This invention is to feeding sheets in a manner, which causes the sheets to be accurately received in transport mechanism so as to be properly positioned for imaging. Typically the sheets are intended to be manually inserted in the imaging device.
In imaging devices, such as printers, feeding sheets individually from external of the imaging device allows selection of individual sheets having unique characteristics, such as letterhead or preprinted borders, or selected width. It is common to either simply provide a slot leading to the sheet transport mechanism of the device or to provide an external tray on which the sheet is slid across so as to be more reliably positioned in the sheet transport.
Reliably positioning the sheet is important because, if the sheet sags against the imaging device structure, the sheet may not feed evenly. When the sheet sags against the device an uneven frictional drag can occur and the sheet enters the sheet feed mechanism turned from the intended position. Accurate registration of the sheet is then lost and not normally recovered, and the final image is turned from the correct position. In extreme cases the sheet jams within the printer.
In those devices in which no guide structure is provided, entire reliance is on the careful insertion of the sheet by the operator. Experience indicates that defective insertions will occur fairly frequently, especially with new operators.
Those devices that have a guide tray are generally effective in achieving proper insertion of the sheets. However, such guide surfaces necessarily extend from the side of the imaging device during use. To avoid such extension being permanent and thereby always defining a perimeter of the imaging device, the guide trays are generally thin structures, which slide into or out of the imaging device or fold out from the device or otherwise need to be positioned by the operator. Such operator intervention reduces productivity and requires some training of the operator. The tray structures themselves add cost to the imaging device, and, since they are thin and relatively unprotected, they are subject to damage.
This invention provides a sheet guide at or near the wall of the imaging device that causes the sheet to bend along the direction of insertion and therefore not sag. Operation is intuitive because pertinent structures are at or near the opening into which the operator necessarily must insert the sheet. Guide structures may be at each end of an entrance opening, with the opposing guide structures each having lower surfaces higher than the center of the opening and upper surfaces sloped downward to reach at least somewhat below the upper level of the lower surfaces. A wide variety of alternative structures configured to force the sheet to bend, and it is the bending which provides beam strength so that the sheet does not sag against the image device. One alternative is an entrance slot in the form of an arc with the low point in the center and of limited height so as to only accept a bowed sheet.
It is widely understood in the paper feed and imaging art that a bent paper or other such sheet has increased beam strength perpendicular to the line of the bend. Only a single bend is necessary in accordance with this invention, but structures that provide multiple, parallel bends would similarly prevent sag and function in accordance with this invention.
The details of this invention will be described in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which:
The printer 1 in
The paper 4 has a bowed configuration along the direction of entry, which is required by the left, and right guide structures, 5a and 5aa respectively. The center of paper 4 is at or near the bottom of slot 7, while the configuration of guide structures 5a and 5aa lift the left and right sides of paper 4 above the bottom of slot 7.
Slot 7 is an opening in the front side 9 of printer 1 which is directly opposite sheet feed mechanism of printer 1, shown in
The guide structures 5a and 5aa are shown just with their mounting elements in FIG. 3. The guide structures 5a and 5aa are mirror images of each other. The ribbed, outer sides 40a and 40aa respectively are handles for grasping by the operator. Guide structure 5a is fixedly mounted to an upper supporting plate 42a, which has a toothed rack extending toward guide structure 5aa. Similarly, guide structure 5aa if fixedly mounted to upper supporting plate 42aa, which has a toothed rack extending toward guide structure 5a. The teeth of structures 5a and 5aa face each other, and engage mating teeth of wheel 44 (shown only in small part) which depends from drag ring 46. This combination provides a structure in which the two guide structures 5a, 5aa can be moved different widths manually, by pushing one or both of the guide structures 5a, 5aa while remaining centered in slot 7. Friction from drag ring 46 then holds guide structures 5a, 5aa in place until they are again manually moved with force to overcome that friction. The guide structures 5a, 5aa are thereby positioned to receive paper 4 of other sheets of different widths.
The front view of
An operator beginning to insert paper in slot 7 necessarily observes that the paper 4 must be bent downward in the middle, as the paper 4 would be blocked in other configurations. This is also a natural way to grasp paper. When the paper 4 is inserted, it is under surfaces 52a, 52b, and, as it is moved by the operator into printer 1, it encounters upward sloping sections 50a, 50aa, and thereby is forced into a bowed configuration.
With paper 4 in such a bowed configuration, it will not sag against the body of printer 1 and therefore will be accurately received by feed rollers 24. This assures that paper will not drag against the front surface of printer 1 when being fed. Elimination of such drag is a necessary component of ensuing good registration. However, other factors as the media enters, such as the user loading the paper 4 or other sheet perpendicular to the feed rollers 24 and the mechanical accuracy of the feed mechanism of printer 1 or other imaging device as the media enters, are also important to accurate sheet registration.
A wide variety of configurations could provide the bowed configuration by which this invention functions. One alternative is shown in FIG. 5. Slot 7a is an open slot leading directly to sheet feed mechanism as is slot 7. However, slot 7a is in the form of a bow and has no guide on each side. Slot 7a should be of sufficient height to permit relatively easy insertion, but a disadvantage is that is must be sufficiently narrow in height so as to not allow flat insertion of the paper in slot 7a.
Accordingly, a wide variety of implementations are anticipated, as is intended to be understood with respect to the accompanying claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040195755 A1 | Oct 2004 | US |