In some inkjet printers, a stationary print bar with a media wide arrangement of printheads is used to print on paper or other print media moved past the printheads. In one type of print bar, elongated molded plastic parts support and carry printing fluid to the printheads.
The same part numbers are used to designate the same or similar parts throughout the figures.
One of the challenges making print bars with molded plastic parts is precisely controlling the position of the printheads on the print bar to maintain the desired spacing and alignment between the printheads and the print media. Controlling the dimensions of plastic parts and keeping the parts flat for proper alignment is more difficult in longer parts. The length of the print bar corresponds to the width of the print media. Thus, using longer parts for printing on wider media increases dimensional tolerances and the risk of misalignment.
A print bar structure disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/010,861 filed Aug. 27, 2013 was developed to help improve dimensional control in a media wide print bar by introducing a rigid chassis to support and constrain the molded plastic parts. In one example described the '861 application, a flange on a rigid, metal chassis is machined flat and sandwiched between plastic parts that support and carry printing fluid to the printheads to keep the parts flat and in the correct position. It has been discovered, however, that the flange in this sandwich configuration can deflect under heavy loads, allowing the printheads to move out of position. Also, sandwiching the chassis flange between plastic parts glued to one another but not to the flange is insufficient to keep the plastic parts flat under some printer operating conditions. Torsional loading on the print bar and thus deflection of the chassis is proportional to the cube of the length of the print bar. Consequently, it is particularly challenging to make the chassis stiff enough to resist torsional loads for printing on wider media, for example for printing on A3 size media (297 mm wide) compared to A4 size media (210 mm wide).
A new, stiffer print bar structure has been developed for media wide printing. In one example, the chassis includes a metal beam such as a C beam or an I beam with two flanges connected by a web. The elongated plastic structure that mounts the printheads is attached to the beam along a planar surface machined or otherwise formed on the edge of each flange. The flow structure that carries printing fluid to the printhead mounting structure is located between the flanges. Inlets to the flow structure protrude through holes in the web to receive printing fluid from the upstream supply system. The beam makes the chassis stronger and more rigid to help keep the printhead mounting structure flat even under the heavier loads on a longer chassis for printing on wider media.
This and other examples shown in the figures and described herein are non-limiting examples. Other examples are possible and nothing in this Description should be construed to limit the scope of the invention which is defined in the Claims that follow the Description.
As used in this document: a “beam” means a structure with two flanges connected by a web such as an I beam or a C beam (C beams are also commonly referred to as channels); “elongated” means a part is longer than it is wide; “room” means an extent of space occupied by or sufficient or available for something; a “printhead” means that part of an inkjet printer or other type of inkjet dispenser that dispenses fluid from one or more openings; and a “print bar” means a structure or device holding one or more printheads that remains stationary during printing. “Printhead” and “print bar” are not limited to printing with ink but also include inkjet type dispensing of other fluids and/or for uses other than printing.
Referring first to
Referring now also to
A shroud 42 extends along the bottom of print bar 12, covering exposed portions of structure 30 and printheads 26 while leaving the face of each printhead 26 exposed for dispensing ink. Printhead mounting structure 30 is attached to a planar surface 44, 46 machined or otherwise formed on the edge 48, 50 of each flange 52, 54 of beam 34. Planar surfaces 44, 46 lie a plane that is parallel to a plane defined by reference surfaces 56A, 56B, 56C on chassis 32. Reference surfaces 56A, 56B, 56C establish three points of contact for mounting print bar 12 in printer 10 that form a primary, Z direction datum 58 to help maintain the desired spacing between printheads 26 and print media 16 during printing.
Referring specifically to
Referring now to the example of print bar 12 shown in
In the example shown, flow structure 28 is configured as two discrete parts—an upstream flow structure 84 and a downstream flow structure 86. Also in this example, as best seen in
In one example, chassis 32 including beam 34 is aluminum and flow structures 84, 86 and printhead mounting structure 30 are molded plastic. Datum contact pads 72, 68A, 68B, and 56A-56C may be machined on to a cast aluminum chassis 32 to define X datum 74, Y datum 70, and Z datum 58. Each alignment surface 44, 46 may be machined on to the corresponding edge 48, 50 of each flange 52, 54 in an X-Y plane parallel to the X-Y plane defined by Z datum contact pads 56A-56C. While other suitable materials and processes may be used for chassis 32 (and specifically beam 34), it is expected that machined aluminum will be desirable for many implementations because it is readily machined with precision, sufficiently rigid to withstand the expected loading, and is comparatively inexpensive to cast and machine. Any suitable fastener may be used to hold the upstream face 92 of printhead mounting substrate 30 flat against planar alignment surfaces 44, 46 including, for example, adhesives or mechanical fasteners such as screws 94 shown in
A beam chassis 32 will be substantially more rigid than a comparably sized non-beam chassis such as that shown in the '861 application. Consequently, the print bar may be longer for printing on wider media while still maintaining an acceptable degree of deflection to help keep the printhead mounting structure flat even under the heavier loads on a longer chassis.
“A” and “an” as used in the claims means one or more.
The examples shown in the figures and described above illustrate but do not limit the invention. Other forms, details and examples may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention which is defined in the following claims.
This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 15/326,244 filed Jan. 13, 2017, which is itself a 35 U.S.C. 371 national stage filing of international application no. PCT/US2014/047085 filed Jul. 17, 2014, each incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
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Youngwan Cho; An Impact Position Control of the Ink Droplet of Inkjet Printer; Dept. of Computer Engineering, Seokyeong University, Seoul, Korea; Jun. 2-5, 2005. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20180170046 A1 | Jun 2018 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 15326244 | US | |
Child | 15897625 | US |