The present invention relates to a printer of a type such that a paper roll is placed on a receiving portion of a paper roll holder so that the outer peripheral surface of the paper roll is supported by the receiving portion and a paper sheet paid out from the paper roll is printed.
Generally known is a printer of a type such that a paper roll is placed on a receiving portion of a paper roll holder and a paper sheet paid out from the paper roll is printed. In this printer, the paper roll rotates on the receiving portion as the paper sheet is paid out from the paper roll.
In the printer of this type, a shortage of the residual quantity of the paper roll is detected by utilizing a reduction of the radius of the paper roll and lowering (or movement toward the receiving portion) of the position of its roll core (see Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 4-176674).
If the paper roll is lightened in weight with its residual quantity lessened, however, the paper roll tends to jump up from the receiving portion or roll on the receiving portion, urged by a force that is generated when the paper sheet is paid out from the paper roll. Thereupon, the position of the paper roll varies, so that the residual quantity of the paper roll cannot be detected. If the paper roll lifts off the receiving portion, moreover, fixed-rate feed to a printing section may be destabilized or noise may be generated, in some cases.
In order to prevent the paper roll from lifting off the receiving portion, therefore, there is proposed a method in which the paper roll that is placed on the receiving portion of the paper roll holder is pressed down with a spring-urged pressure member from above (see Japanese Patent Applications Laid-Opens Nos. 58-22245 and 4-176674).
However, the printer having the pressure member constructed in this manner requires a mechanism for retreating the pressure member from a path of movement of the paper roll toward the receiving portion lest the pressure member hinder the paper roll from being loaded into the paper roll holder.
The object of this invention is to prevent a paper roll from lifting upward in a paper roll holder when the paper roll in the paper roll holder is paid out by feed rollers in a printing section, in a printer with the paper roll holder located beside or under the printing section.
In order to achieve the above object, a printer according to the present invention comprises a printing section and a paper roll holder. The paper roll holder has a receiving portion which supports an outer peripheral surface of a paper roll formed of rolled paper as a print medium and a drawer portion for delivering the paper roll to the printing section side. In this printer, moreover, a guide member is located in a paper course formed between the receiving portion and the drawer portion such that the guide member restricts the paper course between the receiving portion and the drawer portion to the receiving portion side.
One end of the guide member may be fixed to a fixing member on the printing section side, and a free end or the other end thereof may be configured to act on the paper sheet.
The paper course from the receiving portion to the drawer portion may be bent by the guide member so that it is divided into a paper course from the receiving portion to the guide member and a paper course from the guide member to the drawer portion, the two paper courses forming an angle within a range of 90° to 160°.
A separator configured to act on the paper sheet immediately before passing through the drawer portion and to engage a turn-up formed at a terminal end of the paper sheet when the paper sheet is wound on a roll core may be provided between the guide member and the drawer portion.
According to the present invention, the paper roll is prevented from lifting upward in the paper roll holder when the paper roll is paid out by a feed-in roller in the printing section, so that wrong operation of a sensor for detecting a shortage of the residual quantity of the paper roll can be avoided, and the generation of noise by the lift of the paper roll can be eliminated.
The paper roll holder 3, which substantially has the shape of a container, is made of a synthetic resin and comprises a receiving portion 7 and a drawer portion 8. The receiving portion 7 is composed of a pair of bottom plates 9a and 9b, front and rear, which decline toward its center to support a paper roll from below and prevent the paper roll from rolling back and forth.
The drawer portion 8 is formed in a region opposite the printing section 2 of the paper roll holder 3. The paper sheet is passed through the drawer portion 8 to the outside of the paper roll holder 3 and fed in between the print head 4 and the platen 5. Since the print head 4 and the platen 5 are normally situated in a position higher than the receiving portion 7 (bottom plates 9a and 9b) of the paper roll holder 3, as shown in
In
In the printer 1 shown in
As shown in
Although the guide member 12 is provided on the fixing member 16 on the side of the printing section 2 in this example, guide member 12 may alternatively be fixed to a fixing member on the side of the paper roll holder 3. It is necessary that the proximal end of the guide member 12 be fixed to the fixing member of the printer and the distal end thereof act on the paper sheet P1 that is not passed through the drawer portion 8 yet, thereby bending the paper sheet P1.
The function of the guide member 12 will now be described with reference to
A force that causes the paper roll 10 to lift off the receiving portion 7 as the paper sheet is paid out from the paper roll 10 is settled depending on a vertical component of the force that is generated when the paper sheet is paid out from the paper roll 10. Thereupon, if the paper sheet P1 paid out from the paper roll 10 is inclined to be substantially horizontal by being guided by the guide member 12, a vertical component V1 of a force F that is generated when the paper sheet is paid out from the paper roll 10 is smaller than a vertical component V2 of the force F that is generated when the paper sheet is paid out from the paper roll 10 without the use of the guide member 12 (
Thus, it can be seen that even though the paper sheet is paid out from the paper roll 10 with the same force F, a force that causes the paper roll 10 to spring up from the receiving portion 7 can be made smaller than without the use of the guide member 12 if the inclination of the paper sheet is approximated to the horizontal angle by means of the guide member 12.
As described above, the paper roll 10 can be prevented from lifting off the receiving portion 7 by approximating the inclination of the paper sheet paid out from the paper roll 10 to the horizontal angle to reduce the vertical component V1 of the force F that is generated when the paper sheet is paid out from the paper roll 10. Actually, however, the paper roll 10 is placed on the receiving portions 9a and 9b that are inclined in the manner shown in
According to this embodiment, as described above, the paper roll 10 is prevented from being lifted off the receiving portion 7 by the force that is generated when the paper sheet is paid out from the paper roll 10, so that the paper sheet paid out from the paper roll 10 can be steadily fed to the side of the printing section 2, and the residual quantity can be accurately detected by the near-end sensor 11.
Moreover, the printing section 2 of the printer 1 of
If the paper roll 10 is formed by winding an elongate paper sheet around a roll core 14, a winding-side end portion (turn-up 15) of the paper sheet P is turned back outward, as shown in
If the paper sheet P shown in
If the feed-in rollers 6 are rotated, moreover, the paper sheet P touches the distal end of the lug 13a as it is drawn in with its turn-up 15 kept in the slit 13b of the separator 13. In consequence, the curl of the paper sheet P is reformed by the lug 13a. When the turn-up 15 finally gets out of the slit 13b and reaches the feed-in rollers 6, the fold of the turn-up 15 is eliminated. Thus, the turn-up 15 can be prevented from lapping on the paper sheet in the manner shown in
The proximal end of a guide member 12 is fixed to a fixing member of the printing section 2 that faces the paper roll holder 3. A free end or the distal end of the guide member 12 extends toward the inner part of the paper roll holder 3 and laterally acts on the paper sheet P1 (
In the present embodiment, a paper course that extends from a receiving portion 7 to the drawer portion 8 is bent by the guide member 12 and divided into a paper course from the receiving portion 7 to the guide member 12 and a paper course from the guide member 12 to the drawer portion 8. An angle formed between these two paper courses is within a range from 90° to 160° (preferably at about 110°).
As seen from
In the printer 1 of
According to this embodiment, as described above, the paper roll 10 is prevented from being lifted off the receiving portion 7 by the force that is generated when the paper sheet is paid out from the paper roll 10, so that the paper sheet paid out from the paper roll 10 can be steadily fed to the side of the printing section 2, and the residual quantity can be accurately detected by the near-end sensor 11.
Like that of the printer 1 of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2004-294208 | Oct 2004 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/JP2005/018365 | 10/4/2005 | WO | 00 | 1/24/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2006/038624 | 4/13/2006 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5060877 | Bullivant | Oct 1991 | A |
5533821 | Awai et al. | Jul 1996 | A |
20050232678 | Mochizuki et al. | Oct 2005 | A1 |
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58-022245 | Feb 1983 | JP |
59022840 | Feb 1984 | JP |
60-36247 | Mar 1985 | JP |
63-119054 | Aug 1988 | JP |
03096379 | Apr 1991 | JP |
4-176674 | Jun 1992 | JP |
6-247600 | Sep 1994 | JP |
7-33291 | Feb 1995 | JP |
07033291 | Feb 1995 | JP |
8-300752 | Nov 1996 | JP |
9-254473 | Sep 1997 | JP |
9-277637 | Oct 1997 | JP |
10-310291 | Nov 1998 | JP |
11-157716 | Jun 1999 | JP |
2000-103549 | Apr 2000 | JP |
2000-309134 | Nov 2000 | JP |
2005-23933 | Sep 2005 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080310903 A1 | Dec 2008 | US |