of the devices (the PCDs 350 and PHEs 358) for which it has received a communications address.
After the communication addresses are assigned to all the connected devices in this manner, each of the PCDs 350 continues to monitor the connection status at each of its communication ports (i.e., primary communication ports 352 and secondary communication ports 356). If there is any change in the connection status due to a new device being connected or a device being removed, the PCD will assign the reserved communication address to the new device, or it will un-assign the communication address of the removed device. The PCD 350 will then notify the system controller 354 of the altered communication address table.
This method of assigning the communication addresses to the secondary devices ensures that the communication addresses are always incremented in the same direction relative to the linehead independent of which end of the linehead the system controller is attached to. That is, the communication addresses of the secondary devices 364 (i.e., the PHEs 358) always increase from right-to-left across the linehead 348.
In an exemplary embodiment of the invention, the second set of communication addresses includes two distinct subsets of communication addresses. The communication address in one of the subsets are used when the successively assigned communication address are incremented upward, while the communication addresses in the second subset are used when the successively assigned communication address are decremented downward. The use of these two distinct subsets of communication addresses can help the PCDs 350 downstream of the first PCD 350 to determine whether they are to increment or decrement the communication addresses from the received next available communication address as they assign the second set of communication addresses to the attached secondary devices 364.
In certain embodiments as indicated in
In certain exemplary embodiments of the invention, the communication cables (the umbilical cable 370, primary cables 372 and secondary cables 374) and communication ports (primary communication ports 352 and secondary communication ports 356) can include more than one serial link, as shown in
The means by which the PCDs 350 detect the presence of other PCDs 350 and secondary devices 364 in an exemplary configuration is best understood by examining the different signals passed through the primary communication ports 352 and secondary communication ports 356. As shown in
The secondary communication ports 356 and secondary cables 374 include similar lines, except that the secondary communication ports 356 do not include the loopback signal lines 382. The secondary communication ports 356 also each include two sets of IDIn and IDOut signal lines instead of the single set in the primary communication ports 352. One set of IDIn and IDOut lines are used to test for the presence of an attached PMC 360, while the second set of IDIn and IDOut lines are used to test for the presence of the JME 362 which is connected via the PMC 360 to the secondary communication port 356 of the PCD 350. The different signal lines at the secondary communication ports 356 aren't separately labeled for clarity.
On power-up, each PCD 350 transmits a square wave on the IDOut 386 lines of its primary communication ports 352. The PMC 360, and JME 362 boards also transmit a square wave on each of their IDOut lines. In one exemplary embodiment, the square wave frequency is 125 Hz. Each of the PCD boards monitors the IDIn 384 lines of their communication ports 352, 356 to detect whether such a square wave has been transmitted by an attached device. If nothing is attached to one of the communication ports of a PCD 350, the IDIn 384 line of that communication port 352, 356 will float high. Based on detecting a sustained logic-high signal on the IDIn 384 line of a communication port 352, 356 at power up, the PCD 350 can determine that there is not a device attached to that communication port 352, 356. Unlike the other devices, the system controller 354 holds its IDOut 386 line at the logic-low level. The PCD 350 attached to the system controller 354, upon detecting the sustained logic-low signal instead of the square wave or the logic-high signal at one of its two primary communication ports 352, determines that it is connected to the system controller 354 using that primary communication port 352. It then sets the logic level at the IDOut 386 lines of its primary and secondary communication ports 352, 356 to low. It then proceeds to assign communication addresses to itself and the attached devices as previously described. The downstream PCD 350 and secondary devices 364 attached to the first PCD 350 upon detecting the change to IDOut 386 signal from the first PCD 350 to logic-low, stop transmitting the square wave signals on their IDOut 386 lines, holding their IDOut 386 lines at logic-high. The PCD 350 transmits the communication addresses on the IDOut 386 line of the communication port to the IDIn 384 of the attached device. In one embodiment, the address information is transmitted at a 250 Hz bit rate. The address information is transmitted as a 32-bit message that includes two start bits, each at logic-low, and one stop bit at logic-high. The device receiving the address message uses its IDOut 386 line to echo the address message back to the first PCD 350. In addition to echoing back the address message, messages over the IDOut 386 and IDIn 384 lines can include other configuration data, such as baud rates for the serial links, whether the serial link data is encrypted or not, the device type, and device serial number information. Following the echoing of the address message back to the first PCD 350, the attached PMC 360 and JME 362 boards hold their IDOut 386 lines at logic-low. If these devices are disconnected from the PCD 350, the corresponding IDIn 384 port of the PCD 350 will no longer be held low and it will float high, providing a signal to the PCD 350 that the device has been removed.
The use of the IDOut 386 and IDIn 384 lines within the communication ports and cables that are distinct from the serial links within the communication ports enables them to not only transmit communication address information to the attached devices, but also to monitor whether devices are attached. This enables the PCDs 350 to continually monitor their ports to detect newly connected or disconnected devices, even while continuing to relay communications to the attached devices through the serial links within the communication ports. As the PCD 350 detects a newly connected or disconnected device, it assigns or un-assigns a communication address for that device. It then updates its address assignment table and notifies the system controller 354 of the change in the address assignment table.
In certain applications in which the integrity of a communication network is important, the ability to continually monitor for newly connected or disconnected devices on the network, provides a level of security against unauthorized removal and installation of devices on the communication network.
When the second PCD 350 receives the next available communication address from the first set of communication address and from the second set of communication addresses, it assigns communication addresses to itself and to each of the attached devices and communicates the communication addresses to the attached devices in the same way.
In some embodiments, each PCD 350 transmits to the next PCD 350 in the daisy chain the last used communication addresses from the first set and from the second set of communication address rather than the next available communication addresses. The receiving PCD then determines the next available communication addresses based on the received last used communication address.
In some embodiments, the secondary communication ports 356 are not aligned in a row on the PCD 350, but rather the secondary communication ports 356 are alternately placed along two opposite edges of the PCD 350, typically the upstream and downstream edges, as shown in
To facilitate connection of the secondary cables 374 between the secondary communication ports 356 and the associated PHEs 358, it is desirable to similarly alter the orientation of adjacent PCDs 350 within the linehead. In the exemplary embodiment of
In the exemplary embodiments, the PCDs 350 do not act as gatekeepers for communications passing through the one or more serial links of the communication ports. Instead all communications received via a serial link at one of primary communication port 352 of a PCD 350 are transmitted to the corresponding serial link of each of the secondary communication ports 356 and of the other primary communication port 352.
While the invention has been described with respect to an embodiment in which the PCDs 350 each have three secondary communication ports 356, the number of secondary communication ports 356 is not limited to three. The PCDs 350 can have any number of secondary communication ports 356 greater than or equal to 1. Furthermore, the different PCDs 350 within a production system can vary in their number of secondary communication ports 356.
While this invention has been described with respect to a printing system, this invention also has applicability to other types of production systems in which a system controller monitors or controls the operation of a plurality of production tools or instruments. In one such embodiment, the production system includes a plurality of manufacturing cells arranged along a production path, with each cell including a number of devices to act on the units being made. In such a system, each manufacturing cell might include a communication distribution device through which the production tools of the manufacturing cell are connected to a system controller. The communication distribution devices associated with each of the manufacturing cells along the production path are connected in a daisy chain fashion. The present invention is particularly useful in such production systems where there is a need to frequently remove and replace individual tools in the various production cells and a need for the system controller to know where along the production path the individual tools are located.
Outside of the field of production systems, the invention has applicability in communication networks in environments such as in hospitals where a variety of different types of patient monitoring instruments can be moved from one patient treatment room to another, and in which a system controller, perhaps at a nurse's station, must unambiguously know the location of each of the connected patient monitoring instruments. In such an environment, each patient treatment room or patient treatment station might include a communication distribution device, each having a plurality of secondary communication ports to which the patient monitoring instruments can be connected as secondary devices.
The present invention has been described with respect to methods and system components for assigning communication addresses in an inkjet printing production system. It will be obvious to one skilled in the art that an equivalent solution can be applied to other types of production systems having a chain of communication distribution devices, each having ports for connecting to a plurality of secondary devices.
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 spirit and scope of the invention.
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