The present application claims priority to and incorporates by reference the entire contents of Japanese Patent Application No. 2011-146425 filed in Japan on Jun. 30, 2011.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to skew correction devices, image forming systems, and skew correction methods. In particular, the present invention relates to a skew correction device that performs skew correction on a booklet produced by folding sheets of a recording medium such as ordinary paper, recording paper, or transfer paper (hereinafter, abbreviated to “sheets”), an image forming system including the skew correction device, and a skew correction method to be performed by the skew correction device.
2. Description of the Related Art
There are widely known sheet processing apparatuses arranged downstream of an image forming apparatus body to perform postprocessing, such as stapling, on recording sheets or the like output from the image forming apparatus. Such sheet processing apparatuses have come to incorporate multiple functions recently, and sheet processing apparatuses capable of not only side stitching as in conventional apparatus but also saddle stitching and making booklets have become common. Some type of sheet processing apparatuses, which perform saddle stitching and booklet making, further cut an edge(s) of a stapled booklet using a cutting apparatus to increase quality of outputs.
In such a cutting apparatus, a booklet to be cut is typically conveyed by a conveying unit such as a belt and positioned by being abutted against a positioning stopper set to adapt to a size of the booklet, a cut amount, and/or the like. Thereafter, a cutting unit cuts an edge of the booklet that is pressed and fixed by a pressing unit. Thereby, an edge of the stapled booklet is evenly trimmed.
However, in the conventional cutting apparatus, the conveying unit such as a belt rotates in a state where the booklet is in contact with the positioning stopper. This can cause a surface sheet of the booklet to be swollen out. When such a booklet is cut as-is, the side of the cut booklet becomes uneven. Furthermore, when the pressing section presses the booklet in a manner to flatten the swelling of the booklet, a front side or a back side of the booklet can be warped while the booklet is pressed by the pressing unit, and possibly further resulting in that the booklet is moved forward or backward and pressed in a misaligned state. Accordingly, cutting the booklet in such a pressed state can undesirably make the edge of the cut booklet uneven.
Examples of known techniques for preventing such an uneven edge include a technique disclosed in Japanese Patent No. 3472772. According to this technique, an apparatus conveys a booklet using an endless belt such that a spine of the booklet is a leading end, includes, at a downstream part, a stopper plate on which the spine of the booklet is to abut and an aligning reciprocating piece for back-jogging, and aligns the booklet by lightly pressing a fore edge of the booklet toward a leading end of the booklet. It is argued in Japanese Patent No. 3472772 that the apparatus is highly productive because the apparatus configured as described above can process and convey booklets downward one after another.
According to the technique disclosed in Japanese Patent No. 3472772, the apparatus includes the aligning reciprocating piece for back-jogging that aligns and positions a booklet by jogging a fore edge of the booklet and is configured to align the booklet by lightly pressing the fore edge of the booklet toward the leading end of the booklet. However, a saddle-stitched booklet can generally have an error in length, which may be caused from an error in length of not-yet-center-folded sheets, a center-folding error resulting from deviation in folding position, or an error that a booklet becomes practically shorter when the booklet is not folded completely flat and swollen out. When a booklet has a large error in length, it is difficult to lightly press a fore edge of the booklet with the aligning reciprocating piece for back-jogging-alignment only by position control.
Under the circumstance, a spring or the like can be provided on a jogger to perform alignment or skew correction with a constant pressure when sheets to be aligned have wide variation in sheet size. It is easy to lightly press a fore edge of a booklet using this approach.
However, an appropriate pressure to be applied to a fore edge for alignment varies depending on paper type, paper thickness, number of sheets to be stapled, and a folding height. For instance, when a pressing spring force is insufficient, the spine of the booklet fails to abut on a stopper plate, resulting in misalignment. In contrast, when the pressing spring force is excessively large, the spring shows no resiliency after the booklet has abutted, causing buckling of the booklet leading to damage such as bent and/or scratch. Accordingly, booklets to which alignment or skew correction with certain pressure is applicable are limited. Meanwhile, “abutting” in this document means that something comes into contact with an object and this abutted (contact) condition is maintained. “Pressing” means generating a pressure by pressing. A “pressing force” is a pressure generated by pressing, or, in other word, a force exerted to press something. “At application of pressure” refers to time when an operation of pressing something is performed, or, in other words, when something is pressed.
There is a need to make it possible to perform skew correction on a booklet conveyed to a skew correction device reliably without causing a damage such as misalignment, crease, bent, and/or scratch
It is an object of the present invention to at least partially solve the problems in the conventional technology.
A skew correction device includes: a conveying path through which a booklet formed by folding a sheet bundle is conveyed in a conveying direction; a positioning unit on which a leading-end portion of the booklet in the conveying direction is to abut, the positioning unit being arranged to be able to protrude into and retreat from the conveying path; an abutting unit that pushes a trailing-end portion of the booklet in the conveying direction, thereby moving the booklet toward the positioning unit and causing the leading-end portion of the booklet to abut on the positioning unit; and a pushing force changing unit that changes a pushing force applied by the abutting unit to the booklet to push the booklet against the positioning unit based on a pushing amount of the abutting unit to the booklet.
An image forming system includes a skew correction device. The skew correction device includes: a conveying path through which a booklet formed by folding a sheet bundle is conveyed in a conveying direction; a positioning unit on which a leading-end portion of the booklet in the conveying direction is to abut, the positioning unit being arranged to be able to protrude into and retreat from the conveying path; an abutting unit that pushes a trailing-end portion of the booklet in the conveying direction, thereby moving the booklet toward the positioning unit and causing the leading-end portion of the booklet to abut on the positioning unit; and a pushing force changing unit that changes a pushing force applied by the abutting unit to the booklet to push the booklet against the positioning unit based on a pushing amount of the abutting unit to the booklet.
A skew correction method includes: conveying a booklet formed by folding a sheet bundle along a conveying path; causing a leading-end portion of the booklet in the conveying direction to abut on a positioning unit arranged to be able to protrude into and retreat from the conveying path; performing skew correction on the booklet by pushing a trailing-end portion of the booklet in the conveying direction, which has abutted on the positioning unit, against the positioning unit; and changing a pushing force, with which the booklet is to be pushed by the abutting unit, based on a pushing amount of the abutting unit to the booklet by setting the pushing amount based on information relating to the pushing amount.
The above and other objects, features, advantages and technical and industrial significance of this invention will be better understood by reading the following detailed description of presently preferred embodiments of the invention, when considered in connection with the accompanying drawings.
An aspect of the present invention has a feature that pressing springs for pressing a trailing-end jogger in multiple stages are provided and multiple levels of elastic force can be applied using the pressing springs in a stepwise manner depending on amount of pushing the trailing-end jogger toward a booklet, and that a pressing force by the trailing-end jogger can be controlled by changing the amount of pushing toward the booklet depending on booklet information.
Embodiments of the present invention are described below with reference to the accompanying drawings. Equivalent constituents are denoted by the same reference numeral or symbol in the description below, and repeated descriptions are omitted as appropriate.
The first sheet postprocessing apparatus 1 is a sheet postprocessing apparatus that includes a stacking section and has a sheet bundle producing function. The stacking section receives sheets from the image forming apparatus PR one sheet by one sheet, and stacks and aligns the sheets to produce a sheet bundle. The first sheet postprocessing apparatus 1 discharges the sheet bundle using sheet bundle discharging rollers 10 to the downstream second sheet postprocessing apparatus 2. The second sheet postprocessing apparatus 2 is a saddle-stitch booklet-making apparatus that receives the sheet bundle conveyed to the apparatus 2 and performs center folding and saddle stitching to the sheet bundle. Hereinafter, the second sheet postprocessing apparatus may be also referred to as the saddle-stitch booklet-making apparatus.
The saddle-stitch booklet-making apparatus 2 discharges the thus-made booklet to the third sheet processing apparatus 3. The third sheet processing apparatus 3 is a cutting apparatus that cuts a fore edge of the booklet conveyed into the cutting apparatus. The third sheet postprocessing apparatus hereinafter may be also referred to as the cutting apparatus. The booklet cut by the cutting apparatus 3 is discharged as-is to the outside of the cutting apparatus 3 and loaded on a discharge tray (not shown). Alternatively, when another sheet processing apparatus is connected downstream to the cutting apparatus 3, the booklet is discharged as-is into this sheet processing apparatus. The image forming apparatus PR forms a visible image on a sheet-like recording medium based on image data that is input to the image forming apparatus PR or obtained by scanning. The image forming apparatus PR corresponds to, for instance, a copying machine, a printing machine, a facsimile machine, or a multifunction periphery having at least two functions of these machines.
A branch claw 202 is arranged downstream of the entrance rollers 201 in the entrance conveying path 241. The branch claw 202 is horizontally oriented in
The center-folding conveying path 243 includes an upper bundle-conveying guide plate 207 that guides a sheet bundle at a position above a folding plate 215 for use in center folding and a lower bundle-conveying guide plate 208 that guides the sheet bundle at a position below the folding plate 215. Arranged on the bundle-conveying guide plate 207 are upper bundle-conveying rollers 205, a trailing-end tapping claw 221, and lower bundle-conveying rollers 206 in this order from a higher portion to a lower portion. The trailing-end tapping claw 221 stands upright from a trailing-end-tapping-claw driving belt 222 to be driven by a driving motor (not shown). The trailing-end tapping claw 221 is moved by a reciprocating rotary motion of the driving belt 222 to tap (press) a trailing end of the sheet bundle toward a movable fence 210, which will be described later, thereby aligning the sheet bundle. The trailing-end tapping claw 221 retreats from the center-folding conveying path 243 at the upper bundle-conveying guide plate 207 (to a position indicated by a dashed line in
Reference numeral 294 denotes a trailing-end-tapping-claw HP sensor that detects a home position of the trailing-end tapping claw 221, home position being a position which is indicated by the dashed lines in
Arranged on the lower bundle-conveying guide plate 208 are a saddle-stitch stapler S1, a pair of saddle-stitch jogger fences 225, and a movable fence 210 in this order from highest to lowest. The lower bundle-conveying guide plate 208 is a guide plate that receives the sheet bundle conveyed along the upper bundle-conveying guide plate 207. The pair of saddle-stitch jogger fences 225 is arranged in a width direction of the lower stack-conveying guide plate 208. The movable fence 210 on which the leading end of the sheet bundle is to abut (or to be supported) is arranged at a lower portion of the lower bundle-conveying guide plate 208 and is vertically movable.
The saddle-stitch stapler S1 is a stapler that stitches a sheet bundle at its center portion. The movable fence 210 moves upward and downward in a state of supporting the leading end of the sheet bundle and positions the sheet bundle at a location where the center of the sheet bundle faces the saddle-stitch stapler S1. At this location, the sheet bundle is stapled, i.e., saddle stitched. The movable fence 210 is supported by a movable-fence driving mechanism 210a and movable from a position at a movable-fence HP sensor 292, which is in an upper portion of the movable fence 210 in
The folding plate 215, a pair of folding rollers 230, a discharging conveying path 244, and lower discharging rollers 231 are provided between the upper bundle-conveying guide plate 207 and the lower bundle-conveying guide plate 208, i.e., at a substantially center portion of the center-folding conveying path 243. The folding plate 215 is capable of reciprocating in the horizontal direction in
A sheet bundle detection sensor 291 is arranged at a lower end portion of the upper bundle-conveying guide plate 207 to detect the leading end of the sheet bundle conveyed into the center-folding conveying path 243 and passing through the center-folding position. A crease passage sensor 293 is arranged on the discharging conveying path 244 to detect the leading end of the center-folded sheet bundle and recognize passage of the sheet bundle.
The saddle-stitch booklet-making apparatus 2 which is configured as illustrated in
A sheet bundle SB conveyed into the center-folding conveying path 243 is downwardly conveyed along the center-folding conveying path 243 by the entrance rollers 201 and the upper bundle-conveying rollers 205. After passage of the sheet bundle SB is detected by the sheet bundle detection sensor 291, the sheet bundle SB is conveyed by the lower bundle-conveying rollers 206 to a position where a leading end of the sheet bundle SB abuts on the movable fence 210 as illustrated in
When, from this state, a nip pressure between the lower bundle-conveying rollers 206 is released (in a direction indicated by arrow a), the leading end of the sheet bundle abuts on the movable fence 210, and the sheet bundle is stacked on the movable fence 210 with its trailing end free. Then, the trailing-end tapping claw 221 is driven to tap the trailing end of the sheet bundle SB, thereby performing final alignment in the conveying direction (in a direction indicated by arrow c).
Subsequently, the saddle-stitch jogger fences 225 perform alignment in the width direction (a direction perpendicular to the sheet conveying direction), while the movable fence 210 and the trailing-end tapping claw 221 perform alignment in the conveying direction. Thus, alignment of the sheet bundle SB in the width direction and the conveying direction are completed. Amounts by which the trailing-end tapping claw 221 and the saddle-stitch jogger fences 225 is pushed for this alignment are adjusted to optimum values depending on information about a size of the sheet, information about the number of sheets in the sheet bundle, and/or information about the thickness of the sheet bundle.
When the sheet bundle is thick, space in the conveying path is lessened, and therefore it is often the case that a single aligning operation is insufficient to align the sheet bundle. Accordingly, in such a case, the number of times the aligning operation is performed is increased. More favorable alignment can be achieved by increasing the number of the aligning operation. Furthermore, as the number of sheets to be overlaid on one another in an upstream stacking process increases, a period of time required for the stacking becomes longer, making a time interval between receipt of sheet bundles SB longer. Accordingly, even when the number of times the aligning operation is performed is increased, there is no loss of time for the system, and a favorably aligned state can be achieved efficiently. Therefore, the number of times the aligning operation is performed may also be controlled depending on processing time of the upstream process.
The standby position of the movable fence 210 is generally set to a position where a saddle-stitch position of the sheet bundle SB faces a stapling position of the saddle-stitch stapler S1. This is because performing alignment at this position makes it possible to staple the sheet bundle SB while leaving the sheet bundle SB lying at a position where the sheet bundle SB is stacked without moving the movable fence 210 to the saddle-stitch position of the sheet bundle. At this standby position, a stitcher of the saddle-stitch stapler S1 is moved to the center portion of the sheet bundle SB in a direction indicated by arrow b to perform stapling between the stitcher and a clincher. The sheet bundle SB is thus saddle stitched.
The movable fence 210 is positioned by pulse control from the movable-fence HP sensor 292. The trailing-end tapping claw 221 is positioned by pulse control from the trailing-end-tapping-claw HP sensor 294. A central processing unit (CPU) 251 of a control circuit 250 (see
As illustrated in
When the sheet bundle SB reaches a position depicted in
The sheet bundle SB that is folded at its center portion in a state of
In
The conveying section 300a serves as an entrance of the cutting apparatus 3 and includes entrance guide plates 301a, a pair of conveying rollers 302 and 303 arranged one above another, and a trailing-end jogger 319. The trailing-end jogger 319 performs alignment in the conveying direction (at a fore edge) of the booklet BT (see
The cutting section 300b includes cutting blades and a pressing section arranged with the conveying path 300 therebetween. The cutting blades includes an upper cutting blade 305 and a lower cutting blade 307 that are paired and arranged above and below the conveying path 300 to face each other. The upper cutting blade 305 is movable, while the lower cutting blade 307 is fixed. The movable upper cutting blade 305 descends to the booklet BT positioned on the fixed lower cutting blade 307, thereby cutting the fore edge of the booklet BT therebetween. A waste bin 320 that receives waste pieces from the cut booklet is arranged below the cutting section 300b.
The pressing section includes a pressing member 306 that is movable and a base 308 that is fixed. The pressing member 306 and the base 308 are arranged above and below the conveying path 300, respectively. The lower cutting blade 307 is fixed to an edge portion of the base 308 located most upstream in the booklet conveying direction. A position where the lower cutting blade 307 is fixed is set to a position that allows cutting to be performed between a cutting edge of the upper cutting blade 305 and a cutting edge of the lower cutting blade 307. The upper cutting blade 305 is moved downward by a driving mechanism (not shown) to a position beyond the lower cutting blade 307 and moved by the same upward to a position where the upper cutting blade 305 does not interfere with the booklet BT conveyed into the cutting section 300b. This upper standby position is an initial position of the upper cutting blade 305.
The pressing member 306 located above the base 308 is moved by a driving mechanism (not shown) upward and downward. The pressing member 306 has a function of pressing the booklet BT near the cutting blade 305 toward the base 308 when the upper cutting blade 305 is lowered to cut the booklet BT. Each of the upper cutting blade 305 and the pressing member 306 is driven by the driving mechanism (not shown) that uses a motor and a reduction gear coupled to the motor. Alternatively, each of the upper cutting blade 305 and the pressing member 306 may be configured to be moved upward and downward hydraulically rather than by the motor and the reduction gear.
The aligning section 300c includes a lower unit 300c1 positioned below the conveying path 300 and an upper unit 300c2 positioned above the conveying path 300. The lower unit 300c1 includes a first conveying belt 310 that is fixed, a positioning stopper 317, and a guide plate 318. The first conveying belt 310 is stretched around a driving pulley 309a and a driven pulley 309b. A top surface of the first conveying belt 310 is flush with a top surface of the base 308 and also functions as a reference surface for conveyance of the booklet BT.
The upper unit 300c2 includes a second conveying belt 312, a driving pulley 311a, a driven pulley 311b, a support member 313, guide shafts 315, a pressing plate 316, and compression springs 314. The second conveying belt 312 is stretched around the driving pulley 311a and the driven pulley 311b. The support member 313 integrally supports the second conveying belt 312, the driving pulley 311a, and the driven pulley 311b. The guide shafts 315 are attached to a top surface of the support member 313. The pressing plate 316 is mounted to be able to vertically move. The compression springs 314 are attached to the guide shafts 315 between the support member 313 and the pressing plate 316. The compression springs 314 apply an elastic force to the support member 313 and the pressing plate 316 to separate them from each other. The second conveying belt 312, the driving pulley 311a, the driven pulley 311b, the support member 313, the guide shafts 315, and the pressing plate 316 are movable upward and downward integrally as the upper unit 300c2 and therefore can relatively change a gap between the top surface of the first conveying belt 310 and a bottom surface of the second conveying belt 312.
This configuration makes it possible to narrow the gap between the first and second conveying belts 310 and 312 when the booklet BT is to be held therebetween. At that time, a gap between the pressing plate 316 and the support member 313 is also changeable. Accordingly, when the pressing plate 316 is lowered after a top surface of the booklet BT has been pressed by the second conveying belt 312, the compression springs 314 are further compressed. Thus, a holding force or pressing force to the booklet BT can be increased. A driving mechanism (not shown) that moves the upper unit 300c2 upward and downward includes a motor a power transmission mechanism, and a vertical guide, using which the pressing plate 316 is directly moved upward and downward. When the pressing plate 316 is moved upward and downward while maintaining an initial gap between the pressing plate 316 and the support member 313, the entire upper unit 300c2 is moved upward and downward. When the pressing plate 316 is further lowered after the second conveying belt 312 contacts the top surface of the booklet BT, the compression springs 314 are compressed to an extent corresponding to this downward motion, causing the compression springs 314 to exert a pressing force. This pressing force serves as the holding force or the pressing force to the booklet BT.
The first conveying belt 310 and the second conveying belt 312 have a function of conveying the booklet BT and also function as guides during sheet alignment. The first and second conveying belts 310 and 312 also function as guides during skew correction. Accordingly, the first and second conveying belts 310 and 312 has a surface, at which contact with the booklet BT is made, are made of a material reducing a friction coefficient between each of surfaces of the first and second conveying belts 310 and 312 brought into contact with the booklet BT and the sheet. In addition, the conveying belts 310 and 312 are configured to exhibit the friction coefficients near to each other. This configuration lightens a force applied to the top of the booklet and a force applied to the bottom of the booklet during pressing, and makes the force on the top near to the force on the bottom, thereby reducing misalignment during pressing.
In the present embodiment, the first and second conveying belts 310 and 312 also have the guiding function to serve as a guide unit. Alternatively, a configuration may be employed in which the guide plate 318 is arranged along the lower first conveying belt 310 so that the guide plate 318 functions as a guide and another conveying unit such as a conveying roller is used to perform the function of conveying the booklet BT. In this configuration, a top surface of the guide plate 318 is flush with the top surface of the base 308 and functions as a reference surface for conveyance of the booklet BT. Another configuration in which the upper second conveying belt 312 is configured to press the booklet BT against the guide plate 318 may be employed.
In the present embodiment, the lower first conveying belt 310 is fixed, while the upper second conveying belt 312 ascends and descends. Alternatively, a configuration in which the upper second conveying belt 312 is fixed, while the lower first conveying belt 311 is movable, or a configuration in which both the first and second conveying belts 310 and 312 are movable may be employed.
The positioning stopper 317 provided in the aligning section 300c includes a moving mechanism (not shown) that is movable in the booklet conveying direction. The positioning stopper 317 is moved by the moving mechanism to a predetermined position based on the information about the size of the booklet BT, a cut amount, or the like and performs positioning by being abutted by the spine of the booklet BT. Meanwhile, the moving mechanism includes a motor and a power transmission mechanism for the motor.
Referring to
Put another way, each of sections of the sheet postprocessing apparatuses 1, 2, and 3 is controlled by a corresponding one of the CPUs 151, 251, and 351 mounted on the corresponding apparatus; and system control is executed by the CPU PR1 of the image forming apparatus PR. As for control operations to be performed by the apparatuses, each of the CPUs 151, 251, and 351 reads program codes stored in the ROM of the corresponding apparatus, and executes control operation based on a program defined in the program codes while using the RAM of the apparatus as a working area and a data buffer. The CPU 151 of the first sheet postprocessing apparatus 1 can carry out mutual communications using the communications port 161 with the CPU PR1 of the image forming apparatus PR via the communications port PR2 of the image forming apparatus PR. Each of the CPUs 251 and 351 of the second and third sheet postprocessing apparatuses 2 and 3 can carry out mutual communications with the CPU PR1 of the image forming apparatus PR via the communications port(s) and the CPU(s) connected nearer the image forming apparatus PR than those of a corresponding one of the second and third sheet postprocessing apparatuses 2 and 3. In the image forming system configured as described above, information necessary for the CPU PR1 of the image forming apparatus PR to execute control is transmitted to the image forming apparatus PR from the CPUs 351, 251, and 151 of the third sheet postprocessing apparatus 3, the second sheet postprocessing apparatus 2, and the first sheet postprocessing apparatus 1; control signals output from the CPU PR1 of the image forming apparatus PR are transmitted to the CPUs 151, 251 and 351 of the first sheet postprocessing apparatus 1, the second sheet postprocessing apparatus 2, and the third sheet postprocessing apparatus 3.
In this way, the booklet information is transmitted from the CPU PR1 of the image forming apparatus PR to the CPU 351 of the cutting apparatus 3 which is the third postprocessing apparatus. The CPU 351 of the cutting apparatus 3 performs pressing operation and the cutting operations described above based on the received booklet information.
Operations to be performed by the cutting apparatus 3 and processing related to the operations are described below with reference to
The positioning stopper 317 moves to a position where sheet positioning is to be performed according to the information about the booklet size, the cut amount, and/or the like. When the positioning stopper 317 finishes moving to the position, the pair of conveying rollers 302 and 303 and the first and second conveying belts 310 and 312 start rotating to start receiving the booklet BT. The driving pulleys 309a and 311a of the first and second conveying belts 310 and 312 are connected to each other, in relation to driving, to make rotations of the first and second conveying belts 310 and 312 in phase. The first and second conveying belts 310 and 312 in this state stop rotating when a predetermined period of time has elapsed after the entrance sensor SN1 has detected the leading end of the spine (the folded portion) of the booklet BT conveyed into the cutting apparatus 3. The leading end (the crease or spine shearing) of the booklet BT is stopped at a position upstream from the positioning stopper 117 by a predetermined distance.
A method of moving the booklet BT by the first and second conveying belts 310 and 312 can alternatively be employed as a method of causing the booklet BT to abut on the positioning stopper 317. However, a surface sheet of the booklet BT can be undesirably partially curled in a case where the conveying power of the first and second conveying belts 310 and 312 is large. For such a case, it is necessary to set the conveying power of the first and second conveying belts 310 and 312 so as to prevent occurrence of the curling in the booklet BT. The present embodiment employs the trailing-end jogger 319 to avoid occurrence of such curling.
At this time, the pressing plate 316 is further lowered after the second conveying belt 312 has abutted on the top surface of the booklet BT. As a result, the elastic force of the compression springs 314 is applied to the booklet BT as a pressing force in a state where the booklet BT is kept to have a minimum thickness. The pressing force applied to the booklet BT can be controlled by changing or setting a descent amount of the pressing plate 316. A descent amount of the upper unit 300c2 (i.e., the gap between the first and second conveying belts 310 and 312) and the descent amount of the pressing plate 316 are determined according to the booklet information such as information about sheet thickness, sheet size, the number of sheets to be stapled, and paper type (special paper or the like). The gap d3 is a gap that causes the booklet BT to be pressed such that a thickness of the booklet BT becomes the minimum thickness in a state where each sheet in the booklet BT is spread, thereby enabling finishing the booklet BT to have a final thickness; or, a gap that enables pressing the booklet BT to fix it.
The database to be consulted for the first to third gaps d1, d2, and d3 and the descent amount of the pressing plate 316 is made by storing optimum values of the first to third gaps d1, d2, and d3 and the descent amount of the pressing plate 316. The optimum values are determined in advance using a real apparatus before shipment for each combination of elements, such as sheet thickness, sheet size, the number of sheets to be stapled, and paper type (special paper or the like), of each of booklets BT that are possibly subjected to cutting by the cutting apparatus 3. When, for example, booklet information indicating that sheet thickness is regular (when the sheet thickness is classified into thin paper, regular paper, and thick paper; the sheet thickness is expressed in basis weight (g/m2), for instance), sheet size is A3, the number of sheets to be stapled is ten, and paper type is ordinary paper is transmitted to the CPU 351 of the cutting apparatus 3 from the CPU PR1 of the image forming apparatus PR, the CPU 351 obtains the first to third gaps d1, d2, and d3 and the descent amount of the pressing plate 316 associated with that booklet information from the database in the memory to thereby determine the first to third gaps d1, d2, and d3 and the descent amount of the pressing plate 316. This enables cutting to be performed in a state where the booklet BT is held with an optimum holding force or pressing force.
Holding the booklet BT in this way reduces occurrence of deflection of the booklet BT and prevents misalignment when the booklet BT is pressed by the pressing member, thereby enabling highly accurate sheet processing.
In
The trailing-end jogger 319 includes a pivot support 401a that supports the trailing-end jogger 319 in a manner that the trailing-end jogger 319 can pivot in a predetermined range and an abutting surface 401b that abuts on and presses the fore edge of the booklet. The trailing-end jogger 319 is supported by a jogger rod 403 via the pivot support 401a. A return spring 402 is stretched between a lug on the jogger rod 403 and a lug on a rear end portion of the trailing-end jogger 319. The return spring 402 always applies an elastic force to the trailing-end jogger 319 so that the abutting surface 401b tends to be kept in an orientation in which the abutting surface 401b is perpendicular to the booklet conveying direction, in a state where trailing-end jogger 319 is supported by the pivot support 401a.
The moving mechanism includes a jogger casing 404, a rack 404a arranged on a bottom of the jogger casing 404, and a driving motor 411 that includes a driving shaft, to which a pinion 411a that meshes with the rack 404a is attached, and supplies driving power to the rack 404a. The jogger casing 404 can reciprocate in the conveying direction and supports a guide shaft 403b of the guide rod 403. According to this configuration of the moving mechanism, a guide casing 304 moves two opposite directions parallel to a booklet conveying direction D1 depending on a direction in which the motor 411 rotates. Reference symbol 403c denotes a stopper that limits a moving position of the guide shaft 403b. The stopper 403c limits a maximum advanced position of the guide rod 403 relative to the jogger casing 404 in the booklet conveying direction (direction indicated by arrow D1).
The elastic-force applying mechanism includes a three-stage elastic-force applying section that holds the guide shaft 403b projecting in a rear end portion of the guide rod 403 to elastically push the guide rod 403 in the booklet conveying direction. The elastic-force applying mechanism includes a first guide 406, a second guide 408, and a third guide 410 arranged in this order from downstream to upstream in the booklet conveying direction (direction indicated by arrow D1). A spring mount is formed in each of the first to third guides 406 to 410. A first spring 405, a second spring 407, and a third spring 409 are attached to the spring mounts of the first guide 406, that of the second guide 408, and that of the third guide 410, respectively. The first spring 405, the second spring 407, and the third spring 409 are configured to elastically push the guide rod 403, the first guide 406, and the second guide 408 in a downstream direction in the booklet conveying direction, respectively. Preset gaps GAP1, GAP2, and GAP3 are provided between the guide rod 403 and the first guide 406, between the first guide 406 and the second guide 408, and between the second guide 408 and the third guide 410, respectively.
Although the first to third springs 405, 407, and 409 and the first to third guides 406, 408, and 410 are provided in the present embodiment, first to nth (n is an integer equal to or greater than two) springs and first to nth (n is an integer equal to or greater than two) may be provided. A minimum number of the stages is two (n=2). Although three stages (n=3) are provided in the present embodiment, four or more stages (n≧4) may be provided depending on the magnitude of the pressing force required to be applied to the trailing-end jogger 319, the number of sheets in the booklet ST, sheet thickness, and/or the like.
In the skew correction device configured in this way, when the booklet BT is conveyed into the skew correction device from the upstream saddle-stitch booklet-making apparatus 2, the leading-end portion BT2 of the booklet BT abuts on the back surface of the trailing-end jogger 319, causing the trailing-end jogger 319 to pivot about the pivot support 401a in a direction indicated by arrow R1 against the elastic force exerted by the return spring 402 as illustrated in
When the booklet BT finishes passing by the trailing-end jogger 319 as illustrated in
Subsequently, the driving motor 411 is rotated in a direction indicated by arrow R3, thereby moving the trailing-end jogger 319 in the direction indicated by arrow D2 as illustrated in
When the booklet BT is pushed from the fore-edge side as illustrated in
The pressing force applied to the booklet BT depends on elastic forces of the first spring 405, the second spring 407, and the third spring 409, and positions of the first guide 406, the second guide 408, and the third guide 410. When the elastic force of the first spring 405 is approximately 0.1 to 1 N, that of the second spring 407 is approximately 1 to 3 N, that of the third spring 409 is approximately 3 to 10 N, and the number of sheets in the booklet BT is small, the driving motor 411 is rotated by an amount that causes only the first spring 305 to be elastically deformed to feed the jogger casing 404 in the conveying direction (direction indicated by arrow D1). In this case, the booklet BT is aligned with a pressing force of approximately 0.1 to 1 N.
When the number of sheets in the booklet BT is medium, a pressing force of a desired magnitude can be attained by causing the first spring 405 to finish elastic deformation to eliminate the gap GAP1 between the guide rod 403 and the first guide 406 and, furthermore, causing the second spring 407 to be elastically deformed. When the number of sheets in the booklet BT is large, a pressing force of a desired magnitude can be attained by eliminating the gap GAP1 between the guide rod 403 and the first guide 406 and the gap GAP2 between the first guide 406 and the second guide 408, and causing the third spring 409 to be elastically deformed.
Which one of the first to third springs 405, 407, and 409 is to be caused to act determined depending on the booklet information such as information about sheet thickness, sheet size, the number of sheets to be stapled, whether the sheet is made of special paper, or the like varies depending on apparatus specification. The example described above is only exemplary. The elastic forces of the first to third springs 405, 407, and 409 are also not limited to the values described above, and are changed according to the specification.
Also in this case, the CPU 351 determines which one of the first to third springs 405, 407, and 409 is to be caused to act by consulting a database that contains information about optimum spring elastic forces and which one of the springs is to be caused to act that are determined in advance using a real apparatus before shipment for each combination of the elements, such as thickness, sheet size, the number of sheets to be stapled, and paper type (special paper or the like), of each of the booklets BT that are possibly subjected to cutting by the cutting apparatus 3.
As described above, the present embodiment yields the following effects.
In the present embodiment, a pushing force is changed based on a pushing amount of the trailing-end jogger 319 to the booklet BT, when the trailing-end jogger 319 pushes the trailing-end portion, in the conveying direction, of the booklet BT toward the positioning stopper 317 to thereby cause the leading-end portion BT2 of the booklet BT to abut on the positioning stopper 317. This makes it possible to perform positioning and skew correction with an optimum pushing force depending on the number of sheets in the booklet, sheet thickness, sheet quality, or the like.
The sheet bundle in the appended claims corresponds to an element denoted by reference symbol SB in the embodiment. The booklet corresponds to an element denoted by reference symbol ST. The conveying path corresponds to an element by reference numeral 300. The positioning unit corresponds to the positioning stopper 317. The pushing force changing unit corresponds to the first to third springs 405, 407, and 409, the first to third guides 406, 408, and 410, the driving motor 411, and the CPU 351. The abutting unit corresponds to the positioning stopper 317 and the trailing-end jogger 319. The elastic-force applying unit corresponds to the first to third springs 405, 407, and 409, the guide shaft 303b, and the first to third guide members 406, 408, and 410. The first to nth (n is an integer equal to or greater than two) springs correspond to the first to third springs 405, 407, and 409. The first to nth (n is an integer equal to or greater than two) guide members correspond to the first to third guide members 406, 408, and 410. The information about the booklet pushing amount corresponds to the booklet information (information about sheet thickness, sheet size, number of sheets to be stapled, whether the sheet is made of special paper, or the like). The image forming system corresponds to the image forming apparatus PR, and the first to third sheet postprocessing apparatuses 1, 2, and 3. The third sheet processing apparatus corresponds to the cutting apparatus.
According to an aspect of the present invention, it is possible to correct skew reliably without causing misalignment or a damage such as crease, bent, and/or scratch to a booklet conveyed to a skew correction device.
Although the invention has been described with respect to specific embodiments for a complete and clear disclosure, the appended claims are not to be thus limited but are to be construed as embodying all modifications and alternative constructions that may occur to one skilled in the art that fairly fall within the basic teaching herein set forth.
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Entry |
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English language abstract for Japanese Patent Publication No. 2003-276359 published Sep. 30, 2003. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20130001849 A1 | Jan 2013 | US |