Claims
- 1. An ink jet printer device comprising:a printer head comprising a plurality of nozzles for ejecting ink; means for detecting a sequence of droplets of ink ejected from said plurality of nozzles said detecting means operable to generate an output signal pulse in response to each ink droplet of said detected sequence of droplets of ink; and means for performing a measurement on each said output signal pulse of said detecting means, wherein for each said nozzle, said measurement means performs measurements on a number of output signal pulses corresponding to a number of detected ink droplets containing a predetermined volume of ink.
- 2. A printer device as claimed in claim 1, wherein said number of detected ink droplets per each nozzle is two.
- 3. A printer device as claimed in claim 1, wherein said number of detected ink droplets per each nozzle is four.
- 4. A printer device as claimed in claim 1, wherein said means for performing measurements comprises a digital sampling means operable to produce a sequence of a plurality of digital sample signals, each quantized to represent an amplitude of a portion of said output signal pulse.
- 5. A printer device as claimed in claim 1, wherein said measurement means comprises a digital sampling means operable to perform a sequence of sampled measurements on a said output signal pulse at a sampling rate in the range of about 30 kHz to 50 kHz.
- 6. A printer device as claimed in claim 1, wherein said measurement means comprises a digital sampling means operable to sample said detected output signal pulse with a sampling period between samples in the range of about 12 ms to 50 ms.
- 7. A printer device as claimed in claim 1, wherein said detecting means is operable to output for each detected ink droplet an analogue output signal pulse having an amplitude perturbation having a first portion of a lower amplitude than a steady state amplitude output signal of said detecting means, and a second amplitude portion of a higher amplitude than said steady state amplitude output signal.
- 8. A printer device as claimed in claim 1, wherein said means for detecting said predetermined sequence of droplets of ink ejected from said at least one nozzle of said plurality of nozzles comprises:an emitting element configured to emit a light signal; a receiving element configured to receive said light signal; and a means for rigidly locating said emitting element with respect to said receiving element.
- 9. A printer device as claimed in claim 8, wherein said emitting element comprises:a light emitting diode; and a transparent plastics material casing, said casing being configured to focus a light output from said light emitting diode into a beam.
- 10. A printer device as claimed in claim 9, wherein said light emitting diode is an high intensity infra-red light emitting diode.
- 11. A printer device as claimed in claim 1, having a rigid locating means comprising:a first housing; a second housing; and a rigid connecting member being substantially straight and having a first end and a second end, wherein said first housing is rigidly attached to said first end of said rigid connecting member and said second housing is rigidly connected to said second end of said connecting member.
- 12. A printer device as claimed in claim 11, wherein:said first housing has a first aperture; and said second housing has a second aperture, wherein said first aperture is located substantially opposite said second aperture, such that a beam of light may form a path between said first and second apertures.
- 13. A printer device as claimed in claim 11, wherein:said first housing means houses an emitting element; and said second housing means houses a receiving element, wherein said emitting element, said first aperture, said second aperture, and said receiving element are configured to lie along a single substantially straight line.
- 14. A printer device as claimed in claim 1, wherein said measuring means comprises:a processor; and a memory device, wherein said processor and said memory device are configured to operate for converting said output signal into a plurality of integer number signals.
- 15. A printer device as claimed in claim 14, wherein said memory device is configured to store said integer number signals.
- 16. A printer device as claimed in claim 1, wherein said measuring means is operable to measure an output signal of a detecting means and convert said measured output signal into an integer number signal.
- 17. An ink jet printer device configured to print onto a print medium comprising:a printer head having a plurality of nozzles; an elongate rigid connecting member having a first end and a second end; a first housing arranged for mounting an emitter device, said first housing rigidly attached to said first end of said elongate rigid connecting member; a second housing arranged for mounting a detector device, said second housing attached rigidly to said second end of said elongate rigid connecting member, wherein said printer head is located with respect to said first housing and said second housing such that at least one ink droplet ejected from a nozzle of said plurality of nozzles of said printer head passes between said first housing and said second housing, in a trajectory which intersects a beam path between said emitter device and said detector device; and means for measuring an output signal of said detector device, said measurement means operating to generate for said nozzle a signal indicating a performance of said nozzle, in response to said detector signal resulting from passage of said at least one ink droplet containing a predetermined volume of ink across said beam path.
- 18. A method for determining an operating characteristic of a nozzle of a print head of an ink jet printer device having an ink drop detection means, said nozzle being configured to eject a plurality of drops of ink, said method comprising:sending an instruction to said print head to eject a predetermined sequence of at least one drop of ink from said nozzle said predetermined sequence of at least one drop containing a predetermined volume of ink; generating an output signal of said ink drop detecting means, said output signal generated in response to said pre-determined sequence of at least one ink drop; measuring said output signal of said ink drop detecting means; and determining said operating characteristic of said nozzle from said output signal.
- 19. The method as claimed in claim 18, wherein said predetermined volume of ink lies in the range of about 30 picoliters to 100 picoliters.
- 20. The method as claimed in claim 18, wherein said predetermined sequence comprises two consecutively released ink drops when said nozzle is releasing black ink.
- 21. The method as claimed in claim 18, wherein said predetermined sequence comprises four consecutively released ink drops when said nozzle is releasing an ink of a color other than black.
- 22. The method as claimed in claim 18, wherein measuring said output signal comprises sampling said signal at a sample frequency in the range of about 30 kHz to 50 kHz.
- 23. The method as claimed in claim 18, wherein sampling said output signal comprises performing sampling with a period between samples in the range of about 12 ms to 50 ms.
- 24. The method as claimed in claim 18, wherein measuring said output signal of said ink droplet detection means comprises:waiting a fixed time period after said instruction is sent to said print head; and performing a sequence of measurements on said output signal of said ink drop detecting means, wherein said sequence of measurements measure said output signal of said ink drop detection means at a plurality of time intervals.
- 25. The method as claimed in claim 18, wherein determining said operating characteristic comprises analyzing a sequence of at least one perturbation of said output signal produced in response to a predetermined volume of ink passing said detecting means.
- 26. The method as claimed in claim 18, wherein determining said operating characteristic of said nozzle comprises:identifying a largest value of output signal of said ink drop detecting means; identifying a smallest value of output signal of said ink drop detecting means; and subtracting said smallest value of output signal of said ink drop detecting means from said largest value of output signal level of said ink drop detecting means.
- 27. A method as claimed in claim 18, wherein determining said operating characteristic of said nozzle comprises:determining a value of a perturbation of said output signal; and comparing said value of perturbation with a threshold value, wherein said threshold value is set at least six standard deviations above an average noise level of said output signal.
- 28. The method as claimed in claim 18, wherein said total volume of said predetermined sequence of drop of ink passing said ink drop detecting means is configured to lie within a range of volumes which generates a said output signal having a peak to peak perturbation value of at least six standard deviations above a noise level of said output signal.
- 29. A method as claimed in claim 28, wherein said total volume of said predetermined sequence of drops of ink lie substantially in a range of about 30 to 100 picolitres.
- 30. A method as claimed in claim 18, wherein a predetermined number of drops are ejected from a said nozzle at a substantially constant ejection frequency.
- 31. A method for evaluating an operation of each nozzle of a print head comprising a plurality of nozzles, said nozzles being configured to eject a plurality of drops of ink, said method comprising:sending an instruction to said print head to eject a pre-determined sequence of drops of ink from each nozzle wherein each sequence of drops contains a predetermined volume of ink; generating an output signal of an ink drop detecting means for each sequence of drops detected; measuring said output signal of said ink drop detecting means for each sequence of drops detected; and determining an operating characteristic of a corresponding respective nozzle from each output signal.
- 32. The method as claimed in claim 31, wherein measuring said output signal of said ink droplet detecting means comprises:waiting a fixed time period after a said instruction is sent to said print head; and after said fixed time period has elapsed, performing a sequence of measurements on said output signal of said ink droplet detecting means to sample said output signal at a plurality of time intervals.
- 33. The method is claimed in claim 31 wherein determining an operating characteristic of said nozzle comprises for each output signal for each sequence of drops detected:identifying a largest value of output signal of said ink droplet detecting means; identifying a smallest value of output signal of said ink droplet detecting means; and subtracting said smallest value of output signal of said ink droplet detecting means from said largest value of output signal of said ink droplet detecting means, to obtain a peak to peak signal value representing a magnitude of perturbation resulting from a said ejected of ink droplet.
- 34. The method as claimed in claim 31, further comprising determining an operating characteristic of said print head from said plurality of nozzle operating characteristics.
- 35. A method of characterizing a print head of an inkjet printer having a plurality of nozzles capable of ejecting ink droplets, said method comprising:selecting an individual nozzle of said plurality of nozzles; generating a signal for instructing said nozzle to eject a predetermined sequence of at least one ink droplet; continuously monitoring an analogue output signal of a detector device configured for detecting passage of said predetermined sequence of at least one droplet through a light beam; digitizing said analogue output signal; sampling said analogue output signal to produce a set of quantized digital samples of said output signal; determining from said set of quantized samples a minimum level of said output signal; determining from said quantized digitized samples a maximum level of said output signal; determining a difference value between said maximum and said minimum levels; comparing said difference value with a predetermined threshold level; and depending on a result of said difference value determining whether said nozzle is satisfactory.
- 36. The method as claimed in claim 35, wherein if said determined difference value is greater than said threshold value, said nozzle is accepted as satisfactory.
- 37. The method as claimed in claim 35, wherein sampling said analogue output signal comprises sampling at a sampling frequency in the range of about 30 kHz to 50 kHz.
- 38. The method as claimed in claim 35, wherein said analogue signal includes at least one perturbation, resulting from passage of said ink droplet through said light beam, and sampling said output signal comprises sampling said perturbation resulting from said ink droplet at a period between samples in the range of about 12 ms to 50 ms.
- 39. The method as claimed in claim 35, wherein if said determined difference value is less than said threshold value, said nozzle is rejected as unsatisfactory.
- 40. The method as claimed in claim 35, wherein said threshold level is set at least six standard deviations above an average measured noise level of said output signal.
- 41. The method as claimed in claim 35, further comprising:repeating the method until a number of nozzles recorded as unsatisfactory exceeds a predetermined number.
- 42. The method as claimed in claim 35, further comprising:repeating the method for each of said plurality of nozzles.
- 43. The method as claimed in claim 41, further comprising activating a printer head intervention procedure in which one or a plurality of unsatisfactory nozzles are automatically attempted to be cleaned if said number of unsatisfactory nozzles exceeds a predetermined quantity.
- 44. The method as claimed in claim 41, further comprising activating a process in which during a print operation, one or more satisfactory nozzles are used to eject a predetermined sequence of ink droplets in replacement of using said at least one unsatisfactory nozzle if said recorded number of unsatisfactory nozzles exceeds a predetermined quantity.
- 45. The method as claimed in claim 42, wherein said predetermined quantity of unsatisfactory nozzles is set in the range of about 6% to 12% of a total number of nozzles of said print head.
- 46. An ink jet printer device comprising:a printer head comprising a plurality of nozzles for ejecting ink; a sensor for detecting a sequence of droplets of ink ejected from said plurality of nozzles, said sensor operable to generate an output signal pulse in response to each ink droplet of said detected sequence of droplets of ink; and a sampling device for performing a measurement on each said output signal pulse of said sensor, wherein for each said nozzle, said sampling device performs measurements on a number of output signal pulses corresponding to a number of detected ink droplets containing a predetermined volume of ink.
- 47. A printer device as claimed in claim 46, wherein said number of detected ink droplets per each nozzle is two.
- 48. A printer device as claimed in claim 46, wherein said number of detected ink droplets per each nozzle is four.
- 49. A printer device as claimed in claim 46, wherein said sampling device comprises a digital sampling device operable to sample said detected output signal pulse with a sampling period between samples in the range of about 12 ms to 50 ms.
- 50. A printer device as claimed in claim 46, wherein said sensor is operable to output for each detected ink droplet an analogue output signal pulse having an amplitude perturbation having a first portion of a lower amplitude than a steady state amplitude output signal of said sensor, and a second amplitude portion of a higher amplitude than said steady state amplitude output signal.
- 51. A printer device as claimed in claim 46, wherein said sampling device comprises:a processor; and a memory device, wherein said processor and said memory device are configured to operate for converting said output signal into a plurality of integer number signals.
- 52. An ink jet printer device configured to print onto a print medium comprising:a printer head having a plurality of nozzles; an elongate rigid connecting member having a first end and a second end; a first housing arranged for mounting an emitter, said first housing rigidly attached to said first end of said elongate rigid connecting member; a second housing arranged for mounting a sensor, said second housing attached rigidly to said second end of said elongate rigid connecting member, wherein said printer head is located with respect to said first housing and said second housing such that at least one ink droplet ejected from a nozzle of said plurality of nozzles of said printer head passes between said first housing and said second housing, in a trajectory which intersects a beam path between said emitter and said sensor; and a sampling device for measuring an output signal of said sensor, said sampling device operating to generate for said nozzle a signal indicating a performance of said nozzle, in response to said sensor signal resulting from passage of said at least one ink droplet containing a predetermined volume of ink across said beam path.
- 53. A method for determining an operating characteristic of a nozzle of a print head of an ink jet printer device having an ink drop sensor, said nozzle being configured to eject a plurality of drops of ink, said method comprising:sending an instruction to said print head to eject a predetermined sequence of at least one drop of ink from said nozzle, said predetermined sequence of at least one drop containing a predetermined volume of ink; generating an output signal of said ink drop sensor, said output signal generated in response to said pre-determined sequence of at least one ink drop; measuring said output signal of said ink drop sensor; and determining said operating characteristic of said nozzle from said output signal.
- 54. The method as claimed in claim 53, wherein measuring said output signal of said ink drop sensor comprises:waiting a fixed time period after said instruction is sent to said print head; and performing a sequence of measurements on said output signal of said ink drop sensor, wherein said sequence of measurements measure said output signal of said ink drop sensor at a plurality of time intervals.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION(S)
This is a continuation of copending application Ser. No. 09/502,667 filed on Feb. 11, 2000 which is hereby incorporated by reference herein.
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Continuations (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09/502667 |
Feb 2000 |
US |
Child |
10/105830 |
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US |