This invention relates in general to the handling of sheet material and, more particularly, to detecting the position of a sheet within a sheet handling device.
Sheet handling devices are widely used in image reproduction systems such as analog and digital copiers and radiographic laser printers. In such devices, sequential sheets are output to one or more output bins. In the case of multiple output bins, such as sorters, the sheets are selectively deflected from a main sheet transport path into secondary sheet transport paths which branch off the main sheet transport path. In order to detect sheet jamming in one of the sheet transport paths, sheet sensors are located along the sheet transport paths to detect the presence or absence of a sheet. Typically, individual sensors are located along the main path and along each secondary path. The use of several sensors adds expense and complexity to the sorter control system. Japanese Patent Application no. 60-035163, publication date Aug. 28, 1986, inv. Michio, Japanese Patent Application no. 2000-072323, publication date Mar. 7, 2000, inv. Tomoyuki et al., Japanese Application no. 08-247677 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,325,371B, filed Aug. 31, 1999, inv. Araki et al., disclose sorters having sheet sensors which do not solve this problem.
Japanese Patent Application no. 54-124364, publication date, Apr. 28, 1981, inv. Yotaro et al. discloses a sorter having a single light source, light detector positioned to determine whether any of the sorter bins contain sheets. Once a sheet has entered any bin, the sensor is disabled and cannot detect sheet jams.
There is thus a need for a simple and inexpensive sheet detection system for a sorter that can detect sheet jams in the main sheet path and secondary sheet paths to the output bins.
According to the present invention, there is provided a solution to the problems and fulfillment of the needs discussed above.
According to a feature of the present invention, there is provided a sheet detection system comprising:
a first sheet transport for transporting a sheet along a first sheet transport path;
at least second and third sheet transports for selectively transporting a sheet transported along said first sheet transport path along second and third spaced and substantially parallel sheet transport paths which branch from said first sheet transport path;
a radiation source for emitting a beam of radiation which intersects said second and third sheet transport paths in the region where said second and third paths branch from said first path;
a radiation detector for detecting said radiation beam; and
a control for controlling said first, second and third sheet transports said radiation source and said radiation detector, such that when a sheet which is transported along said first sheet transport path by said first sheet transport is caused to be transported along one of said second or third transport paths, interruption or lack of interruption of said radiation beam by said sheet is detected by said radiation detector to indicate whether said sheet has or has not been transported along said one path.
The invention has the following advantages.
1. The sorter sensor system is simple and inexpensive.
2. A single radiation source/radiation sensor is used to monitor the movement of sheet to many outputs.
In general, the present invention is applicable to sheet handling devices which have a number of sheet transport paths either branching from a common path to sorting bins, such as in a sorter used with the output of image reproduction apparatus (radiographic laser printers) or from a number of sources of sheet media which merge into a single sheet transport path, such as sheet media supply stations used at the input to image reproduction apparatus. In the following description, there will be described a sheet sensing system used in a sheet sorter system.
Referring now to
According to the present invention, sheet detection system includes a radiation (light) source 48 which emits a beam of radiation 50 which is detected by radiation detector 52. In this example, radiation beam 50 is substantially parallel to sheet transport path 22 and intersects sheet transport paths 40, 42, etc., substantially perpendicular to paths 40, 42, etc. in the region where such paths branch from path 22. Sheets transported along paths 40, 42, etc., cannot be completely transparent to radiation from source 48 since the presence or absence of a sheet along a path is detected by the radiation blocking effect of a sheet.
It is to be understood that radiation beam 50 need not be parallel to the first transport path. As shown in
Referring now to
The sheet detection system of the invention can detect whether a sheet is delivered successfully to a branched sheet transport path or not. As shown in
Referring now to
Timing diagram I of
By positioning the beam of light very close to the sheet exits, there is little or no chance that a failure could occur after the trailing edge of the sheet passed through the light beam.
The control system can calibrate the system by reading the light sensor output when the beam is unobstructed, both with the light source on and with the light source off. It will than compute a threshold value somewhere between those two readings. Any time the light detector reports a level less than that threshold, a sheet is intersecting the beam. This calibration procedure will compensate for changes in the intensity of the light source, changes in the sensitivity of the light detector, changes to the geometry of the optical path, and variations in ambient light.
The light source 48 can be any device that emits light of any spectrum. Some such devices are incandescent bulbs and light emitting diodes.
The light sensor 52 can be any device that can detect the intensity of the light source. Photocells, phototransistors, and photomultiplier tubes are examples of devices that could be used.
The control systems 54, 56 could be implemented with discrete electronics, programmed logic devices, a microcomputer, or other programmable things.
The invention has been described in detail with particular reference to certain preferred embodiments thereof, but it will be understood that variations and modifications can be effected within the spirit and scope of the invention.
| Number | Name | Date | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3815897 | Hoehl et al. | Jun 1974 | A |
| 4919027 | Littleton | Apr 1990 | A |
| 5580045 | Matsumoto et al. | Dec 1996 | A |
| 6325371 | Araki et al. | Dec 2001 | B1 |
| Number | Date | Country |
|---|---|---|
| 54-124364 | Apr 1981 | JP |
| 60-035163 | Aug 1986 | JP |
| 08-247677 | Apr 1998 | JP |
| 2000-072323 | Mar 2000 | JP |
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20040100019 A1 | May 2004 | US |