Plates are typically large substrates that have been coated with photosensitive or thermally-sensitive material layers. Depending on the type of plate, they can be sensitive or insensitive to ambient light. The plates are usually used in commercial printing operations. For large run applications, the substrates are fabricated from aluminum, although organic substrates, such as polyester or paper, are also available for smaller runs. Because of the composition, the plates can be somewhat heavy, especially in the context of a stack of relatively large plates.
Computer-to-plate printing systems are used to render digitally stored print content onto these printing plates. Typically, a computer system is used to drive an imaging engine of a platesetter. The engine selectively exposes the surfaces of these plates. In a common implementation, the plate is fixed to the outside or inside of a drum and then scanned with a modulated laser source in a raster fashion.
Typically, one of two different strategies is used to feed the plates to the imaging engine. In the simplest case, an operator manually places individual plates into a feeder that then conveys the plates through a feed port to the drum scanner. This approach, however, has some obvious drawbacks, since an operator must be dedicated to feeding the plates. Moreover, the printing system must be housed within a light-safe environment, if the plates being used have any sensitivity to ambient light. The alternative approach is to use a plate manager.
Plate managers typically house multiple plate cassettes. Each cassette holds tens of plates in a stack. For example, in one common implementation, each cassette holds about thirty to fifty plates. The plate manager selects plates from one of its cassettes and then feeds the plates, automatically, into the imaging engine.
In these designs, cassettes are loaded into the plate manager on separate tables. The tables are then raised and lowered inside the manager to bring the plates of a selected cassette into cooperation with a plate picker that grabs individual plates and feeds them to the imaging engine.
In some applications, the plates can be shipped and stored in these cassettes. In other cases, the plates are shipped to the end user in a crate and then transferred to the cassettes by an operator.
Some institutions that use these platesetters require or have a need for an automated solution for feeding plates to the imaging engine. It is not cost effective for these institutions to devote personnel to the task of feeding plates one at a time into the imaging engine. At the same time, however, these institutions may not have the space or the need for a full plate manager that can handle multiple cassettes, since these plate managers can be relatively large and expensive.
This need is addressed to some degree by proposed, automated plate de-crating solutions. These systems, however, can be somewhat dangerous, having many exposed moving parts and are susceptible to mis-feeding, either when the plate is initially engaged, or when it is being conveyed to the infeed port to the imaging engine. They further require a light-controlled environment.
The present invention concerns a plate cassette loader for a platesetter. The plate cassette loader comprises a cassette holder for receiving a cassette, containing a stack of plates. A cassette inverter then rotates this cassette to a feed position in which the plates can be fed into the imaging engine of the platesetter. In this way, the somewhat unwieldy process of loading plates into the imaging engine is handled by the cassette inverter, in combination with the fact that the stack of plates, contained in the cassette, can be loaded in one step, rather than requiring the feeding of individual plates by a dedicated operator.
In the present embodiment, the cassette holder comprises a frame into which the cassette is inserted by the operator. This frame comprises tracks for guiding the cassette upon insertion. Springs are used on either side of the cassette to urge the cassette into engagement with the tracks. These springs also help to constrain the cassette during its rotation by the cassette inverter. A latch is provided for retaining the cassette in the holder, especially during rotation to the feed position.
Plate picker is also preferably provided. It is installed on the cassette holder in the present invention to pick a plate from the stack of plates so that it can be fed to the imaging engine.
In the present configuration, the cassette is inserted into the cassette holder by the operator in a generally horizontal position. The cassette inverter then translates a mouth of the cassette to the infeed port, while raising a distal end of the cassette to pivot the cassette around a horizontal axis. In this way, it inverts the cassette from a generally horizontal orientation, for ease of loading by the operator, to a generally vertical orientation, compatible with the angle of the infeed port.
In order to rotate this cassette, the cassette inverter comprises an actuation system and an inverter track for guiding the movement of a distal end of the cassette. The present configuration mimics the operation of a four-bar linkage. A link arm connects between the cassette holder and a frame to control its movement.
In general, according to another aspect, the invention can also be characterized as a method for loading a plate cassette in a platesetter. This method comprises receiving a cassette containing a stack of plates, and then rotating the cassette to a feed position. Plates are then fed into an imaging engine of the platesetter.
The above and other features of the invention including various novel details of construction and combinations of parts, and other advantages, will now be more particularly described with reference to the accompanying drawings and pointed out in the claims. It will be understood that the particular method and device embodying the invention are shown by way of illustration and not as a limitation of the invention. The principles and features of this invention may be employed in various and numerous embodiments without departing from the scope of the invention.
In the accompanying drawings, reference characters refer to the same parts throughout the different views. The drawings are not necessarily to scale; emphasis has instead been placed upon illustrating the principles of the invention. Of the drawings:
In more detail, the platesetter 10 generally comprises an infeed port 16 that conveys plates to an imaging engine in the general region of 12. The plates are typically loaded onto an imaging drum of the image engine and exposed, typically in a raster fashion by a scanning laser. Plates are thereafter ejected through an outfeed port 18 to a finished plate location 20. Thereafter, the plates are typically transported for further processing including development.
The plate cassette loader 100 generally comprises a cassette holder 110 and a cassette inverter 105.
The cassette holder 110 comprises a cassette frame 112. A cassette 14 is inserted into this frame 112 by an operator by sliding the cassette in the rearward direction into the frame 112.
The cassette holder 110 further comprises, in the illustrated embodiment, a plate picker system 114. This plate picker engages a top plate of a stack of plates held in the cassette 14, and then conveys that picked plate to the picker mouth 116.
The cassette inverter 105 comprises two stationary inverter arms 118 and two link arms 124. The inverter arms 118 generally extend vertically from the frame or body of the platesetter 10 in the fashion of a cantilever. Each inverter arm comprises an inverter track 120, which is generally arcuate, curving upward from the body of the platesetter and slightly rearward. A roller 122, which is journaled to the cassette frame 112, rides in and is confined by the inverter track 120 in the inverter arm 118.
One end of the link arm 124 is journaled to the inverter arm 118 near the base of the inverter arm 118, where it connects to the body of the platesetter 10. This allows the link arm 118 to pivot on the inverter arm 118. In the illustrated load position of
An important aspect of the inverter's operation is the fact that the cassette 14 has never been moved through a vertical position. As a result, a stack of plates contained in the cassette will never be oriented such that they would not fall out of the cassette 14 or flop against a top of the cassette. This characteristic is important since, in the current implementation, the stack of plates is not constrained in the z-axis direction in the frame of reference of the cassette 14. The z-axis is orthogonal to the plane of the cassette (the vertical direction in the orientation of
In this feed position, the picker mouth 116 is cooperating with the infeed port 16 of the imaging engine 12. This allows individual plates to be picked-off of the stack of plates in the cassette 14 and fed through the picker mouth 116, into the infeed port 16 and to the drum of the imaging engine 12.
The U-shaped member 132 defines an insertion channel 168 into which the operator inserts the cassette 14 between the upper and lower legs 164, 162 of the U-shaped member 132.
A reinforcing frame member 134 is attached to the side of the U-shaped member 132. It carries the journaled pin 126 that engages the link arm 124 to provide the pivot engagement and the roller 122 that rides in the inverter track of the inverter arm 118.
Also shown is a latching mechanism 141, which is bolted to lower leg 162. The latching mechanism 141 is used to retain the cassette 14 in the channel of the cassette holder. Specifically, a pin 124, on the cassette 14, is provided that projects down from the bottom of the tray 130 of the cassette 14. Upon full insertion, it engages the latching mechanism 141 that is secured onto the lower leg 162. This latching mechanism 141 retains the pin 124, and thus holds the cassette 14 in the cassette holder 110 during the process of inverting the cassette 14 to the feed position.
While this invention has been particularly shown and described with references to preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the scope of the invention encompassed by the appended claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20030190225 A1 | Oct 2003 | US |