The present application claims priority to and incorporates by reference the entire contents of Japanese priority documents 2007-058963 filed in Japan on Mar. 8, 2007 and 2007-278922 filed in Japan on Oct. 26, 2007.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a sheet conveying device, a sheet finisher, a sheet feeding device, an image forming apparatus, and a sheet conveying method.
2. Description of the Related Art
In recent years, finishers are in widespread use that is capable of correcting the posture or skew of a sheet, detecting and correcting a shift in a direction perpendicular to a sheet-conveying direction, and punching the sheet. Such finishers generally have any or all of functions of, for example, binding, sorting, saddle stitching, and center folding, in addition to punching.
A sheet having an image formed thereon has its leading edge abutting against an entrance roller of the finisher or a registration roller positioned downstream of the entrance roller for skew correction. Then, the position of an end face parallel to a sheet-conveying direction is detected to measure a shift of the sheet. The punching unit is then slid in a shifting direction by the amount of shift for punching. With this operation, accuracy of a punching hole position is improved, thereby improving accuracy of punching-hole alignment for a plurality of sheets.
For example, Japanese Patent Application Laid-open Publication No. 2003-212424 discloses a conventional technology related to such a finisher. In the conventional technology, an entrance roller serves as a registration roller. While a sheet abuts on the entrance roller to be corrected on its posture or skew, a delivery roller of an image forming apparatus that delivers the sheet continues to be driven. Therefore, while the posture of the sheet is corrected, the sheet is deformed (e.g., curls or becomes wavy) between the entrance roller of the finisher and the delivery roller on the image forming apparatus side. Although skew correction is performed with this curl, if a linear velocity of the sheet delivered from the image forming apparatus is increased, larger curl is formed.
That is, the conventional technology can be applied to a low or intermediate-speed image forming apparatus; however, if it is applied to a high-speed image forming apparatus, a sheet is deformed to the extent that it difficult to correct skew with accuracy and to stably convey the sheet.
It is an object of the present invention to at least partially solve the problems in the conventional technology.
According to an aspect of the present invention, there is provided a sheet conveying device including a correcting unit that corrects skew of a sheet; and a conveying unit that conveys the sheet delivered from a delivering unit to the conveying unit. A conveying path between the delivering unit and the correcting unit is equal to or longer than a length of a sheet in a maximum allowable size for skew correction in a conveying direction in which the sheet is conveyed.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a sheet conveying method applied to a sheet conveying device including a correcting unit that corrects skew of a sheet and a conveying unit that conveys the sheet delivered from a delivering unit to the conveying unit. The sheet conveying method includes setting a conveying path between the delivering unit and the correcting unit equal to or longer than a length of a sheet in a maximum allowable size for skew correction in a conveying direction in which the sheet is conveyed; causing the sheet to abut on the correcting unit that stops rotating or is rotating reversely; correcting a leading edge position of the sheet which is deformed while abutting on the correcting unit; and allowing the sheet to pass through the correcting unit.
The above and other objects, features, advantages and technical and industrial significance of this invention will be better understood by reading the following detailed description of presently preferred embodiments of the invention, when considered in connection with the accompanying drawings.
Exemplary embodiments of the present invention are explained in detail below with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The sheet finisher 2 basically includes a receiving inlet 2a, lower conveying paths 2b and 2c, an upper conveyor path, a pre-stack path 2d, a sheet processing unit 18, a delivery roller 16, a sheet delivery outlet 15, and a. sheet delivery tray 3. The receiving inlet 2a is an opening that receives a sheet from a sheet delivery outlet 1a of the image forming apparatus 1. A sheet conveying path 2g subsequent to this receiving inlet 2a is provided with an entrance sensor S1 and a pair of entrance rollers 4b.
The sheet conveying path 2g at downstream of the entrance rollers 4b is branched into the lower conveying paths 2b and 2c that guide the sheet to the sheet processing unit 18 side (hereinafter, a path at upstream of a branching point where a switching nail 9 is provided is referred to as “first lower conveying path 2b” and a path at downstream thereof is referred to as “second lower conveying path 2c”) and an upper conveying path that guides the sheet directly to the sheet delivery outlet 15 side (details are not shown in the drawings), and has a branching point disposed with a branching nail 2e. This branching nail 2e is driven by a stepping motor to switch the sheet conveying path. In place of the stepping motor, a solenoid can be used. On the sheet conveying path 2g, a pair of registration rollers 4c is provided at a position a conveying distance d away from a nip of the delivery rollers 4a provided at upstream of the sheet delivery outlet 1a in a sheet-conveying direction. The puncher 50 is disposed at downstream of the registration rollers 4c in the sheet-conveying direction, and a pair of conveyor rollers 4d are further provided at downstream of the puncher 50. The branching nail 2e is located at further downstream of the conveyor rollers 4d.
The first lower conveying path 2b is provided with a sensor S2 that detects a sheet on the lower conveying path 2b from the upstream side in the sheet-conveying direction, and first conveyor rollers 5. The first lower conveying path 2b has a lower end branched into the pre-stack path 2d at an angle allowing the sheet that goes in reverse to the sheet-conveying direction to be received. At its branching point, the switching nail 9 is provided to function as a guide when the sheet goes in reverse. The second lower conveying path 2c is a conveying path from the branching point to the sheet processing unit 18, is provided with second and third pairs of conveyor rollers 6 and 7 and, on the most downstream side, a pair of tray sheet delivery rollers 8 are provided.
The sheet processing unit 18 includes a stapling tray 14 where sheets are delivered and stacked, a first fence 10 that aligns the sheets stacked on the stapling tray 14 in a direction perpendicular to the sheet-conveying direction, a second fence 11 that aligns the sheets in the sheet-conveying direction, a tapping roller 14a that puts the sheets delivered onto the stapling tray 14 to the second fence 11 side, the stapler 12 that binds a bundle of sheets aligned on the stapling tray 14, and a discharging mechanism including a discharge belt 13 and a pair of discharge nails 13a and 13b that discharge the bundle of sheets bounded on the stapling tray 14. The discharge belt 13 is extended and provided between a discharge roller 19 and a driven roller 19a, and discharges the bundle of sheets from the sheet delivery outlet 15 onto the sheet delivery tray 3 by any of discharge nails 13a and 13b. At this time, the bundle of sheets is discharged while pushing the sheet delivery roller 16 provided on a free end side of a sheet delivery lever 17 supported by a supporting shaft 17a to be able to swing. With this, a predetermined pressing force is received from the sheet delivery roller 16, thereby allowing the bundle of sheets to be reliably conveyed.
Here, the control of the sheet finisher 2 is performed by the CPU 32 executing a program written in a read-only memory (ROM) (not shown) by using a random access memory (RAM) (not shown) as a working area. Also, data required for control and processing is stored in an erasable programmable read-only memory (EPROM) 34 in addition to the RAM.
The sheet output from the image forming apparatus 1 enters the sheet finisher 2 from the sheet delivery outlet 1a and the receiving inlet 2a. The sheet is then detected by the entrance sensor S1, and is conveyed by the entrance rollers 4b. When posture or skew of the sheet is corrected, the leading edge of the sheet abuts on the nip of the registration rollers 4c and thus the sheet is deformed (e.g., curls or becomes wavy), and then again sheet is started to be conveyed. After passing-through the puncher 50, the sheet is conveyed by the conveyor rollers 4d.
When skew correction is performed on a sheet abutting on the nip of the stopped registration rollers 4c, as shown in
The operation shown in
The size of a sheet, posture of which is corrected, is explained below as being equal to or smaller than letter size (the conveying distance d is set to be equal to or smaller than LT width). The letter size can be “A4” size (210 by 297 millimeters), or is “A” size (8½ by 11 inches). Furthermore, a decrease of the conveying distance advantageously leads to downsizing of the finisher.
Specifically, as shown in
At this time, the velocity and acceleration of the entrance roller 4b are different from those of the registration rollers 4c because control becomes easy by matching the velocity V2 of the entrance rollers 4b with the linear velocity of the leading edge of the next sheet. The relation is expressed as follows:
acceleration C≧acceleration B
velocity V3≧velocity V2
If the size of a sheet is larger than LT width, it is possible to perform control such that the posture of the sheet is corrected if the amount of deformation (curl) formed on the sheet to be conveyed to the registration rollers 4c for skew correction does not affect conveyance of the sheet (
In
For the skew correction as explained above, the sheet abuts on the registration rollers 4c at standstill in the example of
At the time of skew correction, as evident from a timing chart of
The circumferential velocity V1 of the delivery rollers 4a and the circumferential velocity V2 of the entrance rollers 4b have a relation as follows.
For a sheet having a large size (with a dimension in the sheet-conveying direction larger than the conveying distance d), consider a case, for example, where it is allowable that deformation (curl) of up to 6 millimeters is formed between the entrance rollers 4b and the delivery rollers 4a. In this case, it is assumed that the velocity V2 of the entrance rollers 4b and the velocity V1 of the delivery rollers 4a are equal to each other. The entrance rollers 4b perform control such that 60 milliseconds are required by the time when the velocity is accelerated from 0 mm/s to 600 mm/s (control with the acceleration A). At this time, it is assumed that the sheet is delivered from the delivery rollers 4a at 600 mm/s (velocity V1). When the posture of the sheet is corrected, the sheet is decelerated by the entrance rollers 4b to abut on the registration rollers 4c (with the relation between the velocity V2 and the acceleration A). At this time, the delivery rollers 4a continues to be driven with the velocity V1. Therefore, the curl to be formed is roughly estimated as follows:
600 mm/s×60 ms/2=18 millimeters
This amount of curl is too large. Therefore, skew correction is not performed.
Next, consider a case where control is performed such that 40 milliseconds are required by the time when the velocity is accelerated from 0 mm/s to 400 mm/s. In this case, when it is assumed that the sheet is delivered with 400 mm/s, the amount of curl formed between the entrance rollers 4b and the delivery rollers 4a is as follows:
400 mm/s×40 ms/2=8 millimeters
This amount of curl is within a safe range. Therefore, in this example, the velocity V1 is required to satisfy the following condition:
V1≦400 mm/s
As evident from the above, the velocity V1 is determined by the amount of curl formed between the entrance rollers 4b and the delivery rollers 4a. Upon determination of the velocity V1, the velocities V2 and V3, the acceleration A, and the decelerations B and C are simultaneously determined.
In this manner, the sheet with its skew corrected by the registration rollers 4c is guided to the lower conveying path 2b by rotating the branching nail 2e counterclockwise in
The sheet guided by the lower conveying path 2b rotates the switching nail 9 counterclockwise in the drawings with a moving force of the sheet, passes through the lower conveying path 2c ensured by the switching nail 9, and is then conveyed to the stapling tray 14 by the conveyor rollers 6, the conveyor rollers 7, and the stapling sheet delivery rollers 8. The conveyed sheet falls in a direction indicated by an arrow B under its self weight, and is tapped down by the tapping roller 14a. With this, the trailing edge of the sheet in the sheet-conveying direction is aligned by the second fence 11. Then, the trailing edge of the sheet is detected in advance by the sensor S2 and, after time for possible alignment in the sheet-conveying direction elapses, alignment in a width direction is made by the first fence 10. By repeating this operation, a plurality of sheets are aligned one by one.
Although the operation is as explained above in the case of one sheet, the operation in the case of two or more sheets is as follows.
The interval between output sheets from the image forming apparatus 1 is constant, and the interval between jobs is also constant. From the image forming apparatus 1, when the first sheet is output, signals indicative of the size of the sheets, the number of sheets, conveying velocity, process mode, and others are transmitted. With these signals received by the sheet finisher, the number of sheets to be stacked, an acceleration point, an accelerated linear velocity, a backflow point, a stop point at the time of stacking are determined.
Described below in reference to
The head sheet of a job output from the image forming apparatus 1 is conveyed by the entrance rollers 4b, the registration rollers 4c, of the sheet finisher 2 the conveyor rollers 4d, and the conveyer rollers 5 to pass the branching nail 9 to a position shown in
Next, as shown in
This is a conveying state in the case of two sheets. Depending on the process at the stapling tray 14, two, three, or more sheets are stacked. Between jobs, the operation explained above is repeated, thereby performing post processing without reducing cards per minute (CPM) of the apparatus.
In the first embodiment, the timing of re-conveying a sheet that has waited on the pre-stack path 2d is set so that the sheet is set at a position 5 millimeters from the conveyor rollers 6 on the upstream side. However, the sheet is not necessarily set at the position 5 millimeters from the conveyor rollers 6. On a condition that the leading edge of an N+1-th sheet does not enter a gap between the conveyor rollers 6 during the slow-up of the conveyor rollers 6, the sheet is set at a position as near the conveyor rollers 6 as possible. Even if the leading edge of the N+1-th sheet abuts on the conveyor rollers 6 and then the sheet is conveyed, this does not pose no problem as long as a leading edge flaw, a flaw caused by curl or the like does not occur.
Described below in reference to
With this state, the conveyor rollers 7 perform the operation of the conveyor rollers 6 as explained above for pre-stacking.
If the pressure of the conveyor rollers 6 is not released when sheets equal to or larger than the B4 width and the LG size are pre-stacked, as is the case of sheets smaller than the LG size, the sheets have to be reversely conveyed to a position 5 millimeters from the conveyor rollers 6 on the upstream side and stopped. That is, as the sheets are longer, the reverse conveying distance is longer, thereby making it impossible for the next sheet to enter a gap between the conveyor rollers 6. This cannot address high productivity.
In the example of
With the operation as explained above, sheets equal to or larger than the LG size can be pre-stacked.
The image forming apparatus body PR includes an image writing unit 110, an image forming unit 120, a fixing unit 130, a duplex conveying unit 140, a sheet feeding unit 150, a vertical conveying unit 160, and a manual sheet feeding unit 170.
The image writing unit 110 modulates a laser diode (LD), which is a light-emitting source, based on image information of a document read by the image reading apparatus 200, and performs laser writing onto a photosensitive drum 121 with a scanning optical system, such as a polygon mirror and an fθ lens. The image forming unit 120 includes known electrophotographic image-forming components, such as the photosensitive drum 121, a developing unit 122 provided along an outer perimeter of this photosensitive drum 121, a transferring unit 123, a cleaning unit 124, and a static eliminating unit.
The fixing unit 130 fixes an image transferred by the transferring unit 123 onto the sheet by heat and pressure. The duplex conveying unit 140 is provided at downstream of the fixing unit 120 in a sheet-conveying direction, includes a first switching nail 141 that switches the sheet-conveying direction between the sheet finisher 400 side and the duplex conveying unit 140 side, a reverse conveying path 142 for conveying the sheet guided by the first switching nail 141 to the duplex conveying unit 140 side, an image-formation-side conveying path 143 for conveying the sheet reversed on the reverse conveying path 142 to the transferring unit 123 side again, and a post-processing-side conveying path 144 for conveying the reversed sheet to the sheet finisher 400 side. At a branching portion between the image-formation-side conveying path 143 and the post-processing-side conveying path 144, a second switching nail 145 is disposed.
The sheet feeding unit 150 includes four sheet feeding stages. A sheet accommodated in a sheet feeding stage selected by a pickup roller and a sheet feeding roller is drawn to be guided to the vertical conveying unit 160. The vertical conveying unit 160 conveys the sheet fed from the relevant one of the sheet feeding stages via relevant one of a pair of conveyor rollers 165, 166, 167, 168, and 169 to registration rollers 161 immediately before (upstream of) the transferring unit 123 in the sheet-conveying direction. The registration rollers 161 sends the sheet to the transferring unit 123 in timing with the leading edge of the visualized image on the photosensitive drum 121. The manual sheet feeding unit 170 includes a manual feeding tray 171 that can freely open and close. The manual feeding tray 171 is opened as required to supply a sheet by manual feeding. Also in this case, a sheet conveying timing is taken by the registration rollers 161 for conveyance.
The large-capacity sheet feeding device 300 stacks a large amount of sheets of the same size for supply. As the sheets are consumed, a bottom plate 302 moves upward, thereby allowing a sheet to be always picked up from a pickup roller 301. The sheet fed from the pickup roller 301 is conveyed by a pair of conveyor rollers 310 from the vertical conveying unit 160 via the conveyor rollers 169 to a nip of the registration rollers 161.
The sheet finisher 400 performs a predetermined process, such as punching, alignment, stapling, and sorting, and corresponds to the sheet finisher 2 in the first embodiment. In the second embodiment, for the functions, a puncher 401, a stapling tray (for alignment) 402, a stapler 403, and a shift tray 404 are provided. That is, the sheets conveyed from the image forming apparatus PR to the sheet finisher 400 are punched one by one by the puncher 401 when punching is performed, and are then transferred to a proof tray 405 when no particular process is performed. When sorting or stacking is performed, the sheets are delivered to the shift tray 404. In the second embodiment, sorting is performed by the shift tray 404 moving in a reciprocating manner by a predetermined amount in a direction perpendicular to the sheet-conveying direction. In addition, sorting can be performed by moving the sheet on any sheet conveying path in a direction perpendicular to the sheet-conveying direction.
For alignment, a punched sheet or an-un-punched sheet is guided to a lower conveying path 406, and is aligned in a direction perpendicular to the sheet-conveying direction by a second fence on the stapling tray 402 and also in a direction parallel to the sheet-conveying direction by a jogger fence. When binding is performed, a bundle of aligned sheets is bound by the stapler 403 at a predetermined position on the bundle of sheets, for example, a corner or two center positions, and is then delivered by a discharge belt to the shift tray 404. The lower conveying path 406 is provided with a pre-stack conveying path 407, on which a plurality of sheets are stacked at the time of conveyance, thereby avoiding an interruption of the image forming operation on the image forming apparatus body PR side during post-processing.
The image reading apparatus 200 optically scans a document guided by the ADF 500 onto a contact glass 210 and then stopped, and reads, with an opti-electric converting element, such as a charge-coupled device (CCD) or a complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS), a read image formed by an image forming lens via first to third mirrors. The read image data is subjected to a predetermined image process by an image processing circuit (not shown), and is then-temporarily stored in a storage device. Then, at the time of image formation, the image data is read from the storage device by the image writing unit 110, modulated according to an image data, and is optically written.
The ADF 500 has a duplex reading function, and is mounted on a set surface of the contact glass 210 of the image reading apparatus 200 to be freely opened and closed. This ADF 500 automatically feeds a document placed on a document table 510 onto the contact glass 210 at the time of reading the document.
In the second embodiment, a conveying distance dl from the conveyor rollers 165 of the uppermost sheet feeding stage of the vertical conveying unit 160 of the sheet feeding unit 150 to the registration rollers 161 and a conveying distance d2 from the conveyor rollers 310 of the large-capacity sheet feeding device 300 to the registration roller 161 are both set to be equal to or larger than the maximum size of the sheet posture of which is to be corrected by the registration rollers 161.
Portions not particularly explained are of basically the same configuration and operate in the same manner as those previously described in the first embodiment. The conveying distances d, d1, and d2 are required to be at least equal to or larger than the maximum length in the sheet-conveying direction of the sheet posture of which is to be corrected. However, in consideration of downsizing, each distance is preferably as short as possible although it is equal to or longer than the maximum length.
As explained above, according to an embodiment of the present invention, the posture of a sheet equal to or smaller than letter size width can be accurately corrected. If the sheet size is restricted, conveying distance can be reduced, which facilitates downsizing of a sheet finisher.
The rotational velocity of delivery rollers of an image forming apparatus, that of entrance rollers of the sheet finisher, that of registration rollers for skew correction, and accelerations (and decelerations) of the respective rollers are controlled as being compared with each other to determine whether to correct the posture of a sheet. Thus, sheets with a larger length (not restricted in size) can also be processed. This enables a versatile system. That is, with a low-speed or intermediate-speed image forming apparatus, even the posture of a sheet having a size larger than letter size width can be corrected.
Moreover, this system is resistant to jamming irrespectively of the sheet size. Thus, stable conveyance quality can be achieved.
Although the invention has been described with respect to specific embodiments for a complete and clear disclosure, the appended claims are not to be thus limited but are to be construed as embodying all modifications and alternative constructions that may occur to one skilled in the art that fairly fall within the basic teaching herein set forth.
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2007-058963 | Mar 2007 | JP | national |
2007-278922 | Oct 2007 | JP | national |
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