The present application claims priority to and incorporates by reference the entire contents of Japanese priority document 2007-322377 filed in Japan on Dec. 13, 2007.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a sheet creaser, a sheet conveyer including a conveying path along which the sheet creaser is provided, a sheet finisher including the sheet creaser, an image forming apparatus including the sheet finisher or the sheet finisher.
2. Description of the Related Art
In the field of image forming apparatuses such as inkjet printers, electrophotographic copiers, facsimile machines, and multifunction products (MFPs), sheet finishers that receive a set of sheet-like recording mediums (hereinafter, “sheets”) from an image forming apparatus and perform post-processing such as stapling have been widely used. With the development of multi-functional sheet finishers, sheet finishers with both a side-stitch function and a saddle-stitch function have appeared. In most of the sheet finishers with the saddle-stitch function, a folding unit that folds the set of sheets includes at least one pair of rollers called pressure rollers and a plate member called folding plate. More particularly, the folding plate is aligned with a line to be folded of the set of sheets, and inserts the set of sheets into a nip between the pressure rollers. Thus, a crease is made along the line to be folded on the set of sheets with the nip.
Some folding units include a first pair of pressure rollers and a second pair of pressure rollers. The set of sheets is pressed twice with the first pressure rollers and the second pressure rollers, which makes a stronger crease.
However, even when the set of sheets is pressed twice, it is difficult to make a crease strong enough due to a short pressing time and a low pressing force. Because a rotation axis of the pressure rollers runs parallel to a direction perpendicular to a sheet conveying direction, a folded side of the set of sheets is pressed in the nip between the pressure rollers only for a short time. Moreover, because the pressure rollers nip the entire folded side at the same time, the pressing force on the set of sheets is distributed, i.e., the pressing force per unit area is low.
To solve the above problems, Japanese Patent Application Laid-open No. S62-16987 discloses a technology for making the stronger crease with a slidable pressure roller. More particularly, after the folding plate inserts the set of sheets into the nip between the pressure rollers and thereby the set of sheets is half-folded, the slidable pressure roller re-presses the folded side while sliding on the folded side in the direction perpendicular to the sheet conveying direction by an operation of a screw.
Because the folded side is pressed with the slidable pressure roller sliding in the direction perpendicular to the sheet conveying direction, the pressing force is applied only at one point of the folded side making a contact with the slidable pressure roller at a time. Because the slidable pressure roller slides on the folded side, the entire folded side is pressed with the high pressing force. As a result, the strong crease is made on the set of sheets. However, just when sliding up on the folded side, the slidable pressure roller may push the sheets in the sliding direction. As a result, the slidable pressure roller may fail to evenly press the entire length of the folded side.
Japanese Patent Application Laid-open No. 2005-162345 discloses a technology for making an evenly-pressed stronger crease by preventing such an undesired displacement of the sheets in the sliding direction caused by the pressing force when the slidable pressure roller slides up on the sheets. More particularly, the sheet finisher according to Japanese Patent Application Laid-open No. 2005-162345 includes a guiding unit, the slidable pressure roller, and a supporting member. The guiding unit guides a half-folded recording medium P from the pressure rollers to the slidable pressure roller. The slidable pressure roller re-presses the folded side of the recording medium P, sliding in the direction perpendicular to the sheet conveying direction. The supporting member supports side surfaces of the recording medium P during the slide-pressing performed by the slidable pressure roller.
The supporting member that supports the sides of the sheets during the slide-pressing of the folded side by the slidable pressure roller is effective in preventing the undesired displacement of the sheets in the sliding direction, and thereby the evenly-pressed stronger crease is made without fails. However, a setting space for the supporting member is required and a space for a mechanism for driving the supporting member increases. Therefore, it is disadvantageous from the viewpoint of downsizing.
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 creaser that includes a conveyer unit that receives a sheet set including at least one sheet and conveys the sheet set; a folding unit that receives the sheet set from the conveyer unit and folds the sheet set along a folding line thereby obtaining a folded sheet set having a folded side; a pressing unit that presses the folded side of the folded sheet set by sliding back and forth in a direction substantially perpendicular to a conveying direction of the sheet set; a switching unit that switches the conveyer unit between a first position to convey the sheet set and a second position unable to convey the sheet set; and a driving unit that commonly drives the switching unit and the pressing 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 described in detail below with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The sheet finisher PD is attached to a side of the image forming apparatus PR. A sheet ejected from the image forming apparatus PR is conveyed to the sheet finisher PD. The sheet passes through a conveyer path A for single-sheet processing (e.g., a punching unit 100 is located near the conveyer path A). After that, the sheet is conveyed by the operation of switching claws 15 and 16 to any one of a conveyer path B connecting to an upper tray 201, a conveyer path C connecting to a shift tray 202, a conveyer path D connecting to a side-stitch tray F for alignment and stapling.
The image forming apparatus PR includes, although not shown in the drawings, an image processing circuit for converting received image data into printable image data, an optical writing device that writes a latent image with a light on a photosensitive element based on an image signal received from the image processing circuit, a developing device that develops the latent image to a toner image, a transferring device that transfers the toner image onto a sheet, and a fixing device that fixes the toner image on the sheet. The image forming apparatus PR sends the sheet with the fixed toner image to the sheet finisher PD. Upon receiving the sheet from the image forming apparatus PR, the sheet finisher PD performs a certain post-processing with the sheet. Although the above explanation is made assuming that the image forming apparatus PR is an electrophotographic machine, the image forming apparatus PR can be any type of image forming apparatus such as an inkjet machine or a thermal-transfer machine.
After the alignment and stapling is performed at the side-stitch tray F with the sheet that has been passed through the conveyer paths A and D, the sheet is conveyed by the operation of a guiding member 44 to either the conveyer path C connecting to the shift tray 202 or a saddle-stitch tray G for saddle-stitch and folding. If the sheet is conveyed to the saddle-stitch tray G, the sheet is folded or the like at the saddle-stitch tray G. The folded sheet is conveyed to a conveyer path H and ejected onto a lower tray 203. The conveyer path D is provided with a switching claw 17 that keeps a position as shown in
An entrance sensor 301 that detects the sheet coming from the image forming apparatus PR, a pair of entrance rollers 1, the punching unit 100, a punch-waste hopper 101, a pair of conveyer rollers 2, and the switching claws 15 and 16 are arranged near the conveyer path A in this order, with the entrance sensor 301 being closest to the image forming apparatus PR. The switching claws 15 and 16 keep positions as shown in
When the sheet is to be conveyed to the conveyer path B, the solenoids are kept OFF, and thereby the switching claws 15 and 16 are in the positions shown in
The sheet finisher PD can perform various sheet processing including punching using the punching unit 100, alignment and side stitch using a pair of jogger fences 53 and a side-stitch stapler S1, alignment and saddle stitch using an upper saddle-stitch jogger fence 250a, a lower saddle-stitch jogger fence 250b, and a saddle-stitch stapler S2, sorting using the shift tray 202, half-folding using a folding plate 74 and a pair of first pressure rollers 81. Moreover, the sheet finisher PD can perform slide-pressing using a slide-pressing unit 525 (see
As show in
The reverse roller 13 is made of sponge. When the sheet is ejected by the ejection rollers 6, the reverse roller 13 comes in contact with the sheet so that the back end of the sheet abuts against an end fence, which makes the sheets stacked on the shift tray 202 aligned. The reverse roller 13 rotates by the rotation of the ejection rollers 6. There is a lift-up stop switch (not shown) near the reverse roller 13. When the shift tray 202 lifts up and pushes the reverse roller 13 up, the lift-up stop switch turns ON and a shift-tray lifting motor (not shown) stops. Thus, the shift tray 202 cannot move up beyond a predetermined position.
The sheet sensor 330 is arranged near the reverse roller 13. The sheet sensor 330 detects a position of the top one out of sheets stacked on the shift tray 202. When it is determined using the sheet sensor 330 that the position of the top sheet reaches a predetermined height, the shift tray 202 moves down by a predetermined amount by the action of the shift-tray lifting motor so that the position of the top sheet is always at the same level.
The ejection rollers 6 are formed with a driving roller 6a and a driven roller 6b. The driven roller 6b is arranged upstream of the driving roller 6a, and is rotatably attached to a free end of an open/close guiding plate. The open/close guiding plate is attached to the sheet finisher PD rotatably around the other end, arranged with the free end being closer to the shift tray 202. The driven roller 6b comes in contact with the driving roller 6a under the weight of the driven roller 6b or by a biasing force, and the sheet is ejected through between the driving roller 6a and the driven roller 6b. When stapled sheets are to be ejected, the open/close guiding plate moves up to a predetermined position, and then moves down at predetermined timing decided based on a detection signal from an ejection sensor 303. The predetermined position is decided based on a detection signal from a guiding-plate open/close sensor (not shown). The open/close guiding plate moves up, driven by a guiding-plate open/close motor (not shown).
When the sheet is conveyed to the side-stitch tray F by the rotation of the stapled-sheet conveyer rollers 11, the sheet is stacked on the side-stitch tray F. More particularly, the sheet goes backward by rotation of a reverse roller 12 in the vertical direction (i.e., the sheet conveying direction), and abut against an end fence 51, which makes the sheets stacked on the side-stitch tray F aligned. A direction perpendicular to the sheet conveying direction (i.e., the sheet-width direction) is aligned with the jogger fences 53. When it is determined based on a staple signal from a control circuit 350 that a last one of a set of sheets is stacked on the side-stitch tray F, the side-stitch stapler S1 stapes the set of sheets. A sheet pressing member 110 presses a side of the set of sheets when the side-stitch stapler S1 staples the sheets.
A home position (HP) of a lifting claw 52a is detected with an ejection-belt HP sensor 311. The ejection-belt HP sensor 311 turns ON/OFF by operation of the lifting claw 52a attached to a lifting belt 52. Two lifting claws 52a are attached to an outer surface of the lifting belt 52, with the lifting claws 52a being opposed to each other. The two lifting claws 52a alternately lift the set of sheets out of the side-stitch tray F.
The lifting belt 52 rotates between a driving pulley and a driven pulley along a center line of the aligned sheet width. A plurality of lifting rollers 56 are attached rotatably to a driving shaft, working as driven rollers. The lifting rollers 56 are arranged symmetric to each other with respect to the lifting belt 52.
The reverse roller 12 swings around a fulcrum 12a by a tapping solenoid, which causes the back end of the sheets stacked on the side-stitch tray F to abut against the end fence 51. The reverse roller 12 rotates counterclockwise. The pair of jogger fences 53 is arranged so that both width-direction sides of the stacked sheets put between them. The jogger fences 53 slide in the sheet-width direction back and forth via a timing belt (not shown) by positive-driving or negative-driving of a jogger motor (not shown). The side-stitch stapler S1 moves to a target position in the sheet-width direction via a timing belt (not shown) by positive-driving or negative-driving of a stapler moving motor (not shown) to staple the target position of the sheet side.
A saddle-stitch mechanism related to the slide-pressing process is explained below. A side-stitch mechanism is not explained, because the side-stitch mechanism is not a feature of the sheet finisher PD.
It is assumed that the sheet is conveyed to the conveyer path D by the operation of the switching claws 15 and 16, and then is conveyed to the side-stitch tray F by the operation of the conveyer rollers 7, 9, and 10, and the stapled-sheet conveyer rollers 11. At the side-stitch tray F, the sheet is aligned with the stapled-sheet conveyer rollers 11 both in the saddle-stitch mode and the side-stitch mode (see
After a set of sheets (hereinafter, “sheet set S”) is roughly aligned at the side-stitch tray F, the sheet set S is lifted up with the lifting claw 52a. As shown in
In the saddle-stitch tray G, the sheet set S is conveyed with a pair of upper conveyer rollers 71 and a pair of lower conveyer rollers 72 (72a, 72b) to a position at which the front end of the sheet set S abuts against a movable backend fence 73 as shown in
The sheet set S, the movable backend fence 73, and the relative members shown in
As shown in
As shown in
The CPU 360 controls those components by reading program codes from a read only memory (ROM) (not shown), loading the program codes on a work area of a random access memory (RAM) (not shown), and executing the loaded program codes.
As shown in
A driving mechanism 501 arranged over the slide-pressing unit 525 drives the slidable pressure roller 520 and the lower conveyer rollers 72. The driving mechanism 501 includes a pressure-release motor 510, a pressure-release gear 512, a slidable pressure-roller driving gear 519, and slidable pressure-roller driving pulleys 514. The slidable pressure-roller driving pulleys 514 include a driving pulley 514a and a driven pulley 514b as shown in
As shown in
To move the lower conveyer roller 72b to/from the lower conveyer roller 72a and convey the sheet set S that is nipped by the lower conveyer rollers 72a and 72b, an end of a compression spring 401 is fixed to a fixing plate 402, and the other end presses with an elastic force the driven shaft 403 of the lower conveyer roller 72b to the lower conveyer roller 72a. The lower conveyer roller 72a is a driving roller, and the lower conveyer roller 72b is a driven roller. The lower conveyer roller 72a and a driving roller of the upper conveyer rollers 71 have a common driving source. When the lower conveyer roller 72b presses the sheet set S against the rotating lower conveyer roller 72a, the sheet set S between the lower conveyer rollers 72 is conveyed. Two compression springs 401a and 401b and two fixing plates 402a and 402b are shown in
A slidable pressure-roller driving belt 517 rotates between the slidable pressure-roller driving gear 519 and the driving pulley 514a. The slidable pressure-roller driving belt 517 transmits the driving force of the pressure-release motor 510 to the driving pulley 514a. A slidable pressure-roller sliding belt 516 rotates between the driving pulley 514a and the driven pulley 514b. The slider 522 that supports the slidable pressure roller 520 is attached to the slidable pressure-roller sliding belt 516. In other words, the relative positions of the driving pulley 514a and the driven pulley 514b are decided so that the slidable pressure-roller sliding belt 516 runs parallel to the guiding rods 526.
With this configuration of the half-folding mechanism, the lower conveyer roller 72b moves close to or apart from the lower conveyer roller 72a by the operation of the link mechanism including the lever 527. When the sheet set S is to be conveyed through the saddle-stitch tray G, the pressure release operation is performed. The slidable pressure roller 520 re-presses the sheet set S by sliding in the direction perpendicular to the sheet conveying direction. In other words, the lower conveyer roller 72b moves apart from the lower conveyer roller 72a between the situations shown in
In this manner, the lower conveyer roller 72b and the slidable pressure roller 520 receive the driving force of the pressure-release motor 510 via the driving-force transmission belt 515 and the driving-force transmission gear 511, and move by the received driving force. The received driving force is transmitted to the pressure-release gear 512 and the slidable pressure-roller driving gear 519 via the transmission gear 513. The driving force is further transmitted to the slidable pressure-roller driving pulleys 514 via the slidable pressure-roller driving belt 517, and thus the slidable pressure-roller sliding belt 516 rotates. As a result, the slidable pressure roller 520 is driven by the rotation of the slidable pressure-roller sliding belt 516.
When the slidable pressure roller 520 is at the HP, the lower conveyer roller 72b is apart from the lower conveyer roller 72a (see
After the crease is made on the center of the sheet set S by the first pressure rollers 81, the sheet set S is conveyed with the folded side being ahead and is stopped when the folded side is on a line along which the slidable pressure roller 520 slides (
As shown in
If the number of sheets is small, the thickness of the sheet set S is small enough and the slide-pressing operation will be performed without any trouble. However, as shown in
As is found by comparing
The sheet creaser incorporated in the sheet finisher is described in the embodiment. However, the sheet creaser can be incorporated in a sheet conveyer, an image forming apparatus, an image forming system, or the like from viewpoints of space savings or cost savings. If the sheet creaser is incorporated in the sheet conveyer, the sheet creaser is, for example, placed upstream of a cutting device that cuts the sheet set S.
Although the number of sheets folded by the sheet creaser is plural in the embodiment, the sheet creaser can fold even a single sheet. If, for example, the single sheet is thick, the sheet creaser slide-presses the half-folded single sheet.
The embodiment of the present invention brings various effects as follows.
Firstly, the driving force of the pressure-release motor 510 is transmitted to a series of the gears 511, 512, and 513 via the driving-force transmission belt 515. With this configuration, the pressure-release motor 510 moves both the lever (link member) 527, i.e., the shaft attached to the lower conveyer roller 72b and the slidable pressure roller 520 in the direction perpendicular to the sheet conveying direction. In this manner, the single pressure-release motor 510 drives both the lower conveyer roller 72b and the slidable pressure roller 520, which makes it possible to reduce the required space and thereby reduce the size of the sheet creaser. Because no electromagnetic clutch is required as the switching unit, the costs are saved.
Secondly, in the half-folding operation, the folding plate 74 inserts the sheet or the sheet set S into the nip between the first pressure rollers 81, and the first pressure rollers 81 presses the inserted sheet or the inserted sheet set S. At that time, if the lower conveyer rollers 72 are in the nip position, the sheet or the sheet set S may tear when it is inserted into the nip between the first pressure rollers 81. To avoid the trouble, it is necessary to keep the lower conveyer rollers 72 in the release position during the half-folding. Moreover, it is necessary to keep the slidable pressure roller 520 out of the area corresponding to the sheet width to receive the half-folded sheet from the first pressure rollers 81. In the embodiment, the lower conveyer roller 72b and the slidable pressure roller 520 commonly use the single driving source so that they operate appropriately as described above. This makes it possible to implement the folding process with maintaining the productivity and reducing the costs.
Thirdly, the close/apart operation of the lower conveyer roller 72b and the slide-pressing operation of the slidable pressure roller 520 are implemented using the common driving torque generated by the single pressure-release motor 510. The pressure-release motor 510 is loaded most when the slidable pressure roller 520 slides up on the sheet set S. At that time, the compression springs 401 extend to move the lower conveyer roller 72b toward the lower conveyer roller 72a, which reduces the driving load of the pressure-release motor 510. As a result it is possible to prevent the step-out of the pressure-release motor 510 and save a part of energy.
Fourthly, to decrease the driving load in any sheet size, the lower conveyer rollers 72 keeps the release position until right before the slidable pressure roller 520 slides up on the minimum size of sheet to be folded. Alternatively, the stand-by position of the slidable pressure roller 520 depends on the sheet size, i.e., the slidable pressure roller 520 stands-by at the position of the sheet size added with N mm. This shortens time necessary for the slide-pressing operation.
According to an aspect of the present invention, it is possible to, in a sheet creaser including an additional folding unit that performs slide-pressing, reduce a space for the additional folding unit, thereby down-sizing the sheet creaser.
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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