The present invention relates to the removal of ink waste from hardcopy devices such as inkjet printers.
When a hardcopy device such as an inkjet printer is not in use, pigment in the ink in its printheads tend to be deposited around each printhead nozzle leaving relatively thin ink, i.e. with a higher proportion of solvent, in the nozzle itself. To avoid deterioration in print quality after a period of non-use, a servicing operation needs to be undertaken to ensure correct operation of the nozzle immediately on commencement of a subsequent printing operation. This typically involves wiping of the nozzle with an elastomeric wiper blade and the spitting of some drops of ink from the nozzle so that it contains ink of the required formulation. The wasted drops of ink are captured within a device known as a spittoon.
The spittoon needs to be of a size corresponding at least to the maximum amount of ink it is expected to contain. Disposing of ink waste materials from a printer usually poses problems regarding satisfactory containment, the danger of liquid spills and environmental considerations. Spittoons contain liquid or semi-liquid materials, and need to be handled with care by end users. Existing spittoons can be categorised as:
The question of the removal of waste ink product becomes an increasing problem as the number of printhead nozzles increases, as a printer's duty cycles become heavier and as the proportion of pigment in modern inks increases. The problem directly affects such issues as spittoon size and replacement frequency but also the intervention rate, handling, liquids disposal and machine size.
To reduce the volume of the accumulated waste ink product, it is possible to collect it in solid form. U.S. Pat. No. 5,617,124 discloses a printer with a service station located at one end of the path of travel of a scanning printhead carriage, the service station incorporating a spittoon in the form of a rotating circular trough. Ink previously purged from the printheads is removed from the trough by a scraper and accumulated ink solids fall to the bottom of a spittoon chamber.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,340,220 discloses a printer service station arranged at one end of the path of a scanning printer. The service station comprises a spittoon wheel arranged with its axis parallel to the scanning axis of the printer and having a circumferential surface arranged to receive ink ejected from a printhead. Liquid components of ink waste are removed from the surface of the wheel, with the assistance of a scraper, into a temporary container from where solid ink residue is transferred to a further storage location.
Scanning type printers, as disclosed in the above-mentioned U.S. patents, are well known, in which printheads are mounted on a carriage which undertakes reciprocating movements between two end positions. A print medium moves underneath the printheads in a direction perpendicular to the direction of the carriage scanning movements. To undertake servicing operations with respect to the printheads, such as capping, wiping, priming and spitting, they are moved beyond one of the end positions to be located adjacent to a service station. This is time-consuming and a precise positioning system is required to ensure that the printheads are accurately returned to the correct printing position after a servicing operation has been undertaken.
This problem is avoided in a page-wide array type of printer, in which one or more fixed printheads extend over the entire width of the printing path. However, undertaking a servicing operation on the printheads again required a precise positioning system to allow the various printer components to move between their printing and servicing configurations.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,081,472 discloses a service station for a page-wide array printer. The service station comprises a rotatable drum which can be pivoted from a servicing position into a position where it is clear of the printhead to permit a printing operation.
Co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/426,574 discloses a hardcopy device comprising a drum platen having a circumferential surface for supporting print media as they move relative to one or more print bars, the circumferential surface also comprising an axially-extending recessed area constituting a spittoon arrangement for the print bars. The contents of this co-pending application are hereby incorporated by reference.
Certain aspects of the present invention seek to provide a spittoon arrangement in which the ink waste product is dried relatively quickly. This permits an enhanced reduction in the volume of the waste product. This in turn permits a higher rate of spitting from the printheads. It also reduces the risk of contamination of the hardcopy device and/or a print media by liquid ink being thrown off by movement of a spittoon.
According to a first aspect of the present invention, there is provided a hardcopy device comprising a printhead, a spittoon arranged to receive ink from said printhead, and a heater arranged to heat ink received in said spittoon.
According to a second aspect of the present invention, there is provided a hardcopy device comprising means defining a print media path, printing means arranged to fire ink at a print media as it moves along said path, spittoon means for receiving waste ink from said printing means, means for producing relative movement between said printing means and said spittoon means, and means for heating ink received in said spittoon means.
According to a third aspect of the present invention, there is provided a service station module for a hardcopy device, said component comprising a spittoon and a heater for said spittoon.
According to a fourth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of operating a hardcopy device having a printhead and a spittoon for receiving ink from said printhead, comprising the steps of: producing relative movement of said printhead and said spittoon to bring them into a mutually adjacent position; firing ink from said printhead into said spittoon; and heating said ink.
According to a fifth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a computer program comprising program code for performing the steps of a method according to the fourth aspect when said program is run on a processing device associated with a suitable hardcopy device.
Certain aspects of the invention seek to provide a spittoon arrangement from which dried ink waste product is removed relatively quickly and efficiently.
According to a sixth aspect of the present invention there is provided a hardcopy device comprising a rotatable drum, an elongated spittoon region extending across substantially the entire width of the circumferential surface of said drum, and a removal device for removing the contents of said spittoon region, said removal device being movable radially relative to said drum.
According to a seventh aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of operating a hardcopy device having a printhead and a drum platen mounted to rotate relative to said printhead, said drum platen having an elongate spittoon region for receiving ink from said printhead, said spittoon region extending across substantially the entire width of the circumferential surface of said drum platen, the method comprising the steps of firing ink from said printhead into said spittoon, rotating said drum platen to move said spittoon region adjacent to a removal device for removing the contents of said spittoon region, and moving said removal device radially relative to said drum platen.
As used herein the term “ink” includes coloured inks and also other liquids which are printed on print media, such as “fixers” and liquids including biological specimens.
The expression “hardcopy device” covers not only printers (e.g. of the ink-jet type) but also photocopiers, scanners and facsimile machines.
A service station is a component part of a hardcopy device which undertakes one or more operations on the printheads or print bars thereof. Each operation is undertaken by a respective part of the servicing station known as a servicing module.
A preferred embodiment of the present invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, of which:
a is a perspective view of a print bar of the printer of
b is an enlarged top plan view of the print dies of the print bar of
Referring to the drawings,
The drum is arranged to carry print media sheets 15 on its circumferential surface 12, and sheet-handling means (not shown) are provided for feeding sheets to, and removing sheets from, the drum. The axial dimension or length “w” of the drum, shown in the perspective view of
The printer 60 is of the page-wide array type. Adjacently-spaced around the circumference of the drum 10 and fixed relative to chassis 120 are six printheads in the form of print bars 121 to 126. Each print bar is arranged to apply drops of a respectively-coloured ink onto print media sheets 15 as they pass underneath the print bar. A typical print bar 124 is shown in
Adjacent dies in the different rows, e.g. 131 and 132 are arranged to overlap slightly to ensure that ink can be applied evenly over the entire width of each print media sheet 15. Each die typically contains two rows of ink-jet nozzles.
At one circumferential location, the surface 12 of the drum is provided with an axially-extending recessed area 18 in the form of a slot with a length “w” and a width “x” corresponding approximately to the same dimensions of a print bar 124. The recessed area has a depth “t”. The recessed area 18 is arranged to serve as a spittoon to receive ink discharged from the printheads 121 to 126 outside normal printing operations. Beneath the area 18 there is provided an electrical heater 41,
Attached to the chassis 120 at a location spaced from the printheads 121 to 126 is a scraper blade 50, which can be actuated to move from the position shown in
Referring to
In operation, the controller 34 outputs control instructions to control the operation of the printer via a communications link 34b. In this manner, the controller causes the drum 10 to rotate and sheets 15 of print media to be loaded onto the drum in a conventional manner by controlling the necessary actuators. The controller also causes the ink ejection nozzles to eject ink drops onto the print media to print a print job in a normal manner as the media passes beneath the print bar. The controller also instructs the ejection of ink drops into the spittoon area 18 and the switching on of the electrical heater 41 at appropriate times. At appropriate intervals the controller causes the spittoon are 18 to be moved to the scraping position and actuates the scraper blade 50.
In normal use of the printer, a succession of printing jobs are carried out as illustrated in the flowchart of
If at step 103, it is determined that another job is waiting, this is immediately undertaken. If no job is waiting, then a decision is taken as to whether to remove the accumulated solid ink residue from spittoon area 18.
The solid ink residue removal process will now be described. Printing operations having been suspended; drum 10 is rotated to its position shown in
Returning to
The above-described arrangement has several advantages. In particular the employment of the heater 41 causes the ink to quickly adhere to the surface of the spittoon area 18, thus preventing the ink drum being expelled from the spittoon by centrifugal force. The heater quickly reduces the ink waste product to residues having a minimal volume. These residues, which result from solids originally dissolved or suspended in the ink, can be collected in container 51 at times which do not interfere with normal printing operations and which do not require movement of the print bars out of their printing position. In addition, the arrangement is compact.
The arrangement avoids the need to dispose of any liquid or moist product. Moreover, provided that the rate of accumulation of dried ink waste product is sufficiently low relative to the size of container 51, it may not be necessary to replace the container during the lifetime of the printer.
A further advantage is that all the printheads can share the same spittoon even if they contain mutually-incompatible inks. Such inks can cause precipitates to form in liquid-containing spittoons, which can develop into so-called “stalagmites” which can grow out of the spittoon and eventually the nozzle plates.
An advantage of the scraper blade 50 is that it extends along the entire length “w” of the drum, thus allowing dried ink residue to be removed from the spittoon area 18 relatively quickly. The spittoon scraping operation described in co-pending U.S. application Ser. No. 10/426,574 is relatively time-consuming, since the scraper blade has to be moved along the entire length “w” of the drum.
The heater 41 preferably comprises one or more electrical resistive heating elements. This provides a compact arrangement and the control of the heating function is easily effected. Alternatively heat may be conducted to the heater from elsewhere in the drum 10. In a further alternative hot air may be conveyed to the heater by convection or by force flow.
The heater 41 may be arranged to be switched on whenever controller 34 instructs ink drops to be ejected into spittoon area 18. The actual moment of switching on may be determined by the controller to be in advance of the spitting operation, simultaneously with initiation of the spitting operation, a predetermined time after invitation of the spitting operation, or as soon as A predetermined amount of ink has been ejected during a spitting operation.
In a modification, blade 50 only moves radially in and out, the scraping action being achieved by causing the drum 10 to undergo small reciprocating rotary movements.
In a further modification, the radial movements of the scraper blade 50 are undertaken while the drum is still rotating at its normal speed. This requires a relatively-quickly movable scraper blade 50 but enables scraping to be undertaken during a printing operation without interrupting it. Blade 50 may have a rotary mounting coaxial with the drum, so that blade 50 can execute an arcuate path to scrape the spittoon area 18. Instead of being fixed to the printer chassis 120, the receptacle 51 may also have a rotary mounting, so that it can move with scraper 50 in an arcuate path.
During a scraping operation, the drum may rotate at a speed slower than its normal speed.
Other movements of the scraper blade 50 relative to spittoon area 18 may be employed.
Means (not shown) may be provided for intermittently removing the contents of container 51 to another container.
Instead of scraper blade 50, other devices may be employed for removing the ink residue.
The width “x” of the slot 18 may be larger than the width of print bar 124. This reduces the risk of ink encroaching on the adjacent surface 12 of the drum and enables a faster speed of drum rotation to be maintained during spitting. Alternatively, the width “x” of the slot may be narrower than the width of print bar 124. For example it may have a width corresponding to that of a print die such as 131. The slot width may be even smaller provided that it remains sufficiently large to catch individual ink drops.
The length “w” of the slot 18 may be larger than the length of print bar 124. This prevents ink reaching undesired regions of the drum surface 12. Alternatively, the length “w” of the slot may be smaller than the length of the print bar 124, provided that it is long enough to catch ink from all the nozzles.
A print bar 124 may have a single long print die extending across the entire length “w” of the drum instead of a plurality of dies such as 131 to 134.
Any number of print bars 124 etc. may be used depending upon the number of different inks required. The term “ink” incorporates “fixer” or other type of deposit.
The drum 10 may incorporate other service station modules for undertaking servicing operations on the or each print bar. These other modules may incorporate one or more of a wiping assembly, a capping assembly, an assembly for applying a cleaning and lubricating fluid, a nozzle scraping assembly, a snout wiping assembly, an assembly for priming the nozzles and a drop detection assembly.
In a modification of the arrangement of
Referring now to
A motor and gear assembly (not shown) drives a spittoon wheel portion 90 of the transferring spittoon system 85. The transferring spittoon system 85 includes a spindle or sidewall 84 to rotationally support the spit wheel 90. A back-up wheel scraper 94 extends from the sidewall 84 to stop any accumulation of ink residue, which may have inadvertently adhered to the spit wheel, from passing under and possibly damaging the printhead 70. The spit wheel 90 has an outer rim 95, which preferably has a concave shaped cross section, to serve as a spit platform for receiving waste ink spit 96 from the printhead 70. Preferably, the spit wheel 90 is mounted to receive the ink spit 96 along a descending portion thereof, as the wheel 90 is rotated in the direction of arrow 97. Preferably, the spit wheel 90 is constructed of an ink-resistant, non-wetting material with dimensional stability, such as a glass fiber filled blend of polyphenylene oxide and polyethylene. As part of the rim 95 there is provided a circumferentially-extending electrical heater 99 corresponding to the heater 41 of the first embodiment.
Another component of the spittoon system 85 is an ink residue storage container or bucket 200, which has a hollow body 202 that is preferably covered by a cover position 204 extending outwardly from the service station frame sidewall 84. As spit wheel 90 rotates the ink 96 deposited thereon is dried by heater 99 and then fed as dried ink residues 961 where it is temporarily stored.
A printer controller (not shown), corresponding to controller 34 of the first embodiment, provides control signals to operate the motor and gear assembly to rotate wheel 90 and to switch on and off the heater 99.
Together, the container body 202 and cover portion 204 define a storage cavity or chamber 205 therein for receiving and holding the dried ink spit residue 961 prior to transfer to a permanent storage location. The container body 202 is preferably pivotally mounted to the frame sidewall 84 at a pivot post 208 which projects outwardly from wall 84. The container 200 pivots around post 208 and is resiliently pulled toward the spit wheel 90 by a biasing member, such as a tension spring 210 which joins a mounting tab portion 212 that extends outwardly from the sidewall 84. The service station frame 82, the spit wheel 90, and the storage bucket 200 may have other mating features to align the wheel and bucket to guide the solid residue 961 from the wheel rim 95 into the bucket.
Another component of the transferring spittoon system 85 is a spit wheel scraper 220, which may be moulded integrally with the bucket 200 beneath a chamber entrance portal that is defined by the container body 202 and/or the cover portion 204. It is apparent that the wheel scraper 220 may also be constructed as a separate member attached to the bucket.
In the illustrated embodiment, the scraper 220 is constructed of the same hard plastic material as the bucket body 202. Alternatively the scraper may be constructed of an ink-resistant, non-wetting, low density polyethylene that is soft enough to have a compliant nature to allows the scraper to conform to the concave contour of the wheel rim.
As disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,340,220, the dried ink residue 96′ may be removed from storage bucket 200 to a permanent storage location by a screw member.
An advantage of the above-described arrangement is that the ink residue 961 is substantially dry relatively soon after the ink 96 has been deposited on the wheel 90. Accordingly, the possibility of incompletely dried ink components running off the wheel 90 in an undesired manner into other parts of the printer is substantially reduced. The dried ink residue 961 is also easier to scrape off the wheel.
In a modification, the dried ink residue 961 is permanently stored in bucket 200.
Heated spittoons according to the present invention may be employed in a wide range of printers and other hardcopy devices. For example a heater may be incorporated in a wheel spittoon of the type shown at 80 in FIG. 2 of U.S. Pat. No. 5,617,124, or in a spittoon roller of the type shown at 102 in FIG. 5 of the same U.S. patent. The contents of U.S. Pat. No. 5,617,124 are hereby incorporated by reference.
Referring now to
The printer 360 has a service station section 380 which incorporates a spittoon container 300 mounted to be fixedly attached to the printer chassis. Container 300 has a heater 399. To undertake a spitting operation, printhead 370 is moved beyond the edge of the print media 15 to the position shown in
The features and modifications of the spittoon arrangements described above, and the arrangements disclosed in co-pending U.S. application Ser. No. 10/426,574 may be combined or interchanged as desired.
What has been described and illustrated herein is a preferred embodiment of the invention along with some of its variations. The terms, descriptions and figures used herein are set forth by way of illustration only and are not meant as limitations. Those skilled in the art will recognise that many variations are possible within the spirit and scope of the invention, which is intended to be defined by the following claims—and their equivalents—in which all terms are meant in their broadest reasonable sense unless otherwise indicated.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
6340220 | Gaylor et al. | Jan 2002 | B1 |
6508552 | Steinfield et al. | Jan 2003 | B1 |
6663215 | Klausbruckner et al. | Dec 2003 | B2 |
6764160 | Phillips et al. | Jul 2004 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2002211007 | Jul 2002 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050162458 A1 | Jul 2005 | US |