Turning now in detail to the appended drawings, therein illustrated is an ink ribbon cassette, for a mailing machine, including a housing comprised of a base component, generally designated by the numeral 10, and a cover component generally designated by the numeral 12. Both components of the housing are integrally formed, each as a single piece, such as by molding of a suitable thermoplastic or thermosetting synthetic resinous material (e.g., an ABS plastic).
As mounted in its normal operating orientation in a mailing machine, the base component 10 provides the back wall 14 of the cassette and the cover component 12 provides the front wall 16 thereof. A peripheral wall, generally designated by the numeral 18, extends about the front wall 16 and is integrally formed therewith as a portion of the cover component 12; it will be self-evident however that the peripheral wall may be formed with the base component or, indeed, that elements forming the peripheral wall may be provided cooperatively by both components of the housing. Several pins 20 project normal (i.e., forwardly) from the raised edge 22 that surrounds the back wall 14, and are engaged in corresponding holes 24 formed into the confronting edge of the peripheral wall 18, thereby serving to secure the base and cover components 10, 12 in assembly, which together thereby define an interior space 26 within the housing.
A pair of circular recesses 28, 30 are molded into the back wall 14 of the base 10 on the supply side and the take-up side of the cassette, respectively, as is a short interconnecting channel 32. An elevated circular platform 34, with a forwardly projecting central hub element 36, is concentrically formed within the recess 28 and serves to rotatably support a ribbon supply spindle, generally designated by the numeral 58. A pair of openings 38, 40 extend through the back wall 14 of the base component 10 and serve to receive elements of the optical sensing system that is provided in the mailing machine.
A cylindrical hub element 42 projects forwardly and concentrically within the take-up side recess 30, and serves to rotatably support a take-up spindle, generally designated by the numeral 72. A circular aperture 44 is provided in the back wall 14 and serves to receive the ribbon-transport drive gear 156, best seen in
An axially split stub axle element, generally designated by the numeral 46, projects forwardly from the back wall 14 within the connecting channel 32. A finger element 48, joined at one end to the channel-defining structure of the base component 10, extends laterally along the channel 32 and defines an open-ended slot 50. Short tabs 52, 54 project forwardly, at spaced locations along the raised edge 22 of the base, and another short tab 56 extends laterally therefrom; tabs 52, 54 facilitate registry and assembly of the base component 10 with the cover component 12; tab 56 cooperates with the mailing machine for mounting purposes.
As is best seen in
A cylindrical skirt extends downwardly (rearwardly) from the underside of the circular base portion 60, and provides a circumferential array of gear teeth 68 with intervening gaps 70. In addition to serving a mechanical function (described below), the gear teeth 68 and (more particularly) the gaps 70 serve to regularly interrupt the light beam generated by the optical sensor system of the mailing machine, thereby generating a supply spindle rotation rate-dependent pulse for controlling movement of the printing ribbon through the cassette, and hence through the mailing machine.
The take-up spindle 72 is most fully illustrated in
As is best seen in
Turning now in greater detail to
As seen in
It will be appreciated that it is the elastic return of the terminal contact element 106 from its fully deflected position, and the resultant impact upon the surfaces of the teeth 84 adjacent their apices, which cause the rapid clacking or ratcheting sound that occurs during manual or automatic advance of the printing ribbon in a cassette that employs such an anti-reverse leaf spring. The provision of a deflection limiting feature, in accordance with the present invention, has been found to greatly abate the noise produced and thereby to cause the cassette to operate much more quietly and in a much more desirable manner than would otherwise be the case.
The inner wall element 164 of the post 160 also contributes to the noise-abatement effect, by limiting inward movement of the anti-reverse spring. By cooperatively defining the slot 166, moreover, the wall 164 contributes to the stable positioning of the spring and ensures that the legs and contact element thereof will be disposed at optimal angles to one another (typical values of which are hereinabove set forth) and to the take-up spindle tooth array, irrespective of whether the spring itself has been optimally formed or has, indeed, been distorted.
It should be noted that, while the slot 166 should be sufficiently narrow to adequately constrain the leg 104, it should not be so narrow as to prevent such deflection as is necessary for the spring to perform its intended function. When for example the spring is about 7 to 8 mils thick (as it will typically be in preferred embodiments of the invention), a slot that is about 44 mils wide has been found to afford optimal functionality. It is also noted that the spring referred to was about 0.23 inch wide, the legs 100, 104 were about 0.61 and 0.33 inch long, respectively, and disposed at an angle of about 110° to 116° to one another, and the terminal element 106 was about 0.1 inch long and disposed at an angle of about 132° to 138° to the leg 104.
As is seen in
With further reference to the cover component 12 of the cassette housing, the front wall 16 has a circular hole 110 formed therethrough, concentric with which are an arrangement of radially extending oval slots 112 (which serve to enable visual inspection of the remaining supply of fresh ribbon) and a rearwardly projecting hold-down ring structure 113 (for stabilizing the supply spindle 58). A ring clement 114 is similarly provided on the take-up side of the cassette, and is disposed coaxially with the circular hole 116 for stabilizing the take-up spindle 72.
Also depending from the front wall 16 of the cover component 12 is an expansion rod 118, which is of generally cylindrical cross section but is relieved along one side to provide clearance for the spindle 58; the free end 119 of the rod 118 is tapered. As will be evident, when the cover and base components of the housing are assembled the rod 118 is inserted into the bore of the stub axle 46, thereby deflecting outwardly the sections 94 and creating a drag force on the spur gear 86, as previously described. Because the rod 118 is relieved along one side, it will generally deflect only three of the sections 94; the resulting increase in effective cross section will nevertheless produce the desired frictional drag force upon the spur gear.
As previously mentioned, the half-round rib 120 extends transversely along the inside surface of wall structure comprising the upper portion 124 of the peripheral wall 18, and provides the element for retaining the leaf-spring 98 in the slot 50 against inadvertent upward displacement, it being evident that the flat rearward end of the rib 120 overlies the leg 100. A hole 24 extends into the free end of the depending cylindrical guide bar 122 for engaging an aligned fastening pin 20 formed on the back wall 14 of the base component 10.
The peripheral wall 18, integrally formed on the cover component 12, comprises an upper portion 124 and opposite end portions 126. The lower portion of the peripheral wall 18 is formed with a rectangular recess 130, which serves to receive the print head and the head-mounting bracket of a printing (e.g., mailing) machine. The recess 130 is defined by an upper wall section 132 and two laterally spaced lateral wall sections 134, 134′, each of which terminates as a smoothly rounded lower free edge element 136, 136′. The edge element 136 on the upstream side of the cassette (taken with reference to the direction of ribbon movement) cooperates with the closely adjacent peripheral wall structure to define a narrow exit slot 138; the edge element 136′ on the downstream side is spaced substantially from the adjacent peripheral wall section 142 (which is flat, and substantially parallel to the upper wall section 132 and the upper wall portion 124) so as to define a relatively wide entrance gap or opening 140. It should be appreciated that the two lateral wall sections 134, 134′ are of virtually the same transverse length, sufficient to ensure slight spacing between the length of printing ribbon that spans the recess 130 and the print head and mounting bracket seated therein.
The flat wall section 142 of the peripheral wall joins a semi-circular section 144, which defines an indentation into the lower portion of the housing for receiving the envelope-drive roller of the mailing machine. As is also conventional in cassettes of the present kind, latching structure 148 is formed on the upper portion 124 of the peripheral wall 18 and serves to disengagably secure the cassette in operative position within the cavity provided in the mailing machine.
As is best seen in
The ribbon “R” is supplied as a so-called “pancake,” generally designated by the numeral 150, which includes the cylindrical core 152 on which the ribbon is wound. As seen in
As best seen in
It will be appreciated that many variations can be made in the cassette of the invention without departing from the novel concepts defined. For example, while the cassettes illustrated and described in detail herein are made for use in a mailing machine, for printing postage, their unique features may be incorporated into cassettes of analogous, but different, construction, suitable for use in a variety of printing applications. Also, while the anti-reverse leaf spring hereinabove described functions against teeth that extend radially outwardly on the take-up spindle, the leaf spring may instead be disposed internally of the spindle base, to act against radially inwardly extending teeth (or functionally equivalent elements).
Thus, is can be seen that the present invention provides a novel ink ribbon cassette that avoids at least certain disadvantageous features of cassettes known in the art and currently commercially available. Tension control and anti-reverse functions are achieved by means that are highly effective and yet relatively uncomplicated; the level of noise produced during advance and tightening of the ribbon is low, assembly is facilitated, and performance may be optimized.
This is a continuation-in-part of copending application Ser. No. 11/388,167 filed Jan. 24, 2006, the entire specification of which is incorporated hereinto by reference thereto.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11388167 | Mar 2006 | US |
Child | 11702709 | US |