1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a sheet storage cassette and a printing apparatus.
2. Description of the Related Art
Conventionally, printers using roll paper have been widely used as business printers, and some home printers are compatible with roll paper. An advantage of the use of roll paper is that since it is possible to continuously feed paper, when continuous printing is to be performed, it is possible to complete paper feeding operation in a relatively short period of time as compared with feeding of rectangular sheets cut to a predetermined size in advance. For this reason, when continuously printing in large quantities, roll paper is more suitable for high-speed printing. Another advantage of the use of roll paper, other than high-speed printing, is that no marginal portions remain on printed matter.
The reason why marginal portions are required when using rectangular sheets will now be described. A sublimation printer heats sublimation ink to transfer it onto a sheet with the sheet being pressed against an ink ribbon. This leads to large conveyance resistance at the printing unit, resulting in an increase in the load of conveying the sheet at the time of printing. In addition, when printing a color image, the printer reciprocally conveys a sheet to superimpose yellow, magenta, and cyan inks. For this reason, if the amount of sheet feed decreases due to the conveyance load at the time of printing, color misregistration occurs and causes a deterioration in print quality.
In order to maintain print quality, it is necessary to convey paper at the time of printing while reliably gripping the paper with convey rollers from the start of conveyance to the end of conveyance. An unprintable portion always appears in the distance from the thermal head to the convey rollers at the start of printing, and hence the unprintable portion becomes a marginal portion. To handle such a marginal portion, a perforated line is provided to cut off the marginal portion. In addition, as disclosed in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2008-100369, a marginal portion is used as a leg portion to stand paper like a photograph stand. However, a roll paper system free of the trouble of having to cut off marginal portions is more preferable than this method.
Digital cameras have been become popular in recent years. To allow more users to print many photographic data captured by these cameras, it is important to shorten the printing time and save the trouble of cutting off the marginal portions of printed matter. In addition, specifications designed to implement high-speed printing without any marginal portions are required for not only business printers but also home printers.
Another merit of roll paper in terms of the cost per print is that it is easier to achieve low cost in manufacturing roll paper than in manufacturing rectangular sheets with perforated lines. In addition, with regard to the form of supplying consumable materials to users, allowing users to refill only paper wound in roll form can minimize the cost of paper as a consumable material.
As described above, a printer of the roll paper system is required to achieve low-cost and high-speed performance, and the lowest cost usage of roll paper itself is to allow the user place the roll paper which he/she purchased into a roll paper storage cassette, with the shaft being inserted through the roll paper, and load the cassette in the printer main body.
A conventional sublimation printer using rectangular sheets can handle different kinds of sheets, and allows sheets and an ink ribbon to be replaced even when they are not used up. When using the roll paper system, therefore, it is necessary for the printer to be compatible with different paper sizes and allow paper to be replaced even before it is used up.
Consider the roll paper storage cassette disclosed in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2006-306511. With this cassette, when the user removes roll paper before it is used up to replace it, the roll paper unrolls. The user must therefore wind the roll paper again and load it in the roll paper storage cassette.
Roll paper is generally wound with the printing surface being the inner surface, and hence the user does not touch the printing surface. However, when the roll paper unrolls, the user may touch the printing surface. At a portion of the printing surface which the user has touched, sublimated ink becomes difficult to adhere. This may lead to a deterioration in print quality.
For this reason, when using a home printer, it is preferable not to open the roll paper storage cassette until the roll paper is used up once it is loaded in the roll paper storage cassette. In addition, preparing roll paper storage cassettes corresponding to the types of roll paper to be used makes it possible to store the roll paper without contaminating it, prevent errors in detecting the cassette type, and replace it simply by replacing the cassette alone.
In addition, home printers need to be more compact with higher usability. In order to reduce the size of a printer, therefore, it is necessary to reduce the size of roll paper storage cassettes themselves and improve the layout of the paper storage cassette, ink ribbon cassette, cutter unit, and the like so as to reduce the size of the printer main body.
In the standby state shown in
At the time of paper feeding shown in
With regard to usability, when the user inserts roll paper into the roll paper shaft and loads it into the roll paper storage cassette 901, the roll paper shaft tends to slip off the roll paper. This makes it difficult to insert the roll paper into the roll paper storage cassette 901. This is because the surface of the roll paper shaft described above is made slippery, and there is always a gap between the roll paper shaft and the inner diameter portion of roll paper because the inner diameter tends to vary depending on the roll paper.
There are available methods for positioning a roll paper shaft and roll paper by using a paper tube for the inner diameter of the roll paper and for stopping rotation and supporting a shaft with a complicated mechanism, as disclosed in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2002-326742. In order to implement a simple, low-cost arrangement, however, a method of integrally forming resin springs with a roll paper shaft as a resin component is optimal.
However, since the urging force of the resin spring 908a against the inner diameter portion of roll paper is minimized, a reduction in the strength of the resin spring 908a of the roll paper shaft 908 may cause the user to deform the resin spring 908a. If the user greatly deforms the resin spring in its opening direction, the resin spring plastically deforms. As a result, the resin spring is caught on the roll paper at the time of loading. In addition, if the user forcibly inserts the resin spring, deformed in its opening direction, into the inner diameter portion of roll paper, the charged amounts of the resin springs increase to greatly urge the resin springs. This may depress the paper at a position near the inner diameter portion of the roll paper. In addition, the resin springs may be caught on the inner diameter portion of the roll paper when the roll paper rotates during printing. This may make it difficult for the roll paper shaft to smoothly rotate, resulting in affecting the printing operation.
In addition, since the resin springs are provided on the roll paper shaft, the resin springs may collide with a guide member which picks up the leading end of roll paper. The distal end of the pickup guide preferably extends near the roll paper shaft so as to pick up roll paper to the end even if the winding diameter decreases as the printing operation proceeds. As a consequence, the distance between the maximum outer diameter surface of the roll paper shaft and the pickup guide decreases. The resin springs of the roll paper shaft without roll paper being loaded are in an open state. In this state, the resin springs easily make contact with the distal end of the pickup guide. It is assumed that when roll paper is used up or only the roll paper shaft 908 is loaded in the roll paper storage cassette 901, the resin springs spread open. If it is possible to detect the presence/absence of paper, it is possible to prevent the roll paper shaft 908 from rotating. However, since the roll paper storage portion has no detection means, the point at which the presence/absence of paper can be determined is the time when the leading end of paper is detected at the time of paper feeding. The roll paper shaft 908 therefore rotates until this timing.
The present invention has been made in consideration of the aforementioned problems, and realizes a sheet storage cassette which does not damage the spring members provided on the shaft which retains roll paper and pickup guide even when no roll paper is loaded, and a printing apparatus.
In order to solve the aforementioned problems, the present invention provides a sheet storage cassette which contains a print sheet in roll form wound into a hollow cylindrical shape and is attached to a printing apparatus, the cassette comprising: a sheet retaining shaft which retains the print sheet in roll form by being made to extend through a hollow portion of the print sheet and making an urging member urge an inner surface of the hollow portion in a diameter expanding direction; and a support portion which rotatably supports the sheet retaining shaft, wherein the urging member protrudes from a maximum outer diameter of the sheet retaining shaft while the print sheet is not attached to the sheet retaining shaft, and urges the inner surface of the hollow portion of the print sheet in the diameter expanding direction while the print sheet is attached to the sheet retaining shaft, and a rib portion which is provided at the sheet retaining shaft and continuously extends in a rotational direction and contacts a pickup guide, which picks up a leading end of a print sheet which is rotated by a roller of the printing apparatus, when the urging member rotates, wherein the rib portion is provided to prevent the pickup guide from interfering with the urging member which rotates together with the sheet retaining shaft.
In order to solve the aforementioned problems, the present invention provides a sheet storage cassette which contains a print sheet in roll form wound into a hollow cylindrical shape and is attached to a printing apparatus, the cassette comprising: a sheet retaining shaft which retains the print sheet in roll form by being made to extend through a hollow portion of the print sheet and making an urging member urge an inner surface of the hollow portion in a diameter expanding direction; and a support portion which rotatably supports the sheet retaining shaft, wherein the urging member protrudes from a maximum outer diameter of the sheet retaining shaft while the print sheet is not attached to the sheet retaining shaft, and urges the inner surface of the hollow portion of the print sheet in the diameter expanding direction while the print sheet is attached to the sheet retaining shaft, and a restriction member which restricts a deformation amount of the urging member when the urging member is urged in the diameter expanding direction is provided.
In order to solve the aforementioned problems, the present invention provides a sheet storage cassette which contains a print sheet in roll form wound into a hollow cylindrical shape and is attached to a printing apparatus, the cassette comprising: a sheet retaining shaft which retains the print sheet in roll form by being made to extend through a hollow portion of the print sheet and making an urging member urge an inner surface of the hollow portion in a diameter expanding direction; and a support portion which rotatably supports the sheet retaining shaft, wherein the urging member protrudes from a maximum outer diameter of the sheet retaining shaft while the print sheet is not attached to the sheet retaining shaft, and urges the inner surface of the hollow portion of the print sheet in the diameter expanding direction by being urged while the print sheet is attached to the sheet retaining shaft, an end detection mark in a hole shape or a concave/convex shape configured to detect an end of the print sheet is provided on part of a surface of the print sheet, and the end detection mark is provided in a portion of the print sheet other than an area opposite to a cylindrical portion of the sheet retaining shaft.
In order to solve the aforementioned problems, the present invention provides a printing apparatus which performs printing by transferring ink onto a print sheet using a thermal head, the apparatus comprising: a sheet storage cassette defined above; and convey means for conveying a print sheet from the sheet storage cassette to the thermal head.
According to the present invention, it is possible to implement a structure which does not damage the spring members provided on the shaft which retains roll paper and pickup guide even when no roll paper is loaded.
Further features and aspects of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached drawings.
Embodiments of the present invention will be described in detail below with reference to the accompanying drawings. The following embodiments are merely examples for practicing the present invention. The embodiments should be properly modified or changed depending on various conditions and the structure of an apparatus to which the present invention is applied. The present invention should not be limited to the following embodiments. Parts of the respective embodiments to be described later may be properly combined.
The ink ribbon cassette 2 mainly includes an ink ribbon carrying ink, a take-up bobbin which takes up the ink ribbon, and a case which retains them. They are completely assembled together at the time of sale. After the ink ribbon is used up, the ribbon is discarded and recovered in the form of the ink ribbon cassette 2.
The manner of opening the roll paper storage cassette 1 will now be described with reference to
The slide member 104 serves to cover the finger engaging portion 103a of the open lever, as shown in
The arrangement of the roll paper storage cassette 1 will now be described in more detail with reference to
The roll paper storage cassette 1 mainly includes three components, namely roll paper, a storage case, and a roll paper shaft as paper retaining shaft. For example, when replacing roll paper, the user purchases only the roll paper R and replaces the roll paper set with respect to a roll paper shaft 4 and the roll paper storage cassette 1. In this case, after the roll paper R is used up, the user needs to only discard a small amount of the roll paper R which is left on the roll paper shaft. This saves the trouble of recovering and recycling the roll paper R, thus providing advantages in terms of cost and resource saving. In other cases, the roll paper R wound around the roll paper shaft 4 may be sold with priority being attached to usability, or roll paper set in a roll paper storage cassette may be sold. That is, roll paper can take various kinds of forms in accordance with various purposes.
The roll paper storage cassette 1 includes the upper case 101 and the lower case 102. Ribs 101a and 102a are provided on the inner surfaces of the cases to reduce conveyance resistance. Grooves 102b are provided for the lower case 102 to guide the roll paper shaft 4 inserted into the roll paper R. Pressing springs 106 and pressing guides 107 are mounted on the upper case 101. The pressing springs 106 urge the roll paper shaft 4. The pressing guides 107 can slide in a direction to urge. The pressing springs 106 and the pressing guides 107 are provided on the left and right sides of the upper case 101 to uniformly urge two end portions 4a of the roll paper shaft 4.
A pair of rollers 109 are provided for the upper case 101 so as to protrude from the ribs 101a, and are urged by urging springs 110 from the back surfaces. Walls 102c on the two side surfaces of the lower case 102 serve as walls for restricting the roll paper R in the widthwise direction so as to reduce meandering and positional shifts in the widthwise direction. An offset guide 108 is provided on one side surface of the lower case 102 to urge a portion near the outer surface of the roll paper R. The offset guide 108 can slide in the widthwise direction of the roll paper. A method of urging the offset guide 108 will be described later with reference to
A pickup guide 5 is provided at the outlet corresponding to the leading end of roll paper to pick up the leading end of the roll paper R. The pickup guide 5 is always urged to the roll paper side by a spring member (not shown). The distal end of the pickup guide 5 slides along the outermost circumference of the roll paper R to reliably pick up the leading end of the roll paper at the time of paper feeding.
A method of making the offset guide 108 urge a portion near the outer surface of roll paper and a lifting mechanism for the feed roller will now be described with reference to
The feed roller 311 is placed on the bottom surface side of the lower case 102. The feed roller 311 is lowered to a position where it does not collide with the roll paper storage cassette 1 at the time of cassette loading, and is raised at the time of printing. Rectangular holes 102c provided in the lower case 102 are opening portions which rubber portions 311a of the feed roller 311 enter. Bearings are provided on the two ends of the feed roller 311 and formed into elongated holes to allow the feed roller 311 to move upward. Two cam gears 317 having cam shapes are arranged on the bottom surface of the frame 310 under the feed roller 311 to raise the feed roller. An urging member 318 for pressing the feed roller 311 downward is provided on the middle portion of the feed roller 311. The feed roller 311 and the cam gears 317 are driven by driving sources and power transmission mechanisms (not shown).
The movement of the pressing guides 107 and the pressing direction of the roll paper shaft 4 will now be described with reference to
When the user inserts the roll paper shaft 4 into the roll paper R, places the roll paper in the lower case 102, and closes the upper case 101, the pressing springs 106 provided on the left and right sides of the upper case 101 urge the roll paper R in the direction of the bottom surface of the lower case 102 located on the lower side in
The pressing springs 106 attached to the cassette upper case 101 urge the roll paper shaft 4 toward the feed roller 311, and transfers the urging force through the pressing guides 107. To reduce the rotational resistance of the roll paper shaft, the pressing guides are desirably made of a material having good sliding properties, such as polyacetal.
When loading the unused roll paper R, the roll paper shaft 4 is at the height shown in
As the number of remaining printable pages decreases, the winding diameter of the roll paper R decreases. When the roll paper R is used up, the roll paper shaft 4 moves downward to the height shown in
The pressing force that presses the roll paper R against the feed roller 311 is desirably strong and constant. As described above, however, the pressing springs 106 stretch with a change in the winding diameter of the roll paper R. It is therefore desirable to maximize the winding diameter and the number of turns and reduce the spring constant while securing strong pressing force.
As the rubber portions 311a of the feed roller 311, rubber portions having small diameters and widths are used to reduce the size of the printer main body 3 and suppress an increase in cost. Since the roll paper shaft 4 is pressed at the two ends relative to the positions of the rubber portions 311a in the widthwise direction of the paper, the rubber portions 311a are desirably arranged at two positions spaced apart from each other to suppress meandering of the paper. However, in order to cope with a paper size small in width, the rubber portions 311a are arranged slightly inward. Surfaces 4b of the roll paper shaft 4 which are opposite to the positions of the rubber portions 311a need to be continuous surfaces without any irregularities. This prevents pressure losses and the occurrence of being caught.
The shape of the resin springs and the restriction members provided for the roll paper shaft 4 will now be described with reference to
As described with reference to
In addition, in order to prevent the user from displacing the resin springs 401 upward with his/her fingers, ribs 404 are formed in the spaces below the resin springs 401 in consideration of the retreat positions of the resin springs. This makes it difficult for the user to insert his/her fingers to inhibit he/she from pushing the resin springs 401, thereby preventing he/she from bending the resin springs up to plastic deformation.
Printing operation will now be described with reference to
A paper guide 320 guides the roll paper fed from the roll paper storage cassette 1, changes its traveling direction to the upper side in
A rotating shaft provided for the printer main body 3 retains a supply bobbin 201 and take-up bobbin 202 of the ink ribbon cassette 2 by making the bobbins engage with the shaft. The supply bobbin 201 is on the driven side, and rotates while receiving rotational resistance so as to apply proper tension to the ink ribbon. The take-up bobbin 202 is rotated/driven by the same driving source as that for the grip roller 313, and is rotated/driven via a torque limiter at the time of printing.
The paper feeding direction at the time of printing is the direction indicated by an arrow E. The roll paper is extracted in advance at the time of paper feeding by a length required for printing. The printer then performs printing while pressing a thermal head H against a platen roller 316, conveying the roll paper to the roll paper storage cassette 1 using the grip roller 313, and taking up the printed portion. The thermal head H and the platen roller 316 convey the roll paper R and an ink ribbon 203 while they are in tight contact with each other. When they are placed on the thermal head H in a line, a heating element generates heat in accordance with print data, thereby forming an image.
The printer of this embodiment is a sublimation printer. When printing a color image such as a photographic image, yellow, magenta, and cyan colors must be superimposed. For this reason, when completing yellow printing as the first color printing, the printer conveys the roll paper to the printing start position again, and starts magenta printing. The printer reciprocally conveys the roll paper by the number of times corresponding to the number of ink layers. Upon completion of printing of all the layers, the printer cuts a printed portion extending from the leading end of the roll paper R or a marginal portion, and delivers the roll paper to the outside. If there is an image to be printed next, the printer conveys paper to the printing start position and starts printing operation. If there is no image to be printed next, the printer rotates the feed roller 311 in the direction opposite to that at the time of paper feeding to completely rewind the roll paper R into the roll paper storage cassette 1. After the cassette contains the roll paper, the printer lowers the feed roller 311 to the retreat position and enters the standby state.
A pickup guide distal end 5a, the thinning portion 4c of the roll paper shaft 4, and the resin springs 401 are placed at aligned positions. As the remaining amount of the roll paper R decreases, the roll paper shaft 4 moves downward to make the resin spring 401 and the pickup guide distal end 5a positionally interfere with each other. Each resin spring 401 in this embodiment has a rib portion 401b which contacts the pickup guide distal end 5a before a pressing surface 401d of the resin spring 401 contacts the pickup guide distal end 5a. The rib portion 401b extends in the rotational direction and is continuous with the pressing surface 401d. With this structure, the pickup guide distal end 5a is contacted and picked up by the rib portion 401b of the resin spring 401 without being caught on the resin spring 401 or the rib portion 401b of the resin spring 401 slips under the pickup guide distal end 5a, thereby preventing them from interfering with each other.
In addition, the disc shaped rib portion 403 is additionally provided to prevent the pickup guide distal end 5a from excessively entering the thinning portion 4c of the roll paper shaft 4. With this structure, making a portion 5c of the pickup guide make contact with the rib portion 403 of the resin spring 401 makes the rib portion 401b of the resin spring 401 contact and pick up the pickup guide distal end 5a and restricts the amount of entrance so as to inhibit the pickup guide distal end 5a from approaching the roll paper shaft 4 by a predetermined distance or more.
A case in which the roll paper shaft 4 without the roll paper R is loaded into the roll paper storage cassette 1, and paper feeding operation is performed will now be described with reference to
At the start of rotation in
At the time of rotation in
In this embodiment, in order to achieve low cost, the resin springs and the restriction members are integrally formed. However, they may be discrete members. In addition, when using metal springs, it is possible to obtain the same effect as that described above by integrally or discretely providing restriction members and rib portions.
This embodiment has exemplified the case in which the pickup guide 5 is provided for the roll paper storage cassette 1. It is, however, possible to implement an arrangement without the roll paper storage cassette 1 or provide the pickup guide 5 for the printer main body as long as the positional relationship between the roll paper shaft 4 and the pickup guide 5 remains the same.
The second embodiment will be described below. When printing on roll paper, it is necessary to make a printer recognize the end position of the printable roll paper. The printer can recognize the end position of the roll paper by detecting an end detection mark formed on the roll paper. For example, a through hole is formed in part of roll paper, and an end sensor such as a photoreflector in the printer detects the through hole. Alternatively, a low-reflectance seal different from roll paper is pasted on the roll paper or roll paper is coated with a low-reflectance paint to form an end detection mark, and an end sensor in the printer detects the mark. The above end detection mark is obtained by forming a through hole in part of roll paper. Alternatively, this mark is obtained by forming part of the surface of roll paper into a slightly convex portion corresponding to the thickness of a seal pasted on the surface of the roll paper, or by pressing part of the surface of roll paper with, for example, a thermal head into a concave shape.
Assume, however, that the above roll paper is repeatedly reciprocated by the feed roller while being pressed by the roll paper shaft. In this case, if there is an end detection mark near the roll paper shaft, the shape of part of the end detection mark may be transferred onto the roll paper, or a print may be transferred onto the roll paper when it is rewound. Executing printing on a portion of such roll paper onto which a shape or print has been transferred will cause print irregularity or an unexpected print transfer trace occurs because the surface around the portion is not smooth, resulting in a deterioration in print quality. Therefore, if there is the above through hole or concave/convex shape on the surface of roll paper, the above shape transfer or print transfer is made difficult to occur by making it difficult for the feed roller or the like to apply a pressure onto the surface having the above through hole or concave/convex shape.
The specification of Japanese Patent No. 3861727 discloses a method of making it difficult to apply a pressure to a surface of roll paper which has a through hole or concave/convex shape. According to the specification of Japanese Patent No. 3861727, paper is used, which is obtained by integrally bonding paper having a heat sensitive dye to a separator with an adhesive. The separator has a cutting line parallel to the paper feeding direction. This cutting line is formed in a region other than a region to which a pickup roller and an urging spring are commonly opposite. The cutting line portion is lifted from the separator, and a high pressure is applied to only the lifted portion, thereby preventing color development due to frictional heat.
According to the specification of Japanese Patent No. 3861727, the pressing means includes a pressing plate and an urging spring. The urging spring urges paper against the pickup roller through the pressing plate. The pressing plate is required to press paper against the surface of the pickup roller while making the paper squarely face it, and to feed the paper upon receiving a frictional force from the pickup roller, and hence is regarded to have relatively high rigidity.
In the arrangement disclosed in the specification of Japanese Patent No. 3861727, the pressing plate receives the force of the urging spring, and the urging force is diffused by the pressing plate. The pressing force is then transferred to the paper through the pressing plate. Finally, the pickup roller supports the paper. That is, portions immediately under the urging spring and the pressing plate and the pickup roller paper support surface are portions on which the pressure generated by the urging spring acts relatively strongly.
In addition, a cutting line portion corresponding to a concave/convex shape is located immediately under the urging spring, at the front side of the pickup roller, or immediately under the pressing plate. Although no high pressure is applied to the cutting lines of all the paper clamped between the pressing plate and the pickup roller, a relatively high pressure is applied to paper near regions adjacent to three positions immediately under the urging spring, at the front side of the pickup roller, and immediately under the pressing plate. This increases the pressure on the cutting line portion to cause color development on the cutting line portion. That is, this method does not provide sufficient countermeasures.
An object of the second embodiment is to prevent the occurrence of shape transfer and print transfer onto roll paper near a shaped portion on the surface of the roll paper.
The arrangement of roll paper in this embodiment will now be described with reference to
A circular hole R3 is provided in an almost middle portion in the widthwise direction of roll paper at a position spaced apart from the hollow portion by a predetermined length. The hole R3 is an end detection mark which is provided in the surface of roll paper to allow an optical detection means such as a photoreflector provided on the printer side to detect the end of the roll paper. Depending on the detection performance of the optical detection means or a detection method, it is possible to provide a portion formed into a convex or concave shape to a degree that does not extend through the surface of roll paper instead of a hole or engrave the surface of roll paper while coloring it with a laser or the like. The shape of the hole R3 is not limited to a circle, and may be a belt-like shape or atypical shape. Either of these end detection marks is formed to extend through or form a convex/concave pattern on the surface of roll paper.
The roll paper R is wound with the printing surface being the inner surface, and the outermost circumferential portion is fixed with a leading end fixing seal R1. The roll paper shaft 800 is inserted into the hollow portion of the roll paper R. The roll paper shaft 800 has rotating shafts 803, each having the smallest outer diameter, at the two end portions, which are rotatably supported and retained by groove-like support portions 507 formed in the two sides of a roll paper storage portion 508 of the cassette main body 500. Reference numeral 801 denotes large-diameter portions of the roll paper shaft 800, which have smooth surfaces without any irregularities; and 802, a small-diameter portion which extends from the middle of the roll paper shaft and has a diameter smaller than the largest outer diameter. The small-diameter portion 802 is formed into a shape from which portions corresponding to “sinks” are thinned out in advance by resin molding.
When loading the roll paper R into the cassette main body 500, the user inserts the roll paper shaft 800 into the hollow portion of the roll paper R in a direction P1, and then loads the roll paper as indicted by an arrow P2 while fitting the two rotating shafts 803 of the roll paper shaft 800 in the support portions 507. Upon loading the roll paper, the user peels off the roll paper leading end fixing seal R1, and then pushes the cover portion 501 until the lock pawls 505 are locked in the lock holes 506, thereby completing the loading operation.
As shown in
At the time of printing, first of all, the thermal head H is at the retreat position, and the feed roller 804 and the grip roller 805 convey the roll paper R in a direction E in
Secondly, when the printer conveys the roll paper to the printing start position, the printer drives the take-up bobbin 607 to take up the ink ribbon 700 in a direction K in
Thirdly, the thermal head H moves downward to a position to nip the roll paper R on the platen roller 810, and the feed roller 804 and the grip roller 805 convey the roll paper R in the direction F in
Fourthly, the printer conveys the roll paper R until the heating position of the thermal head H coincides with the printing start position of the roll paper R again.
Fifthly, the printer repeats printing with the M ink (magenta color) 703, C ink (cyan color) 704, and OC ink (overcoat layer) 705 in the same manner as described above. Upon completing printing with the four colors, the printer drives the feed roller 804 and the grip roller 805 to convey the leading end of the roll paper to a predetermined cutting position in the direction E in
Sixthly, upon cutting the roll paper, the printer causes the feed roller 804 and the grip roller 805 to convey the leading end of the roll paper by a predetermined length in the direction E in
As described above, in order to achieve a reduction in apparatus size, a printer PR of this embodiment is configured to be able to repeatedly feed and take up the roll paper R, and hence repeatedly feeds and takes up roll paper a plurality of number of times to form one color print. During this repetitive operation, the roll paper shaft 800 rotates and slides in the hollow portion of the roll paper R, and the large-diameter portion 801 presses the inner surface of the hollow portion of the roll paper R.
In printing operation, since the maximum outer diameter D11 of the roll paper shaft 800 is slightly different from the inner diameter D9 of the hollow portion of the roll paper, they rotate with a slight difference in the number of rotations. That is, the large-diameter portion 801 of the roll paper shaft 800 slides on the inner surface of the hollow portion of the roll paper R during printing, whereas the large-diameter portion 801 and the inner surface of the hollow portion of the roll paper R are in tight contact with each other and rotate in the same direction while changing their positions during printing.
In the above arrangement, the area W11 where the large-diameter portion 801 of the roll paper shaft 800 is in contact with the inner surface of the coreless portion of the roll paper R overlaps the area W141 where the roller portion 821 as the outermost circumferential portion of the feed roller 804 is in contact with the outermost circumferential portion of the roll paper. In this manner, it is possible to allow the pressing force L of the pressing levers added to the roll paper shaft 800 to efficiently act on the roll paper by interposing the stacked paper portion of the roll paper between the large-diameter portion 801 of the roll paper shaft 800 and the feed roller 804 so as to uniform the thickness of the stacked paper portion of the roll paper.
In addition, the hole R3 as the end detection mark of the roll paper is placed at the position where it is opposite to the small-diameter portion 802 which does not make contact with the inner surface of the hollow portion of the roll paper R, avoiding positions immediately below the areas W11 and W141 where relatively high pressures are applied. Although the hole R3 has been described with reference to
Placing the end detection mark R3 or R4 accompanied by a concave/convex portion on the surface of the roll paper while avoiding the area W11 described above can retain the roll paper in the printer while inhibiting any high pressure from acting on the convex/concave portion on the surface of the roll paper. Even if an end detection mark is wound immediately near the inner surface of the hollow portion of the roll paper R for the purpose of end detection, in particular, placing the mark on a portion other than a portion immediately below the area W11 will increase the effect of inhibiting any pressure from acting on the end detection mark R3 or R4 accompanied by a concave/convex pattern on the surface of the roll paper.
In addition, the hollow portion of the roll paper R is formed into a cylindrical shape by making one turn of the roll paper fixed with a double-sided tape, and hence is weak. That is, during printing, a space is formed between the inner surface of the hollow portion of the roll paper R and the small-diameter portion 802, and an adequate clearance is formed on the inner surface of the hollow portion of the roll paper R. Therefore, no pressure acts on the large-diameter portions 801. This can reduce the chance of transferring a convex/concave shape of the end detection mark R3 or R4 itself, which is accompanied by a convex/concave pattern on the surface of the roll paper R, or transferring printed ink at the time of rewinding onto a portion of the roll paper R which is wound so as to overlap a portion near the end detection mark.
In order to make the large-diameter portion 801 of the roll paper shaft 800 as a rigid body have a surface without any irregularities, the large-diameter portions 801 are thinned out from the axial end faces instead of the outermost circumferential portions. This makes the large-diameter portions 801, on which pressing forces act, free from irregularity, and hence prevents the roll paper shaft itself from transferring a convex/concave shape onto the inner surface of the hollow portion of the roll paper R.
While the present invention has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed exemplary embodiments. 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.
This application claims the benefit of Japanese Patent Application Nos. 2010-172782, filed Jul. 30, 2010 which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2010-172782 | Jul 2010 | JP | national |
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2005-349744 | Dec 2005 | JP |
2006-168974 | Jun 2006 | JP |
2006-306511 | Nov 2006 | JP |
3861727 | Dec 2006 | JP |
2008-100369 | May 2008 | JP |
2009-143021 | Jul 2009 | JP |
Entry |
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He above references were cited in a Sep. 2, 2013 Chinese Office Action, which is enclosed with English Translation, that issued in Chinese Patent Application No. 201110216899.7. |
The above foreign patent documents were cited in the Apr. 11, 2014 Japanese Office Action, which is enclosed without an English Translation, that issued in Japanese Patent Application No. 2010-172782. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120027494 A1 | Feb 2012 | US |