1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a sheet post-process apparatus, such as a finisher, which is designed for installation at the outlet side of a multi-function periperal (MFP).
2. Description of the Related Art
An apparatus called “finisher” is known, which receives printed sheets supplied from an MFP and staple them together. In the finisher, the sheets supplied from the MFP are sequentially conveyed to a tray and stapled by a stapler, forming a bundle of sheets. The bundle of sheets is ejected from the apparatus onto a storage tray.
Jpn. Pat. Appln. KOKAI Publication No. 6-99070 discloses a finisher. This finisher performs a post-process on sheets. In the post-process, a stapler staples sheets. To process the sheets at the same rate as the MFP processes them, it is necessary to reduce the speed at which sheets are conveyed in the finisher. The finisher therefore has a long sheet-conveying path.
Having a long sheet-conveying path, the finisher cannot be as small as desired.
Jpn. Pat. Appln. KOKAI Publication No. 10-316299 discloses a mechanism that aligns sheets on the storage tray, more readily than before.
An object of the present invention is to provide a sheet post-process apparatus in which sheets can be readily conveyed from the waiting tray to the process tray.
A sheet post-process apparatus according to this invention comprises: a plurality of rollers which receive sheets from an MFP and convey the sheets forward; a waiting tray which is provided in a conveying path, which holds the sheets conveyed from the rollers, when the sheets need to be post-processed, and which has sidewalls, each having at least one part that is inclined outwards; a processing tray which holds the sheets conveyed from the waiting tray and the sheets conveyed via the conveying path without being conveyed to the waiting tray, before the sheets are post-processed; a conveying mechanism which causes the sheets to fall, due to gravity, from the waiting tray onto the processing tray; a sheet-aligning mechanism which aligns the sheets with one another on the processing tray, at transverse edge and longitudinal edge, thereby forming a bundle of sheets; a post-process mechanism which performs a post-process on the bundle of sheets on the processing tray; sheet-conveying means for conveying the bundle of sheets from the processing tray; and a storage tray which holds the bundle of sheets conveyed from the processing tray.
Preferably, the waiting tray may have a bottom that is inclined downwards.
The sheet post-process apparatus may further comprises a mechanism that changes the angle of inclination of the sidewalls of the waiting tray.
Preferably, the sidewalls of the waiting tray may have an upper end part each, which is inclined outwards.
In the apparatus, the waiting tray holds sheets to be post-processed. The conveying mechanism causes these sheets to fall, due to gravity, onto the processing tray. Hence, it suffices to provide a sheet-waiting section that is just as long as the waiting tray. This renders the sheet post-process apparatus small.
The waiting tray has sidewalls, each having at least one part that is inclined outwards. Hence, the sheets in the waiting trays sag and are collected at the center part of the waiting trays. This helps to align the sheets at the transverse edges at high efficiency.
An embodiment of this invention will be described, with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The sheet post-process apparatus further comprises a pair of input rollers 22, a pair of sheet-feeding rollers 24, and an input-roller motor 26. The input rollers 22 receive a sheet 20 supplied from an MFP and convey the sheet 20 to the sheet-feeding rollers 24. The sheet-feeding rollers 24 convey the sheet 20 to the waiting tray 10. The input-roller motor 26 drives the input rollers 22.
One of the input rollers 22 is an upper input roller 22a, and the other input roller 22 is a lower input roller 22b. Likewise, one of the sheet-feeding rollers 24 is an upper sheet-feeding roller, and the other sheet-feeding roller 24 is a lower sheet-feeding roller.
The waiting tray 10 comprises two tray parts 10a and 10b. The tray parts 10a and 10b can move from left to right, and vice versa. When the tray parts 10a and 10b take a closed position, the waiting tray 10 can receive sheets. Waiting-tray rollers 28, a waiting-roller drive 30 and a waiting-roller motor 32 are provided. The waiting-tray rollers 28 align sheets on the tray parts 10a and 10b while both tray parts remain in the closed position. The waiting-tray rollers 28 can move up and down when they are driven and controlled by the waiting-roller drive 30. The waiting-roller motor 32 rotates the waiting-tray rollers 28.
When the number of sheets 20 stacked on the waiting tray 10 reaches a prescribed value, a waiting-tray motor 34 drives the waiting-tray parts 10a and 10b to an opened position as is illustrated in
The sheet post-process apparatus has a paper guide 36, which guides sheets from the MFP to the waiting tray 10 and thence to the processing tray 12. The paper guide 36 has a paper-pass ceiling.
In the processing tray 12, the sheets are aligned at the longitudinal edges and the transverse edges. The sheets are aligned at their longitudinal edges by a longitudinal-alignment mechanism 38 as is illustrated in
The sheets are aligned at their transverse edges, too, as is illustrated in
When the number of sheets thus aligned in the processing tray 12 reaches the prescribed value, the stapler 14 starts operating. The stapler 14 is positioned as depicted in
Controlled by the unit 49, the stapler 14 staples the sheets together, forming a bundle of sheets. As shown in
How the post-process apparatus according to this invention operates will be explained with reference to
As
As is illustrated in
As
As
As
Thereafter, the third sheet 20c and some following sheets are conveyed from the sheet-feeding rollers 24 to the processing tray 12, not through the waiting tray 10. These sheets are laid, one after another, upon the bundle 20b of two sheets. A bundle 21, which consists of the prescribed number of sheets, is formed on the processing tray 12. As the sheets including the third sheet 20 are sequentially laid on the bundle 20b, the longitudinal-alignment rollers 38 and the transverse-alignment mechanism 47 align the sheets at their longitudinal edges and transverse edges.
The waiting tray 10 must be positioned so that its rear end 60 may lie downstream of the rear end (upstream-side) of the processing tray 12 when the sheets are laid on the bundle 20b. As shown in
It is desired that the waiting tray 10 and the processing tray 12 be inclined, having their upstream ends at a lower position than their downstream ends. In other words, they should be so positioned that their rear ends 60 and 62 lie at the lowest position. If the trays 10 and 12 are so inclined, the sheets 20 are aligned, due to gravity, at the rear end 60 of the waiting tray 10, and the bundle 20b can be aligned, due to gravity, at the rear end 62 of the processing tray 12.
As seen from
(1) The waiting tray 10 extends longer in the sheet-conveying direction than the length of sheets 20.
(2) The processing tray 12 extends shorter in the sheet-conveying direction than the length of sheets 20.
(3) Because of the feature (2), any sheet 20 that has fallen from the waiting tray 10 onto the processing tray 12 is supported not only by the processing tray 12, but also by the first storage tray 16.
These features (1), (2) and (3) reduce the size of the sheet post-process apparatus (i.e., finisher) in the sheet-conveying direction.
As
If the sheets need to undergo the post-process, they are not conveyed to the processing tray 12. They are ejected from the waiting tray 10 onto the first storage tray 16 as shown in
The waiting tray 10 will be described in more detail, with reference to
As
Preferably, the bottom of the waiting tray 10 has a slightly larger width than the sheets 20. Then, the waiting tray 10 can more readily align the sheets 20 at their transverse edges, and the sheets 20 can be more smoothly conveyed to the processing tray 12.
How the mechanism opens the sidewall 72a will be explained, with reference to
When the shaft of the motor 100 rotates counter-clockwise, the idler gear 102 is rotated clockwise. Then, the gear 108 mounted on the shaft 76a is rotated counterclockwise. Secured to the gear 108, the sidewall 72a is rotated outwards. The sensor 72a detects the angle of rotation of the sidewall 72a, by receiving light beams coming through the slits made in the encoder 104. The sensor 106 generates a signal representing the angle of rotation. Thus, the angle of inclination of the sidewall 72a of the waiting tray 10 can be controlled in accordance with the signal supplied from the sensor 106. A value desired for the angle of inclination of the sidewall 72a can be set by operating the buttons provided on the MFP or the buttons provided on the finisher.
One embodiment of the invention has been described. The invention is not limited to the embodiment, nevertheless. The components described above may be replaced with other components that are identical in function.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2004-282204 | Sep 2004 | JP | national |
The present application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 11/008,294, filed Dec. 10, 2004, the entire contents of which is incorporated herein by reference. This application is based upon and claims the benefit of priority from prior Japanese Patent Applications No. 2004-282204, filed Sep. 28, 2004, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11008294 | Dec 2004 | US |
Child | 12252142 | US |