This application claims priority from Japanese Patent Application No. 2003-356739 filed Oct. 16, 2003, which is hereby incorporated by reference herein.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a sheet-processing system capable of simultaneously performing a plurality of jobs such as binding or stacking of sheets on which images are formed, by arbitrarily combining a plurality of sheet-processing devices having individual sheet-processing functions such as forming an image onto a sheet, inserting a cover or tab, or stapling aligned sheets in a bundle.
2. Description of the Related Art
A sheet-processing system of a type having an image formation device such as a copier including a sequentially connected stacker, inserter, and finisher has been provided. The image formation device forms images onto sheets and outputs them, the stacker temporarily holds sheets, the inserter inserts special-purpose paper such as a front cover or tab, into the top or middle of sheets, and the finisher aligns and binds a plurality of sheets. With this sheet-processing system, after images are formed onto the sheets, various processes such as insertion of special-purpose paper, ejecting, folding, stapling, binding, or punching can be performed on the sheets.
In the sheet-processing system, those devices are arbitrarily combined to perform a job, which is a unit for sheet processing. For instance, the finisher 70 aligns and staples sheets together with images formed in the image formation device 1, along with special-purpose paper such as a front cover or tab that is inserted by the inserter 60, thereby binding all the sheets together. These different tasks are executed as one job.
Furthermore, with a known image formation device, when a plurality of copy jobs is performed in series, one copy job is displayed on the entire display frame of an operation display (display) at a time so that the screen has to be switched to monitor each copy job (some of these techniques may be found, for example, in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 11-212406).
Moreover, with the known sheet-processing system, while one job is processed, no other jobs can be executed simultaneously.
More specifically, while a job for stacking sheets using the image formation device 1 and the stacker 50 is processed, other jobs such as binding with the inserter 60 and the finisher 70 cannot be performed, even though the inserter 60 and the finisher 70 are not in use in the stacking job. Accordingly, each device cannot be fully utilized at the same time. Thus, the general efficiency of the sheet-processing system is deteriorated, resulting in decreased productivity.
Assuming that a number of jobs are simultaneously performed in the sheet-processing system and a display screen using the entire display frame is switched between jobs as in the sheet-processing system described in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 11-212406, a user cannot monitor all the jobs, which are simultaneously performed, in one display screen. Specifically, since a number of users may share one sheet-processing system, an improvement in the visibility of the operation display is necessary, so that the users do not misunderstand the status of the jobs processed in parallel.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a sheet-processing system in which a plurality of jobs are simultaneously displayed in a display frame through display segmentation during parallel processing of the plurality of jobs, whereby the display provides superior visibility.
To attain the aforementioned object, according to a first aspect of the present invention, a sheet-processing system includes: a plurality of sheet-processing devices having sheet-processing functions; controllers for executing a job per unit for sheet processing with at least one of the sheet-processing devices; and a display having a single display frame and displaying a job display screen. In the sheet-processing system, when a plurality of jobs are processed in parallel, the job display screen is segmented in accordance with the number of jobs being processed in parallel, whereby segmented job display screens for the plurality of jobs are displayed simultaneously in the display frame.
As described above, in the sheet-processing system of the present invention, when the plurality of jobs are processed in parallel, the job display screen is segmented in accordance with the number of jobs being processed in parallel, whereby the segmented job display screens for the plurality of jobs are displayed simultaneously in the touch panel display frame of the display. Hence, a user can monitor the status of the both jobs simultaneously processed on the segmented job display screens in the display frame at the same time so that the sheet-processing system of the present invention exhibits excellent visibility.
The above and other objects, features, and advantages of the invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
The present invention will now be described in detail below with reference to the accompanying drawings showing a preferred embodiment thereof. In the drawings, elements and parts which are identical through out the views are designated by identical reference numeral, and duplicate description thereof is omitted.
The image formation device 10 reads documents and forms images on sheets. The image formation device 10 includes a printer 300, an image reader 200, a document feeder 100, an operation display or display 400. The printer 300 forms images onto sheets. The image reader 200 is disposed on top of the printer 300 and reads the images of documents. The document feeder 100 is openably disposed on the image reader 200. The operation display 400 is disposed above the image reader 200.
A plurality of documents is placed on a document tray, facing up. The document feeder 100 separates the documents one-by-one from the foremost sheet and transfers the documents through a U-shaped path to a position where the document image is read (referred to as an image-reading position below) in the image reader 200. The image reader 200, in turn, reads the images of the running documents. Thereafter, the documents are ejected onto an ejection tray 112 disposed on the right side of the document feeder 100.
The image reader 200 reads the images of the documents. The image reader 200 has a platen glass 102 on top of the image reader 200 and has a scanner unit 104 below the platen glass 102. The scanner unit 104 reads the images of the documents transferred from the document feeder 100 to the image-reading position on the platen glass 102.
The image of the running document is read in the following manner. When a document passes through the image-reading position on the platen glass 102, the face of the document to be read is illuminated with light from a lamp 103 provided in the scanner unit 104, and the reflected light from the document is guided to an image sensor 109 via a mirror 105 disposed in the sequential scanner unit 104 and mirrors 106 and 107 disposed in the image reader 200. Then, the image sensor 109 converts the light into an electric signal. More specifically, the document is transferred across the image-reading position on the platen glass 102 from left to right in the drawing. The direction along which the document is transferred is a sub-scanning direction and the direction orthogonal to the sub-scanning direction is a main-scanning direction. The image sensor 109 reads every line of the image of the document in the main-scanning direction, and the sequential image sensor 109 reads the image of the document in the sub-scanning direction, thereby reading the entire image of the document. After that, a predetermined image process is conducted on the image data output from the image sensor 109, and the resulting image data is input to the printer 300 as a video signal.
The printer 300 forms an image on a sheet in accordance with the image of the document read by the image reader 200. The printer 300 includes an exposure controller 110, a photosensitive drum 111, a polygon mirror 110a, cassettes 114 and 115, a manual-feed tray 125, a two-sided transfer path 124, a fixing unit 117, and eject rollers 118. The video signal in accordance with the image data output from the image sensor 109 is input to the exposure controller 110 and the exposure controller 110 modulates and outputs laser beams in response to the video signal. The photosensitive drum 111 generates a latent image. The laser light output from the exposure controller 110 is scanned and irradiated onto the photosensitive drum 111 by the polygon mirror 110a. The cassettes 114 and 115 supply sheets to a transferring unit 116 disposed below the photosensitive drum 111. A developed image formed on the photosensitive drum 111 is transferred to a sheet at the transferring unit 116, and the fixing unit 117 fixes the developed image onto the sheet. Passing through the fixing unit 117, the sheet are ejected outside the printer 300 by the eject rollers 118.
[Stacker 500]
The stacker 500 temporarily holds sheets output from the printer 300. As shown in
When the stacker 500 performs a stacking process such as sorting or grouping, the first flapper 510 is switched such that the sheets are prevented from entering the horizontal transfer path 502. Accordingly, the sheets ejected from the printer 300 are led to the transfer path 520 and stacked sequentially in the stacking unit 530.
When the sheets are not to be stacked in the stacking unit 530, the first flapper 510 is switched such that the sheets are prevented from entering the transfer path 520. Accordingly, the sheets ejected from the printer 300 pass along the horizontal transfer path 502 towards the inserter 600 and the finisher 700.
[Inserter 600]
The inserter 600 supplies special-purpose paper, which is previously printed, such as color copy paper, or inserts special-purpose paper such as a front cover or tab into the top or middle of the sheets output from the printer 300. As shown in
The inserter 600 inserts the special-purpose paper stacked in the sheet-accommodating units 630, 631, and 632 into the sheets output from the printer 300 at a predetermined timing upon request. The inner plates 633, 634, and 635 ascend or descend in accordance with the amount of stacked sheets.
[Finisher 700]
The finisher 700 performs sorting, stapling, punching and the like. As shown in
When sorting is not performed, the flapper 710 is switched such that the sheets are prevented from entering the sort path 713. The sheets output from the inserter 600 are led to the non-sort path 712 and ejected onto the sample tray 721 through transfer rollers 706 and non-sort eject rollers 703.
When sorting is performed, the flapper 710 is switched such that the sheets are prevented from entering the non-sort path 712. The sort path 713 leads the sheets output from the inserter 600 to the intermediate tray 730 through sort eject rollers 704, and the sheets are stacked on the intermediate tray 730. The sheets stacked on the intermediate tray 730 are aligned, stapled or punched, as necessary, and are ejected onto the stack tray 722 through eject rollers 705. The stack tray 722 can move vertically.
[Structure of Outer Covers]
The stacker 500 includes a cover 551 for covering the horizontal transfer path 502 and a cover 552 for covering the stacking unit 530. The covers 551 and 552 can be separately opened. Cover-opening detection sensors S54 and S55 detect whether or not the covers 551 and 552 are open. The covers 551 and 552 are opened when maintaining the stacker 500, such as removing a paper jam, changing parts, cleaning parts, adjusting parts, or taking out paper.
The inserter 600 includes a cover 651 for covering the horizontal transfer path 612, a cover 652 for covering the vertical transfer path 611, and a cover 653 for covering the sheet-accommodating units 630, 631, and 632, and the sheet-separating units 636, 637, and 638. The covers 651, 652, and 653 can be separately opened. Cover-opening detection sensors S64, S65, and S66 detect whether or not the covers 651, 652, and 653 are open. The covers 651 and 652 are opened when maintaining the inserter 600, such as removing a paper jam, changing parts, cleaning parts, adjusting parts, or supplying paper.
The finisher 700 includes a cover 751 for covering the finisher path 711, a cover 752 for covering the non-sort path 712, and a cover 753 for covering the stapling section including the stapler 720. The covers 751, 752, and 753 can be separately opened. The cover-opening detection sensors S74, S75, and S76 detect whether or not the covers 751, 752, and 753 are open. The covers 751, 752, and 753 are opened when maintaining the finisher 700, such as removing a paper jam, changing parts, cleaning parts, adjusting parts, or supplying paper.
[Structure of Controllers]
The CPU circuit 150 controls a document-feeder controller 101, an image reader controller 201, an image signal controller 202, an external interface or external I/F 209, a printer controller 301, an operation display controller 401, a stacker controller 501, an inserter controller 601, and a finisher controller 701 via a control program stored in the ROM 151.
The RAM 152 stored in the CPU circuit 150 temporarily stores data for controlling the controllers, and computation necessary for controlling the controllers is also performed in the RAM 152. The document-feeder controller 101 controls the document feeder 100 in accordance with an instruction from the CPU circuit 150.
The image reader controller 201 controls the scanner unit 104, the image sensor 109 and the like and transfers an analog image signal output from the image sensor 109 to the image signal controller 202.
In accordance with an instruction from the CPU circuit 150, the image signal controller 202 converts the analog image signal from the image sensor 109 to a digital signal and applies several processes on the digital signal. The digital signal is then converted into a video signal and the video signal is output to the printer controller 301. The image signal controller 202 also performs several processes on a digital image signal which is input to the image signal controller 202 from a computer 210 via the external interface 209. Then, the image signal controller 202 converts the digital image signal to a video signal. This video signal is output to the printer controller 301.
The printer controller 301 controls the exposure controller 110 in accordance with the video signal input from the image signal controller 202. The operation display controller 401 controls exchange of information between the operation display 400 in the image formation device 10 and the CPU circuit 150. The operation display 400 is a touch panel display with one display frame and displays a display screen (job display screen) showing keys for setting various functions for image formation and settings of the sheet-processing devices. A key signal in accordance with the key selected in the operation display 400 is output to the CPU circuit 150 through the operation display controller 401. The operation display controller 401 controls the operation display 400 so that the operation display 400 displays information in accordance with a signal from the CPU circuit 150.
The stacker controller 501 is disposed in the stacker 500 and controls the stacker 500 via the CPU circuit 150. The inserter controller 601 is disposed in the inserter 600 and controls the inserter 600 via the CPU circuit 150. The finisher controller 701 is disposed in the finisher 700 and controls the finisher 700 via the CPU circuit 150.
[Structure of Stacker Controller]
Drivers 565 and 566 are connected to the CPU circuit 560. The driver 565 drives a horizontal path transfer motor M51 and solenoids SL51 and SL52, which constitute a module for a first transferring process, in accordance with a signal from the CPU circuit 560. The driver 566 drives a stacking plate motor M52 and a stacked-sheets transfer motor M53, which constitute a modules for a sheet-stacking process, in accordance with a signal from the CPU circuit 560.
The module for the first transferring process is composed of the transfer rollers 503, 504, and 505 disposed in the stacker 500, the horizontal path transfer motor M51 for driving the transfer rollers 503, 504, and 505, the solenoid SL51 for switching the first flapper 510, and the solenoid SL52 for switching the second flapper 506. The module for the sheet-stacking process is composed of the stacking plate motor M52 for driving the stacking plate 521 in the stacking unit 530 and the stacked-sheets transfer motor M53 for driving transfer rollers 527 disposed on the transfer path 520.
When the cover-opening detection sensor S54 detects that the cover 551 is open, in response to the detection signal from the cover-opening detection sensor S54, a power source of the driver 565 is turned off and thus the module for the first transferring process is inactivated. Simultaneously, a power source of the driver 566 is turned off and thus the module for the sheet-stacking process is inactivated.
When the cover-opening detection sensor S55 detects that the cover 552 is open, in response to the detection signal from the cover-opening detection sensor S55, a power source of the driver 566 is turned off and thus the module for the sheet-stacking process is inactivated.
[Structure of Inserter Controller]
Drivers 665, 666 and 667 are connected to the CPU circuit 660. The driver 665 drives a horizontal path transfer motor M61, which constitutes a module for a horizontal-transferring process, in accordance with a signal from the CPU circuit 660. The driver 666 drives a vertical path transfer motor M62, which constitutes a module for a vertical-transferring process, in accordance with a signal from the CPU circuit 660. The driver 667 drives a sheet separation-motor M63 and an inner-plate motor M64, which constitute a module for a sheet-supplying process, in accordance with a signal from the CPU circuit 660.
The module for the horizontal-transferring process is composed of the transfer rollers 602, 603, and 604 and the horizontal path transfer motor M61 for driving the transfer rollers 602, 603, and 604. The module for the vertical-transferring process is composed of the transfer rollers 640, 641, and 642 and the vertical path transfer motor M62 for driving the transfer rollers 640, 641, and 642. The module for the sheet-supplying process is composed of the sheet-separating units 636, 637, and 638, the sheet-separation motor M63 for driving the sheet-separating units 636, 637, and 638, the inner plates 633, 634, and 635, and the inner-plate motor M64 for driving the inner plates 633, 634, and 635 up and down.
When the cover-opening sensor S64 detects that the cover 651 is open, a power source for the driver 665 is turned off in response to the detection signal from the cover-opening detection sensor S64 and thus the module for the horizontal-transferring process is inactivated. Simultaneously, power sources for the drivers 666 and 667 are turned off and thus the entire inserter 600 is inactivated.
When the cover-opening detection sensor S65 detects that the cover 652 is open, a power source for the driver 666 is turned off in response to the detection signal from the cover-opening detection sensor S65 and thus the module for the vertical-transferring process is inactivated. Simultaneously, a power source for the driver 667 is turned off and thus the module for the sheet-supplying process is inactivated. When the cover-opening detection sensor S66 detects that the cover 653 is open, a power source for the driver 667 is turned off in response to the detection signal from the cover-opening detection sensor S66 and thus the module for the sheet-supplying process is inactivated.
[Structure of Finisher Controller]
Drivers 765, 766, 767, and 768 are connected to the CPU circuit 760. The driver 765 drives a transfer motor M71 and a solenoid SL71 in response to a signal from the CPU circuit 760. The driver 766 drives a non-sort eject motor M72, which constitutes a module for a non-sort ejecting process, in response to a signal from the CPU circuit 760. The driver 767 drives a sort eject motor M75 and a bundle-transferring motor M73, which constitute a module for a sort ejecting process, in response to a signal from the CPU circuit 760. The driver 768 drives a tray motor M74, which constitutes a module for a tray-stacking process, in response to a signal from the CPU circuit 760.
The module for the second transferring process is composed of the entrance rollers 702, the transfer motor M71 for driving the entrance rollers 702, and the solenoid SL71 for switching the flapper 710. The module for the non-sort ejecting process is composed of the transfer rollers 706, the non-sort eject rollers 703, and the non-sort eject motor M72 for driving the transfer rollers 706 and the non-sort eject rollers 703. The module for the sort ejecting process is composed of the sort eject rollers 704, the sort eject motor M75 for driving the sort eject rollers 704, the eject rollers 705, and the bundle-transfer motor M73 for driving the eject rollers 705. The module for the tray-stacking process is composed of the stack tray 722 and the tray motor M74 for driving the stack tray 722.
The transfer motor M71, the non-sort eject motor M72, and the sort eject motor M75 are stepping motors. By controlling an excitation pulse rate, the rollers can be rotated at a constant speed or each roller can be separately rotated. The bundle-transfer motor M73 is a DC motor.
When the cover-opening detection sensor S74 detects that the cover 751 is open, a power source of the driver 765 is turned off in response to a detection signal from the cover-opening detection sensor S74 and thus the module for the second transferring process is inactivated. Simultaneously, power sources of the drivers 766, 767, and 768 are turned off and thus the entire finisher 700 is inactivated.
When the cover-opening detection sensor S75 detects that the cover 752 is open, a power source for the driver 766 is turned off in response to the detection signal from the cover-opening detection sensor S75 and thus only the module for the non-sort ejecting process is inactivated. When the cover-opening detection sensor S76 detects that the cover 753 is open, a power source for the driver 767 is turned off in response to the detection signal from the cover-opening detection sensor S76 and thus only the module for the sort ejecting process is selectively inactivated.
[Operation of Sheet-Processing System]
The operation of the sheet-processing system according to the present embodiment will now be described. The sheet-processing system of the present embodiment can perform a plurality of jobs in parallel by arbitrarily combining the image formation device 10, which reads documents and forms images onto sheets, and devices that perform various post-processes on the sheets output from the printer 300 in the image formation device 10, the devices including the stacker 500, the inserter 600, and the finisher 700. A job is a unit for sheet processing.
In the first job, in response to an instruction from the CPU circuit 150 in the image formation device 10, the CPU 561 in the stacker 500 causes the first flapper 510 to be switched such that sheets are prevented from entering the transfer path 520 by the solenoid SL51 and, simultaneously, the horizontal path transfer motor M51, which constitutes the module for the horizontal-transferring process, is activated so as to drive the transfer rollers 503, 504, and 505. In response to an instruction from the CPU circuit 150, the CPU 661 in the inserter 600 causes the horizontal path transfer motor M61, which is the module for the horizontal-transferring process, to drive the transfer rollers 602, 603, and 604 on the horizontal transfer path 612. In response to an instruction from the CPU circuit 150, the CPU 761 in the finisher 700 causes the flapper 710 to be switched such that the sheets are prevented from entering the non-sort path 712 by the solenoid SL71 and, simultaneously, the transfer motor M71, the sort eject motor M75, the bundle-transfer motor M73, and the tray motor M74, which constitute the module for the second transferring process, are activated so as to drive the entrance rollers 702, the sort eject rollers 704, the eject rollers 705, and the stack tray 722.
By controlling the sheet-processing system A as described above, passing along the horizontal transfer path 502 in the stacker 500 and the horizontal transfer path 612 in the inserter 600, the sheets with images formed at the printer 300 are transferred onto the intermediate tray 730 in the finisher 700. The stacked sheets in bundles on the intermediate tray 730 are aligned and stapled by the stapler 720 and then ejected onto the stack tray 722. Alternatively, the stapler 720 may also perform punching or the like.
In the second job, in response to an instruction from the CPU circuit 150 in the image formation device 10, the CPU 561 in the stacker 500 causes the first flapper 510 to be switched such that the sheets are prevented from entering the horizontal transfer path 502 by the solenoid SL51, and, simultaneously, the stacked-sheets transfer motor M53 and the stacking plate motor M52, which constitute the module for the sheet-stacking process, are activated so as to drive the transfer rollers 527 on the transfer path 520 and the stacking plate 521 in the stacking unit 530.
By controlling the sheet-processing system A as described above, the sheets with images formed at the printer 300 pass along the transfer path 520 to be stacked in the stacking unit 530. The stacking plate 521 descends corresponding to the amount of the stacked sheets.
In the third job, in response to an instruction from the CPU circuit 150 in the image formation device 10, the CPU 661 in the inserter 600 causes the sheet-separation motor M63 and the inner-plate motor M64, which constitute the module for the sheet-supplying module, to be activated so as to drive the sheet-separating units 636, 637, and 638 and the inner plates 633, 634, and 635. Moreover, in response to an instruction from the CPU circuit 150, the CPU 761 in the finisher 700 causes the flapper 710 to be switched such that the sheets are prevented from entering the non-sort path 712 by the solenoid SL71, and, simultaneously, the transfer motor M71, the sort eject motor M75, the bundle-transfer motor M73, and the tray motor M74, which constitute the module for the transferring process, are activated so as to drive the entrance rollers 702, the sort eject rollers 704, the eject rollers 705, and the stack tray 722.
By controlling the sheet-processing system A, the special-purpose paper supplied from the inserter 600 is transferred to and stacked on the intermediate tray 730 in the finisher 700. The special-purpose paper, which is bound with the sheets from the image formation device 10 and is stacked on the intermediate tray 730, is aligned and stapled with the stapler 720, thereby outputting the bound sheets onto the stack tray 722. Alternatively, the stapler 720 may also perform punching or the like.
In the fourth job, one job (second job) is performed by combining two or more sheet-processing devices next to each other, and another job (third job) is performed by combining two or more sheet-processing devices next to each other that are different from the ones that perform the second job.
More specifically, the aforementioned second job and the third job are simultaneously performed. As described above, in the second job, images are formed on sheets at the image formation device 10 and the sheets are stacked in the stacker 500, and in the third job (binding job), the special-purpose paper stored in the inserter 600 is bound and stapled with the sheets from the image formation device 10 at the finisher 700, thereby outputting the bound sheets.
When performing the fourth job, the third job is performed by two or more sheet-processing devices next to each other that are different from the sheet-processing devices that perform the second job. The transfer path 520 and the transfer rollers 527 used in the second job are disconnected from the horizontal transfer path 612, the transfer rollers 602, 603, and 604, the finisher path 711, the sort path 713, the entrance rollers 702, the sort eject rollers 704, and the eject rollers 705 that are used in the third job.
Accordingly, since the sheet-processing devices for the second job are not activated, the sheet-processing devices for the first job can process the first job and vice versa. Thus, productivity of the sheet-processing system is improved.
In the fourth job, in response to an instruction from the CPU circuit 150 in the image formation device 10, the CPU 561 in the stacker 500 causes the second flapper 506 to be switched such that sheets are prevented from entering the inserter 600 by the solenoid SL52. Accordingly, even if a sheet is erroneously transferred to the horizontal transfer path 502, due to an operational failure of the first flapper 510, instead of being stacked in the stacker 500, the second flapper 506 prevents the sheet from entering the inserter 600. Accordingly, mixture of sheets from different jobs is prevented, thereby improving reliability of the binding job. Other operations of the fourth job are the same as those of the second and third jobs and thus description thereof is omitted here.
As has been described, two jobs can be simultaneously performed by arbitrarily combining the image formation device 10 and other devices, i.e., the stacker 500, the inserter 600 and the finisher 700. For example, while document reading or printing (image formation) is performed in the image formation device 10, the third job using the inserter 600 and the finisher 700 can be performed.
Moreover, the first job and the third job may be performed simultaneously. In this case, two jobs are simultaneously performed by sharing the horizontal transfer path 612 and the transfer rollers 602, 603, and 604 in the inserter 600 and all the units in the finisher 700. Alternatively, the third job may interrupt the first job. Furthermore, the horizontal transfer path 612 and the transfer rollers 602, 603, and 604 in the inserter 600 may be alternately used between the first job and the third job.
[Display Screen in Operation Display]
Display screens (job display screens) in the operation display 400 in the sheet-processing system according to the present embodiment will now be described with reference to
Referring to
During standby, a user selects one job, for example, presses a post-process button 450 shown in
When the user selects a finisher select button 451 in the processing-device select screen shown in
By contrast, when the user selects a stacker select button 452 on the processing-device select screen shown in
Next, the flow of input operation regarding a general job following the flow chart in
When the OK button is selected on the processing-type select screen, the screen is changed to a the-number-of-sets input screen shown in
When the OK button is selected in the the-number-of-sets input screen shown in
When the start button shown in
The CPU circuit 150 monitors the system at all times to detect a problem such as a paper jam during a job (S1305). When a problem is detected, the job is halted and an error screen shown in
In the above-described case, the finisher select button 451 is selected on the processing-device select screen shown in
When the stacker select button 452 is selected, the parallel-processing button 453, which is typically shown in
When the parallel-processing button 453 is pressed on the processing screen for process 1 shown in
The initial segmented screens shown in
When a full-screen display button 454 is selected on the screen shown in
The flow of input operation regarding process 2 performed in parallel processing will now be described by referring to
After selecting the OK button on the parallel-processing-type select screen shown in
After selecting the number of feeders on the screen shown in
After the sheet-supply conditions are selected in the sheet-type select display shown in
Pressing the OK button on the the-number-of-sets input screen shown in
When the start-processing button 460 is selected on the previous screen shown in
A screen-segmentation-change button 461 is provided at the top corner of the laterally-segmented screens shown in
When a screen-segmentation-change button 462 is selected on the screen shown in
The CPU circuit 150 monitors the system at all times to detect a problem such as a paper jam during the parallel processing (S1407). If the CPU circuit 150 detects a problem, the job is halted and an error screen appears automatically. The error screen shows instructions for the user to address the problem (S1408).
Examples of the error screen are described below.
Thereafter, one job is completed (S1409). When one job (process 1) is successfully completed, the screen is automatically switched to a full-screen display for the process 2 and the parallel-processing button 453 appears on the screen (S1410), as shown in
In the above embodiment, only when parallel processing can be performed, the parallel-processing button 453 is displayed. Alternatively, a job may be preset even when the parallel processing cannot be performed at the moment.
The above-described embodiment is summarized below.
(1) The sheet-processing system A according to the present embodiment includes a plurality of sheet-processing devices (the image formation device 10, the stacker 500, the inserter 600, and the finisher 700), which have different sheet-processing functions and the display (operation display 400), and the system executes a job per unit for sheet processing with at least one of the sheet-processing devices. In this sheet-processing system A, when a plurality of jobs are processed in parallel, the job display screen is segmented in accordance with the number of jobs being processed in parallel, whereby segmented job display screens for the plurality of jobs are displayed simultaneously in the display frame of the display.
(2) According to the sheet-processing system A described in (1), an instruction from a user regarding the job is input on the job display screen while the job is being processed, and an instruction regarding each of the plurality of jobs is input on the job display screen while the plurality of jobs is being processed in parallel.
(3) According to the sheet-processing system A described in (2), an instruction from the user is input on each of the segmented job display screens displayed simultaneously in the display frame of the display.
(4) According to the sheet-processing system A described in (1) to (3), an instruction from a user regarding the job is input on the job display screen, and a parallel-processing job reception key appears on the job display screen in the display when while at least one job is being processed, another job can be performed with at least one sheet-processing device that is not in use for the job being presently processed.
(5) According to the sheet-processing system A described in (4), when the parallel-processing job reception key is input, the job display screen for the job being presently processed and the job display screen for the job to be processed are displayed simultaneously in the display frame of the display.
(6) According to the sheet-processing system A described in (1) to (5), when at least one job is irregularly stopped in parallel processing of the plurality of jobs, the job display screen for the job irregularly stopped is displayed larger than the job display screen for the proceeding job in the display frame of the display.
(7) According to the sheet-processing system A described in (1) to (6), the segmented job display screens in the display frame are arranged in the same manner as the sheet-processing devices are arranged in the sheet-processing system, the sheet-processing devices processing the jobs in parallel.
While the present invention has been described with reference to what are presently considered to be the preferred embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed embodiments. On the contrary, the invention is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the spirit and scope of the appended claims. The scope of the following claims is to be accorded the broadest interpretation so as to encompass all such modifications and equivalent structures and functions.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2003-356739 | Oct 2003 | JP | national |
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5878302 | Inui et al. | Mar 1999 | A |
6430382 | Okamoto et al. | Aug 2002 | B1 |
6433880 | Nishikata et al. | Aug 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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62210481 | Sep 1987 | JP |
2003-089473 | Mar 2003 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050084277 A1 | Apr 2005 | US |