In many conventional printers, individual sheets of paper or other print media are fed into the printer off the top of a stack of sheets held in a horizontally oriented tray. Typically, a pick roller is rotated against the top sheet to slide the top sheet off the stack and into the printer. Friction between sheets in the stack sometimes causes the top two or three sheets in the stack to stick together as the top sheet is picked from the stack. The next-to-top sheets must be separated from the top sheet to avoid feeding multiple sheets into the printer at the same time. In one conventional input structure for a horizontal feed printer, the next-to-top sheets are separated from the top sheet by driving the sheets across an elastomeric pad positioned at the front of the media input tray. This pad is often referred to as a separator pad because it's function is to separate the top sheet in the stack from next-to-top sheets in the stack so that only the top sheet moves into the printer. In some printers, such as Hewlett-Packard Company's Deskjet® 5150 model injet printer, the separator pad is lifted against the pick roller at the beginning of the pick cycle and then quickly lowered to momentarily increase the separating effect of the pad.
The active separator pad design used in the Deskjet® 5150 works well when media sheets are picked from a horizontal stack, where the separator pad need overcome only the friction force between sheets. If this active separator pad design is used when sheets are picked from a vertically oriented stack, however, gravity can pull multiple sheets into the media path as soon as the pad is moved away from the pick roller, resulting in more than one sheet being fed into the printer.
Embodiments of the present invention were developed in an effort to adapt an active separator pad design from a conventional horizontal feed printer to a new vertical feed printer. Embodiments of the invention will be described with reference to the vertical feed inkjet printer shown in
A printhead carriage 20 is driven back and forth along a guide rail 22 mounted to chassis 18. Any suitable drive mechanism may be used to move carriage 20. A reversing motor 24 coupled to carriage 20 through a belt and pulley system, for example, is one carriage drive mechanism commonly used in inkjet printers. Carriage 20 has stalls for holding one or more printheads 26. Printheads 26 are also commonly referred to as print cartridges or ink cartridges. Each printhead 26 is positioned along a media path 28 such that each sheet of print media 30 passes directly by printhead 26 at a print zone 32. The portion 34 of each printhead 26 that faces media sheet 30 includes an array of nozzles through which drops of ink are ejected onto media sheet 30.
An electronic printer controller 36 receives print data from a computer, scanner, digital camera or other image generating device. Controller 36 controls the movement of carriage 20 back and forth across media sheet 30 and the advance of media sheet 30 along media path 28. Printer controller 36 is also electrically connected to printhead 26 through, for example, a flexible ribbon cable 38. As carriage 20 carries printhead 26 across media sheet 30, printer controller 36 selectively activates ink ejection elements in printhead 26 according to the print data to eject ink drops through the nozzles onto media sheet 30. By combining the movement of carriage 20 across media sheet 30 with the movement of sheet 30 along media path 28, controller 36 causes printhead 26 to eject ink onto media sheet 30 to form the desired print image.
Referring now to
Conventional “vertical feed” printers use either active separation or passive separation, but not both. The input tray in these vertical feed printers hold the media stack at about 20 degrees from true vertical. This comparatively low feed angle aids in sheet separation by reducing the effect of gravity but at the cost of a larger footprint. These conventional systems fail to effectively separate next-to-top sheets from the top sheet in a substantially vertical feed printer, such as printer 10. The combined passive and active sheet separation system shown and described herein enables a near vertical feed printer with its minimal footprint while still effectively separating next-to-top sheets from the top sheet.
In some printers, pick roller 42 may still be turning after the trailing edge of top sheet 30 has cleared the separation area. In that case, stationary separator pads 62 and 64 are positioned far enough back from pick roller 42 so that an exposed and still turning pick roller 42 does not grab the next-to-top sheet lying on pads 62 and 64. In the embodiment shown in the figures, separator pads 62 and 64 are constructed as elongated strips that extend below pad 60 to ensure that pads 62 and 64 extend past the area on pad 60 where top sheet 30 is separated from next-to-top sheets.
In the embodiment shown in the figures, pad 60 and pads 62 and 64 are positioned relative to one another such that pad 60 will be slightly higher than pads 62 and 64 when pad 60 is pressed against pick roller 42 and slightly lower than pads 62 and 64 when pad 60 is withdrawn from pick roller 42. In this configuration, when pad 60 is pressed against pick roller 42, pad 60 lifts top sheet 30 and, perhaps, one or two next-to-top sheets to momentarily reduce the separating effect of pads 62 and 64 and allow top sheet 30 to move more easily into the nip 74 between pad 60 and pick roller 42. When pad 60 is withdrawn, pad 60 no longer retards the progress of top sheet 30 as pick roller 42 continues to move top sheet 30 over pads 62 and 64 along media path 28 toward feed roller 48.
At the end of the pick cycle, after the trailing edge of top sheet 30 has cleared the feed area, kickers 70 are rotated up, as indicated by the phantom lines in
In operation, and referring first to
As shown in
Carriage 20 and printhead 26 along with other hardware components necessary to deliver ink to the print media are referred to collectively as a print engine. Rollers 42, 48 and 50 along with other hardware components necessary to transport print media through printer 10 are referred to collectively as a pick/feed mechanism. Controller 36 includes the programming, processor and associated memory and electronic circuitry necessary to control the print engine, the pick/feed mechanism, and the other operative components of printer 10.
The exemplary embodiments shown in the figures and described above illustrate but do not limit the invention. Other forms, details, and embodiments may be made and implemented. Hence, the foregoing description should not be construed to limit the scope of the invention, which is defined in the following claims.
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