Printing devices (e.g., inkjet printers, laser printers, and the like) can operate according to control signals, commands, and/or computer readable instruction sets to effectuate the transfer of ink onto print media. In an inkjet printer, one or more controllers (e.g., microprocessors) can regulate the movement of a carriage that can move a number of inkjet pens or printheads, across a print media. The controllers can further regulate the timing and/or firing of the ink onto the print media. In an inkjet printer, ink can be ejected onto the print media from one or more inkjet printheads, each inkjet printhead containing one or more nozzles through which the ink is ejected. The image quality of the printer can be a major concern for users, especially with the use of digital photography and the printing of digital images on printing devices.
Gloss uniformity is an image quality attribute for digital photography professionals. Gloss enhancer is a transparent ink used to improve gloss uniformity. Gloss enhancer can be used in various types of printers, including professional photographic printers. A diagnostic plot may currently be used with printers to allow users to check nozzle firing status of the transparent ink printheads. However, because gloss enhancer ink is substantially transparent, it is not easy for a user to assess whether a nozzle is firing.
A diagnostic plot that may be used for checking nozzle firing status of the gloss enhancer printhead can print the gloss enhancer on a gray patch. The gloss enhancer can be visible, if only minimally, on the gray patch which can make it possible to visualize the nozzle firing status of the gloss enhancer printhead. In the case that the grey printhead has some nozzle health problems and can not properly print a gray patch on a print medium, the gray area fill will show white areas and it will be impossible to assess the nozzle status of the gloss enhancer printhead.
Embodiments of the disclosure herein provide systems and methods for a printhead diagnostic plot. A nozzle firing diagnostic plot for the transparent gloss enhancer ink is disclosed, which can also be used for low visibility ink, such as yellow ink. An embodiment of a method for diagnosing printhead status includes diagnosing which of a number of nozzles fire ink in a first printhead using a drop detector and printing a diagnostic plot using a second printhead that maps the nozzles firing ink from the first printhead. In various embodiments, an electrostatic or optical sensor detects the nozzles that fire ink in the first printhead. The ink in the first printhead can be gloss enhancer or a low visibility ink and the ink in the second printhead can be a visible ink. In various embodiments, the printhead diagnosis occurs by visually identifying the nozzles that are firing ink as indicated by the visible ink on the diagnostic plot.
Mid-range and high-end printers can have a built-in device called a drop detector. This device can be an electrostatic sensor, an optical sensor, or other various drop detectors that allows detection of the ink drops fired by any printhead. This means that it is possible to know the nozzle status of the printheads with a transparent ink, like gloss enhancer. Once the nozzle status of the gloss enhancer is known by the drop detector, a nozzle health pattern can be printed with a visible ink printhead. This printhead will print by disabling the same nozzles that failed to print in the gloss enhancer printhead. It is evident that the visible ink printhead should have good nozzle health to correctly reproduce the nozzle status of the gloss enhancer. Since a standard printer has 12 colors in 6 pens, the probability of having a printhead with good nozzle health is high.
In one embodiment, a printhead diagnostic plot system consists of a first printhead with a number of nozzles, a number of drop detectors that determine which nozzles in the first printhead eject ink, and a second printhead with a number of nozzles. In various embodiments of a printhead diagnostic plot system, the first printhead, the drop detectors, and the second print are coupled together to allow the second printhead to print a diagnostic plot with visible ink that maps the nozzles that fired ink in the first printhead as detected by the drop detector. In various embodiments, a nozzle on the second printhead is enabled when the corresponding nozzle on the first printhead fires ink and a nozzle on the second printhead is disabled when the corresponding nozzle on the first printhead does not fire ink. A diagnostic plot is printed by the second printhead using only enabled nozzles. A visual inspection of the diagnostic plot is then completed to determine the nozzle status of the first printhead.
This diagnostic plot allows for a determination of nozzle health of the gloss enhancer printhead that can be assessed by a user. In using this diagnostic plot, diagnosis of whether an image quality defect is or is not caused by nozzle health problems in the gloss enhancer printhead can be completed by a visual inspection. Moreover, the nozzle health diagnostic plot presented is not only applicable to the gloss enhancer printhead, but also to any printhead containing a low visibility ink, such as yellow.
The printer 100 has a predefined print zone which coincides, at least partly, with the feed path of the media in such a way that the latter is fed through the printing zone. An illustrative printing zone is defined as an area within which each of the multiple nozzles of the printheads of the printhead unit 102 may print throughout the entire width of the media.
The printhead unit 102 that moves back and forth includes a carriage 104 mounted in such a way that it may slide on at least one fixed guide rod 118 so as to move bi-directionally along the platen. In the embodiment of
In the embodiment of
In the embodiment of
The executable instructions carry out various control steps and functions for the inkjet printer 200. Memory 215 can include some combination of ROM, dynamic RAM, and/or some type of nonvolatile and writeable memory such as battery-backed memory or flash memory.
The controller 214 can be interfaced, or connected, to receive instructions and data from a remote device (e.g. host computer), such as 710 shown in
A drop detector 222 is provided which is operable to determine if ink is ejected from a nozzle in a printhead. The drop detector 222 can be an electrostatic sensor, an optical sensor, or other various sensors on the printhead 202. The drop detector 222 can determine the functional status of the nozzles in a printhead while the printhead 202 is in use.
As shown in the embodiments of
In various embodiments, the correlation component 224 is able to analyze the output of the nozzle on a printhead 202, e.g., using the drop detector 222. Based on this analysis, the correlation component 224 can provide instruction for mapping a diagnostic plot to be printed with another visible ink printhead. For example, the drop detector 222 and correlation component 224 in
The example of the inkjet printhead 300 shown in
In some embodiments, as shown in
In some embodiments, as shown in
As such, in various embodiments, algorithm 500 can be used for image quality trouble shooting by determining where the gloss enhancer is not being applied to the print media that is being printed on by the printer. In some embodiments of the present disclosure, algorithm 500 can be used to show the nozzle status of the gloss enhancer printhead. This information can be used to implement various remedies for nozzles that are not functioning properly. The nozzles in the gloss enhancer printhead that are not functioning properly can physically be repaired or replaced once it is determined that they are the cause of the image quality problems the printer is experiencing. Also, the printer can remedy the image quality issues by implementing another algorithm that uses other functioning nozzles that compensate for the nonfunctioning nozzles through repositioning of the print media or delivery patterns of the gloss enhancer.
In some embodiments, a compensatory algorithm can be implemented using a processor to execute instructions to at least partially determine which of a number of print nozzles is a potential substitute by determining which of a number of inks utilized in the print nozzles can be used to substitute for the one or more misfiring print nozzles.
In various embodiments of the present disclosure, a printing system can at least partially compensate for one or more potentially misfiring print nozzles that are intended to eject gloss enhancer to defined locations on the print medium by using one or more print nozzles to deposit droplets of gloss enhancer at the defined locations that are intended to gloss enhancer. That is, in some embodiments, at least partially compensating for a potentially misfiring print nozzle can be performed in substantially all locations where gloss enhancer is intended to be deposited by using at least one other print nozzle to deposit gloss enhancer where the gloss enhancer is intended to be deposited by the misfiring nozzle.
The system 600 is operable to receive data and interpret the data to position an image in a particular image position. The system 600 can include software and/or application modules thereon for receiving and interpreting data in order to achieve the positioning and/or formatting functions. As one of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate, the software and/or application modules can be located on any device that is directly or indirectly connected to the printing device 602 within the system 600.
The printing device 602 can include a controller 604 and a memory 606, such as the controller and memory discussed in connection with
In the embodiment shown in
When a printing device is to be utilized to print an image on a piece of print media, a print job can be created that provides instructions on how to print the image. These instructions are communicated in a Page Description Language (PDL) to initiate a print job. The PDL can include a list of printing properties for the print job. Printing properties include, by way of example and not by way of limitation, the size of the image to be printed, its positioning on the print media, resolution of a print image (e.g. DPI), color settings, simplex or duplex setting, indications to process image enhancing algorithms (e.g. halftoning), and the like.
As shown in the embodiment of
In various embodiments, a remote device 612 can include a device having a display such as a desktop computer, laptop computer, a workstation, hand held device, or other device as the same will be known and understood by one of ordinary skill in the art. The remote device 612 can also include one or more processors and/or application modules suitable for running software and can include one or more memory devices thereon.
As shown in the embodiment of
The network described herein can include any number of network types including, but not limited to a Local Area Network (LAN), a Wide Area Network (WAN), Personal Area Network (PAN), and the like. And, as stated above, data links 622 within such networks can include any combination of direct or indirect wired and/or wireless connections, including but not limited to electrical, optical, and RF connections.
Memory, such as memory 606 and memory 614, can be distributed anywhere throughout a networked system. Memory, as the same is used herein, can include any suitable memory for implementing the various embodiments of the invention. Thus, memory and memory devices include fixed memory and portable memory. Examples of memory types include Non-Volatile (NV) memory (e.g. Flash memory), RAM, ROM, magnetic media, and optically read media and includes such physical formats as memory cards, memory sticks, memory keys, CDs, DVDs, hard disks, and floppy disks, to name a few.
Software, e.g. computer readable instructions, can be stored on such memory mediums. Embodiments of the invention, however, are not limited to any particular type of memory medium. And, embodiments of the invention are not limited to where within a device or networked system a set of computer instructions is stored on memory for use in implementing the various embodiments of invention.
As noted, the system embodiment 600 of
Although specific embodiments have been illustrated and described herein, those of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that an arrangement calculated to achieve the same results can be substituted for the specific embodiments shown. This disclosure is intended to cover adaptations or variations of various embodiments of the present disclosure. It is to be understood that the above description has been made in an illustrative fashion, and not a restrictive one. Combination of the above embodiments, and other embodiments not specifically described herein will be apparent to those of skill in the art upon reviewing the above description. The scope of the various embodiments of the present disclosure includes other applications in which the above structures and methods are used. Therefore, the scope of various embodiments of the present disclosure should be determined with reference to the appended claims, along with the full range of equivalents to which such claims are entitled.
In the foregoing Detailed Description, various features are grouped together in a single embodiment for the purpose of streamlining the disclosure. This method of disclosure is not to be interpreted as reflecting an intention that the disclosed embodiments of the present disclosure have to use more features than are expressly recited in each claim. Rather, as the following claims reflect, inventive subject matter lies in less than all features of a single disclosed embodiment. Thus, the following claims are hereby incorporated into the Detailed Description, with each claim standing on its own as a separate embodiment.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP07/51860 | 2/27/2007 | WO | 00 | 8/10/2009 |