The present invention relates generally to printers for printing on discrete, flexible, information-bearing substrates such as plastic cards, and particularly to an apparatus and a method for removing particulate matter such as dust and/or other debris from the substrates before information is printed thereon.
Printers for printing information on discrete, flexible substrates such as plastic identification cards, drivers licenses, prepaid cards, and the like, conventionally comprise a substrate hopper and feeder for storing and supplying a succession of individual substrates to be printed; a substrate cleaning station for cleaning the surface of each substrate prior to printing; a print station typically comprising a thermal printhead cooperating with a thermal transfer ribbon or dye sublimation ribbon to print the information on the information-receiving surface of the substrate; and a discharge station for receiving the printed substrates.
The thermal printhead is actuated by a drive mechanism to move the head toward and away from a platen roller in synchronization with the sequential transportation of the substrates past the print station. Printing is effected through the thermal transfer or dye sublimation ribbon positioned between the printhead and the substrate. The thermal printhead has a transverse tip carrying a large number of heatable elements selected ones of which are energized to transfer an ink or a dye from the ribbon to the substrate. The ribbon is typically carried by a replaceable ribbon cartridge that is disposed of when the ribbon is spent.
As is known, the printable surface of information-bearing substrates and particularly those in the form of cards made of plastics such as PVC, must be clean so as to provide a high quality representation of the printed information (and particularly so where the information is applied by a high temperature thermal printing process) and to protect the printhead from being damaged. A substrate cleaning station is therefore provided upstream of the printing station. The cleaning station typically comprises a cleaning platen roller that rides in contact with the information-receiving surface of each of the substrates successively fed through the printer. The cleaning platen roller has a surface of, for example, silicone, treated to make the surface tacky so as to lift particulate matter such as dust and/or other debris (hereinafter “debris”) from the print-receiving substrate surface. It will be evident that as the tacky surface of the cleaning roller accumulates debris the roller will lose its effectiveness so that the cleaning roller itself needs to be kept clean. Alternatively, the cleaning roller must be replaced when the tacky surface becomes saturated with debris.
In one approach, the tacky cleaning roller is periodically cleaned by means of a sticky debris removal member in the form of a sticky tape fed from a tape supply roll against the surface of the tacky cleaning roller and from there to a tape take-up roll. The sticky tape supply and take-up rolls are carried by a tape carrier. When the sticky tape is consumed, the tape carrier is disposed of and replaced. In another conventional approach, a sticky removal member in the form of a sticky roller riding in contact with the surface of the tacky cleaning platen roller is used to clean the platen roller. When the sticky roller loses its effectiveness it is disposed of and replaced.
Thus, in conventional substrate printers, both the sticky removal member and the ribbon cartridge must be separately removed and individually replaced. It has been found, however, that most end users neglect to change the sticky removal member when it loses its debris-lifting effectiveness. As a result, debris remaining on the substrate surface can enter the print mechanism causing poor print quality and ultimately leading to the destruction of the printhead that is the most expensive component of the printer.
The objects, features and advantages of the invention will be evident to those skilled in the art from the detailed description below, taken together with the accompanying drawings, in which:
The following description is of a best mode presently contemplated for practicing the invention. This description is not to be taken in a limiting sense but is made merely for the purpose of describing the general principles of the invention whose scope is defined by the appended claims.
With reference to
The thermal transfer substrate printer 10 generally comprises a printer body or frame 12, a substrate supply and feeder station 14, a substrate cleaning station 16, a substrate print station 18 and a substrate discharge station 20. Individual substrates 22 are transported in succession from right to left, as viewed in
The substrate supply and feeder station 14 is conventional and need not be described in detail. Suffice it to say that the substrate supply and feeder station 14 includes a pair of opposed, counter-rotating substrate drive rollers 26 and 28 for transporting individual substrates along the substrate feed path 24 toward the substrate cleaning station 16.
With reference now also to
The substrate print station 18 may comprise a conventional thermal printhead 60, a printing platen roller 62 and a cartridge 64 containing a printer consumable comprising a transfer medium 66 typically in the form of a conventional thermal transfer or dye sublimation ribbon.
Referring now also to
In accordance with the present invention, the second cleaning structure or member in the form of roller 32 that comprises part of the cleaning station 16 is mounted on the ribbon cartridge 64. More specifically, the second cleaning roller 32 is rotatable about outer end shafts 98 and 100 journaled in corresponding bearings 102 and 104 carried by the cartridge frame 68. The shaft bearings 102 and 104 are movable vertically within bearing housings 106 and 108 formed integrally with the cartridge frame 68. The bearings 102 and 104 within which the outer ends of the roller shaft 100 are journaled are resiliently biased downwardly (as viewed in
In the past, the disposable ribbon cartridge and the disposable sticky cleaning member needed to be changed individually. End users, however, often neglected to change the sticky cleaning member when due for replacement. This allowed debris to remain on the substrate surface and foul the print mechanism. By integrating the ribbon cartridge and the sticky cleaning structure such as the sticky roller 32, in a single unit, only that one part needs to be replaced. A sticky cleaning member is typically discarded after a predetermined number of substrates, for example, about two hundred, have passed through the printer. It happens that this replacement cycle is substantially the same as the replacement cycle of the ribbon so that both will be spent at about the same time.
While several illustrative embodiments of the invention have been shown and described, numerous variations and alternative embodiments will occur to those skilled in the art. Such variations and alternative embodiments are contemplated, and can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/690,395, filed Oct. 20, 2003 now abandoned, which is hereby incorporated herein in its entirety by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Child | 11381899 | US |