The invention relates to a desktop booklet maker or desktop bookbinding system and more particularly, the invention relates to an apparatus and method for folding and trimming the folded sheets to form a book or booklet.
Today, a variety of different booklet making and bookbinding systems can deliver professional bound documents, including books, manuals, publications, annual reports, newsletters, business plans, and brochures. A bookbinding or booklet making system generally may be classified as a commercial (trade) system that is designed for in-line manufacturing of high quality volume runs or an in-house (office or desktop) system designed for short “on-demand” runs.
Commercial bookbinding systems generally provide a wide variety of binding capabilities, but require large production runs (e.g., on the order of thousands of bindings) to offset the set-up cost of each production run and to support the necessary investment in expensive in-line production equipment. Commercial systems also require high power cutting devices for trimming the edges of the sheets.
Office bookbinding systems and desktop booklet making systems, on the other hand, generally involve manual intervention and provide relatively few binding capabilities, but are significantly less expensive to set up and operate than commercial bookbinding systems, even for short on-demand production runs of only a few books or booklets.
A system for finishing printed sheets into booklets is described in PCT Document No. WO 00/18583 (hereafter referred to as “the Trovinger PCT”), hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety. The Trovinger PCT describes a desktop booklet maker in which sheets are trimmed on a sheet-by-sheet basis to avoid the need for high powered cutting devices. The trimmed sheets are then folded and stapled into the finished booklet.
Mechanical folding of sheets involves doubling the sheet between rollers while applying pressure appropriate to the thickness of the paper to create a sharp fold that substantially eliminates the paper's natural tendency to revert to its original shape. There are two commonly used techniques for mechanical folding including knife folding and buckle plate folding.
Knife folding uses a moving knife which moves between two rollers rotated in opposite directions. The moving knife plugs the sheet in-between the rollers which have been set to the thickness of the sheet going between them. As the sheet passes through the rollers, it is pinched and the fold is formed.
The Trovinger PCT describes a knife folding apparatus using two drive motor assemblies. A first vertical drive motor assembly operates to immobilize a sheet by pressing it against a fold blade with a folder assembly. This first vertical drive motor assembly moves a set of fold rollers into contact with both the sheet and a longitudinal fold blade. The axes of rotation for the fold rollers are perpendicular to the fold blade used to fold each sheet. A second horizontal drive motor then operates to deform the sheet against the fold blade by reciprocating the set of fold rollers, which have been placed into contact with the sheet, back and forth along the fold blade to crease the sheet. The number and spacing of these fold rollers are such that during horizontal movement of the fold rollers, at least one fold roller passes over every point along the portion of a sheet where a fold is to be formed.
Although a knife folding apparatus provides a precisely located fold, this apparatus is complicated and expensive due to the need for a translating knife and/or movable rollers. Where a less precise fold is required, it is possible to use an alternative folding method known as buckle folding.
One buckle folding system includes three rollers and a buckle plate. The first two rollers are arranged vertically one above the other to deliver the incoming sheet into a slot in the buckle plate until it reaches a feed guide stop. Once the paper stops in the buckle plate, the sheet continues to be fed creating a buckle in the space between the rollers and the buckle plate. As the excess paper accumulates adjacent the buckle plate, the excess paper is driven between the lower incoming roller and the third roller to form a fold.
Unlike knife folding, buckle folding does not require the cyclical movement of the knife or rollers which makes the folding process with a buckle folder faster and less expensive. However, with buckle folding it is more difficult to achieve a precisely located fold. For the desktop booklet making systems and office bookbinding systems the speed of a buckle folding system would be desirable if the problem of the imprecise fold could be addressed.
It would be desirable to reduce the apparatus cost and the time required to form a fold in a desktop booklet making system or an office bookbinding system.
The present invention relates to a folding and trimming system using a relatively imprecise folding apparatus in combination with a trimming apparatus which adjusts for the imprecision of the fold by trimming the folded sheet.
In accordance with one aspect, a sheet folding and trimming apparatus includes a folding apparatus including a plurality of rollers for forming a fold in a sheet, and a sheetwise trimming apparatus including at least one cutting blade configured to trim the folded sheet from the folding apparatus on three unfolded sides of the folded sheet in a sheetwise manner.
In accordance with another aspect, a booklet making apparatus includes a folding apparatus including a plurality of rollers configured to form a folded sheet, a sheetwise trimming apparatus including at least one cutting blade configured to trim the folded sheet from the folding apparatus on three unfolded sides of the folded sheet in a sheetwise manner, and an assembling apparatus for assembling a plurality of folded and trimmed sheets into a booklet, the assembling apparatus including an opening roller for opening the folded and trimmed sheets and an advancing apparatus for advancing a sheet into an opened sheet.
In accordance with a further aspect, a method of forming a bound text body includes the steps of:
(a) folding a sheet with a folding apparatus to form a folded sheet;
(b) trimming three edges of the folded sheet to form edges that a square with the fold;
(c) repeating steps (a) and (b) with a plurality of sheets;
(d) assembling the plurality of folded and trimmed sheets into a text body; and
(e) binding the text body.
The invention will now be described in greater detail with reference to the preferred embodiments illustrated in the accompanying drawings, in which like elements bear like reference numerals, and wherein:
A system 100 for forming a bound text body is shown in
The location of the sheet folder 130 prior to the sheet trimmer 140 allows the use of a relatively imprecise and inexpensive folding apparatus and adjusts for the imprecision of the fold by trimming the folded sheet.
In one embodiment, the sheet folder 130 is a buckle folding apparatus 300 as shown in
The buckle folding apparatus 300 illustrated in
As shown in
The term “sheetwise trimming” as used herein means the trimming of single folded sheets or a small number of sheets with a low powered trimming device. The sheets trimmed with a sheetwise trimming apparatus are trimmed separately then assembled and bound into a text body.
When the trimming apparatus 400 is used to create folded sheets for use in the formation of a booklet, the cutter 410 for trimming the trailing edge of the sheet is movable to allow a size of the trimmed sheets to be adjusted on a sheet-by-sheet basis based on a trim schedule which adjusts the size of the sheets depending on a location of the sheet in a booklet and a thickness of the sheet material. Examples of trim schedules are described in the Trovinger PCT which was previously incorporated herein by reference.
The sheets are transported from the sheet folder 130 to the sheeting trimmer 140 and then to the sheet assembler 150 by a transport system including conventional feed rollers 450.
Formation of a Booklet
When the trimmed and folded sheets are to be assembled into a booklet, the sheets can be opened and stacked and then stapled along the fold. One example of a mechanism for opening and stacking folded sheets into a booklet is shown in
Bookbinding System
The systems for folding and trimming a sheet described in
The use of an imprecise sheet folding apparatus followed by three-sided trimming, provides the advantages of faster and cheaper sheet folding for a desktop system. The system also allows for a full bleed sheet in the final text body because the margins can be removed when performing the three-sided trimming. The sheet folding followed by trimming can also eliminate any sheet-to-sheet variations that exist in a ream of paper and result in a much more even finished book or booklet.
While the invention has been described in detail with reference to the preferred embodiments thereof, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that various changes and modifications can be made and equivalents employed, without departing from the present invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4221373 | Muller Hans | Sep 1980 | A |
4484501 | Ramcke | Nov 1984 | A |
4575296 | Kockler et al. | Mar 1986 | A |
4595187 | Bober | Jun 1986 | A |
4795071 | Jacobs et al. | Jan 1989 | A |
5028193 | Misicka | Jul 1991 | A |
5377965 | Mandel et al. | Jan 1995 | A |
5457904 | Colvin | Oct 1995 | A |
5632587 | Coyette | May 1997 | A |
5662318 | Harada et al. | Sep 1997 | A |
5678813 | Osako et al. | Oct 1997 | A |
5803891 | Haan et al. | Sep 1998 | A |
6099225 | Allen et al. | Aug 2000 | A |
6709374 | Neubauer et al. | Mar 2004 | B1 |
20020106264 | Cobene | Aug 2002 | A1 |
20020119029 | Cobene | Aug 2002 | A1 |
20030214092 | Horii et al. | Nov 2003 | A1 |
20050020425 | Kawatsu et al. | Jan 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
WO 0018583 | Apr 2000 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20050079968 A1 | Apr 2005 | US |