Claims
- 1. A thermal printer capable of preventing crease formation in a dye transfer area of a dye donor web that can cause line artifacts to be printed on a dye receiver during a dye transfer from the dye transfer area to the dye receiver, said printer comprising:a thermal print head for heating the dye transfer area of the dye donor web sufficiently to effect a dye transfer from the dye transfer area to the dye receiver, but not heating two opposite edge areas of the dye donor web alongside the dye transfer area sufficiently to effect a dye transfer from the two edge areas to the dye receiver, so that the dye transfer area is vulnerable to being stretched relative to the two edge areas; a web take-up that takes up the dye donor web, and that exerts a pulling force on the dye transfer area and two edge areas at said print head which is sufficient to stretch the dye transfer area relative to the two edge areas to possibly form some creases in at least respective regions adjacent the two edge areas; and a crease-preventing platen roller having a rotatable main portion and a coaxial pair of opposite end portions each rotatable independently of said roller main portion, with respective lengths to hold the dye transfer area and two edge areas against said print head, and with a diameter that is greater at said roller end portions than at said roller main portion, so that said roller end portions apply a pressure against the two edge areas that is greater than a pressure said roller main portion applies against the dye transfer area, whereby the pressure difference causes the two edge areas to be stretched substantially the same as the dye transfer area when the dye transfer area and two edge areas are subjected to the pulling force of said web take-up roller, so that crease formation which can cause line artifacts is at least substantially prevented.
- 2. A thermal printer as recited in claim 1, wherein said independently rotatable roller end portions and roller main portion each have a rubber hardness of Shore A in the range of 30-80, so that said roller end portions have the same compliance as said roller main portion.
- 3. A thermal printer as recited in claim 1, wherein said roller end portions rotatable independently of said roller main portion each have a diameter that is 0.4 mm greater than the diameter of said roller main portion.
- 4. A thermal printer as recited in claim 1, wherein said roller end portions rotatable independently of said roller main portion each have a diameter of 18.4 mm, and said roller main portion has a diameter of 18 mm.
- 5. A thermal printer as recited in claim 1, wherein said roller end portions rotatable independently of said roller main portion each have a single diameter periphery which applies pressure against the two edge areas at said print head.
- 6. A thermal printer as recited in claim 1, wherein said roller end portions rotatable independently of said roller main portion each have dual diameter peripheries consisting of a uniform diameter periphery for applying pressure against the two edge areas at said print head and a varying diameter periphery between said uniform diameter periphery and said roller main portion which decreasingly tapers from the diameter of said uniform diameter periphery to the diameter of said roller main portion.
- 7. A thermal printer as recited in claim 1, wherein said roller main portion has a length of 156 mm, and said roller end portions rotatable independently of said roller main portion each have a length of 5 mm to provide a total roller length of 166 mm.
- 8. A method of preventing crease formation in a dye transfer area of a dye donor web that can cause line artifacts to be printed on a dye receiver during a dye transfer from the dye transfer area to the dye receiver, said method comprising:heating the dye transfer area of the dye donor web sufficiently at a thermal print head to effect a dye transfer from the dye transfer area to the dye receiver, but not heating two opposite edge areas of the dye donor web alongside the dye transfer area sufficiently at the print head to effect a dye transfer from the two edge areas to the dye receiver, so that the dye transfer area is vulnerable to being stretched relative to the two edge areas; taking up the dye donor web after dye transfer at the print head, but exerting a web take-up pulling force on the dye transfer area and two edge areas at the print head which is sufficient to stretch the dye transfer area relative to the two edge areas to possibly form some creases at least in respective regions adjacent the two edge areas; and moving a crease-preventing platen roller having a rotatable main portion and a coaxial pair of opposite end portions each rotatable independently of the roller main portion, and with a diameter that is greater at the roller end portions than at the roller main portion, to hold the dye transfer area and two edge areas against the print head, so that the roller end portions apply a pressure against the two edge areas that is greater than a pressure the roller main portion applies against the dye transfer area, whereby the pressure difference causes the two edge areas to be stretched substantially the same as the dye transfer area when the dye transfer area and two edge areas are subjected to the web take-up pulling force, so that crease formation which can cause line artifacts is at least substantially prevented.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
Cross-reference is made to commonly assigned, co-pending application Ser. No. 10/391,175 entitled PREVENTING CREASE FORMATION IN DONOR WEB IN DYE TRANSFER PRINTER THAT CAN CAUSE LINE ARTIFACT ON PRINT, and filed Mar. 18, 2003 in the names of Zhanjun J. Gao, John F. Corman and Robert F. Mindler, Po-Jen Shih and Theodore J. Skomsky.
US Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Name |
Date |
Kind |
5460457 |
Mindler et al. |
Oct 1995 |
A |
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number |
Date |
Country |
06-171170 |
Jun 1994 |
JP |
9-095018 |
Apr 1997 |
JP |