Print systems may include a conveying mechanism to transport media to a printer. A velocity of the media along the conveying mechanism may vary.
Print systems, such as printers, copiers, etc., may generate text or images onto print media (e.g., paper, plastic, etc.). Print systems may transfer print substance (e.g., printing fluid and/or toner, etc.) to print media, heat the print media, and/or perform other operations with respect to print media to form text, graphics, and/or other aspects of a print job. As mentioned, print systems may include a conveying mechanism, such as rollers, drums, and belts, to transport print media by imparting movement into the print media. A velocity of the print media along the conveying mechanism may be monitored to help achieve a particular quality of print output. For example, the velocity of the print media may be tracked using mechanical systems such as those employing a rotary encoder. However, such mechanical systems may not be suitable for all types of print systems such as those having a small form factor. Additionally, such mechanical systems may rely on marks such as top of form (TOF) marks on a substrate of a print media that may inherently limit a total amount of printable space on the substrate of the print media.
The disclosure is directed to removable tracking markings as a mechanism to permit velocity determinations of print media, such as those without complex and/or costly mechanisms like rotary encoders and/or without marks on a substrate of a print media. For example, a print media can include a substrate, a removable layer coupled to a surface of the substrate, and an object on a surface of the removable layer, as detailed herein. Removable tracking markings can permit determination of a velocity of a print media when coupled to the print media, and notably can be decoupled from a substrate of the print media to provide a greater total amount of printable space on the print media and/or provide a resultant print media that is tracking marking free, as detailed herein.
The substrate 104 refers to a material that is to couple to the removable layer 110 and is to receive a printing agent (e.g., printing fluid, various plastic/metal or other types of particulates, etc.), receive heat, etc. to form content (text, images, etc.) on the substrate. The substrate 104 can be formed of paper, a polymeric film, plastic, metal and/or combinations thereof, among other possible materials. The substrate 104 can be opaque, transparent, translucent, reflective or retroreflective. While illustrated as having a rectangular shape, the size and/or shape of the substrate 104 and/or the print media can be varied.
The substrate 104 includes a first surface 105 and a second surface 106. As illustrated in
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In other examples, the object 120 can be a visible tracking mark. As used herein, a visible object can be formed of black or other colored printing agent and be visible to an unaided human eye. A visible object can be shaped, colored, sized, and/or oriented in a number of possible manners. For example, a visible object can be shaped, colored, sized, and/or oriented to avoid interfering with or reducing an area of the print media available to receive a printing agent. A visible object can also provide a particular aesthetic due in part to the object 120 being disposed on the removable layer (e.g., as opposed to being disposed on a substrate). A visible object can also convey information (e.g., represent a trademark, logo, and/or other information) to an end user or other individual due in part to the object having non-uniform tracking markings.
The adhesive 208 can be a pressure-sensitive adhesive. As used herein, a pressure-sensitive adhesive refers to an adhesive that is tacky at ambient temperature to permit adhering to substrates, such as those describe herein, such as in response to application of pressure (e.g., hand pressure). The pressure-sensitive adhesive can in various examples be employed without an activator such as water, solvent, and/or heat. Suitable pressure-sensitive adhesives include those selected from a group including alkylacrylate polymers and copolymers; copolymers of alkylacrylates with acrylic acid; terpolymers of alkylacrylates, acrylic acid, and vinyl-lactates; alkyl vinyl ether polymers and copolymers; polyisoalkylenes; polyalkyldienes; alkyldiene-styrene copolymers; styrene-isoprene-styrene block copolymers; polydialkylsiloxanes; polyalkylphenylsiloxanes; natural rubbers; synthetic rubbers; chlorinated rubbers; latex crepe; rosin; cumarone resins; alkyd polymers; and polyacrylate esters and mixtures thereof. Further examples include polyisobutylenes, polybutadienes, or butadiene-styrene copolymers, and mixtures thereof (such polymers and copolymers have no reactive moieties, i.e., are not oxidized in the presence of air); silicone-based compounds such as polydimethylsiloxane, and polymethylphenylsiloxane combined with other resins and/or oils, among other suitable pressure-sensitive adhesives.
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For example, a first individual tracking marking 342-1 can have a different thickness than a thickness of a second tracking marking 342-2. For instance, is illustrated in
While
For instance,
The objects 462, 464 can extend over a portion of a surface such as a second surface of a removable layer 410. That is, as illustrated in
The receptacle 672 defines a volume to receive print media 677 including an object, as described herein. The print media 677 can be delivered by a media belt 679 and/or other suitable device to convey the print media (in a direction of travel 680 of media) from the receptacle. The encoder 674 is positioned downstream from the receptacle 672 and is to sense or otherwise detect an object 678 as the media travels along a direction of travel 680 on the media belt 679. Object 678 can be analogous to object 120, 220, 340, 462, 464, and/or 566, as described herein, among other possibilities.
In some examples, the encoder 674 is a media encoder unit (MEU) included in a plurality of MEUs. A MEU refers to device that can produce timing signals to promote printing of a print job. For instance, the encoder 674 can be non-rotary encoder such as a reflective/optical encoder, among other possibilities. As illustrated in
v=d/Δt (Equation 1)
where, Δt=(t681-1−t681-2)
The velocity determination is made by the processing resource 675. The processing resource 675 receives the signals, from the first sensor and the second sensor, 681-1 and 681-2, respectively, and calculates the velocity based on those signals. For example, an object sequentially arrives at the first sensor 681-1 and then at the second sensor 681-2. As each object passes under the first sensor 681-1, the first sensor detects tracking markings of the object and sends a pulse (e.g., a signal) to the processing resource 675. Therefore, if, in an example, there are six tracking markings in a given group of tracking markings, a pulse train of six pulses is sent to the processing resource 675. That is, such a pulse train can include a plurality of individual pulses that pertain to individual objects and/or individual tracking markings of a given object. Each pulse can have a peak that corresponds to the center of a objects and/or individual tracking markings of a given object. Pulses can be sinusoidal (as opposed to square), among other possibilities, given the nature with which the first sensor 681-1 senses the tracking marking as it travels past. For instance, referring to a first pulse in a pulse train, the first sensor 681-1 can detect a leading edge of an object at time t1, the center of the object at time t2, and the trailing edge of the object at time t3. In various examples, different pulse shapes can be produced depending upon the type of sensor used.
Because the second sensor 681-2 is positioned a short distance (e.g., the distance d in
Although a reasonably accurate measurement of the velocity of the media 677 could be obtained from an individual object and/or individual tracking marking (e.g., an individual pulse from each sensor), comparatively increased accuracy of results can be obtained when multiple pulses from the first sensor 681-1 are correlated with multiple pulses from the second sensor 681-2, In such a process, the shapes of the pulses in the first pulse train are matched to the shapes of the pulses in the second pulse train, for instance, so that respective peaks of the matched pulses can be correlated with greater accuracy and, therefore, the time difference can be likewise determined with greater accuracy. Although any number of pulses can be correlated in this manner, the greater the number of pulses that are correlated, the greater the accuracy with which the time between arrival of the media 677 at each sensor 681-1, 681-2 can be calculated.
Once a velocity of the media 677 has been determined, that velocity can be used as input into an encoder signal emulator (not shown) included in the imaging device 668, which generates a signal that emulates that of a mechanical encoder such as a rotary encoder. The emulator generates a further pulse train that simulates the pulses that would be sent by a mechanical encoder for each object and/or tracking marking of an encoder disk that is sensed.
The processing resource 675 can output emulated encoder signals that can be sent to vary a printing attribute (e.g., dots per inch, etc.) of the imaging device 668 based on the determined velocity of the print media. The processing resource 675, as used herein, can include a processor capable of executing instructions stored by the computer readable medium 676. Processing resource 675 can be integrated in an individual device (e.g., an imaging device) or distributed across multiple devices (e.g., printing systems, and/or servers). The instructions (e.g., computer-readable instructions (CRI)) can include instructions stored on the computer readable medium 676 and executable by the processing resource 675 to implement a particular function (e.g., determine a velocity of the print media along the print path based on the sensed location of the visible tracking mark, etc.).
The computer readable medium 676 can be in communication with a processing resource 675. A computer readable medium 676, as used herein, can include a memory component capable of storing instructions that can be executed by processing resource 675. Such computer readable medium 676 can be a non-transitory CRM. Computer readable medium 676 can be integrated in an individual device or distributed across multiple devices. Further, computer readable medium 676 can be fully or partially integrated in the same device as processing resource 675 or it can be separate but accessible to that device and processing resource 675.
The computer readable medium 676 can be in communication with the processing resource 675 via a communication link (not shown). The communication link can be local or remote to a computing device associated with the processing resource 675. Examples of a local communication link can include an electronic bus internal to a computing device where the computer readable medium 676 can be a volatile, non-volatile, fixed, and/or removable storage medium in communication with the processing resource 675 via the electronic bus.
At 794 the method 790 can include imparting movement into the print media, as described herein. At 796 the method 790 can include sensing a position of the tracking mark, for instance, by a sensor such as those described herein. At 798 the method 790 can include determining a velocity of the moving print media based on the sensed position of the tracking markings of the object, as described herein.
In some examples, the method 790 can include decoupling the removable layer from a surface to expose the pressure-sensitive adhesive and adhering the tracking marking-free print media via the exposed pressure-sensitive adhesive to an article. In this manner, the substrate can be employed as a label or other item that can be adhered via the pressure-sensitive adhesive to an article.
In the foregoing detailed description of the disclosure, reference is made to the accompanying drawings that form a part hereof, and in which is shown by way of illustration how examples of the disclosure can be practiced. These examples are described in sufficient detail to enable those of ordinary skill in the art to practice the examples of this disclosure, and it is to be understood that other examples can be utilized and that process, electrical, and/or structural changes can be made without departing from the scope of the disclosure.
The figures herein follow a numbering convention in which the first digit corresponds to the drawing figure number and the remaining digits identify an element or component in the drawing. For example, reference numeral 104 can refer to element “04” in
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2018/025824 | 4/3/2018 | WO | 00 |