The description refers to a spittoon system for a printing mechanism and a printer. It further refers a method for purging printing fluid residue received in a spitting process from a printing mechanism.
Examples will be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which corresponding reference numerals indicate corresponding parts and in which:
In a service routine of a printing mechanism, the nozzles of its print-head are refreshed by firing a number of drops of printing fluid through each of the nozzles in a process known as “spitting” with the residue printing fluid being collected in a “spittoon” reservoir portion of the service station.
When spitting printing fluid onto the bottom of a reservoir, over a period of time the rapidly solidifying printing fluid residue grows into a stalagmite of printing fluid residue. This stalagmite might contact the print-head and thereby interfere print quality or contributes to clog the nozzles.
The cover part 12 of the reservoir 10 has a spit-through opening 13 through which printing fluid is spit from the print-head onto the first zone 40 of the bottom part 11 during a print-head spitting process. In some examples, the cover part 12 includes a plurality of spit-through openings 13 each one corresponding to one of a plurality of print-heads of a page-wide array (PWA) printing mechanism. In some examples, the cover part 12 includes only one spit-through opening 13 corresponding to the single print-head of a wide nozzle array printing mechanism. In some examples, the cover part 12 includes a plurality of spit-through openings 13 each one corresponding to one nozzle group of a plurality of nozzle groups of a PWA printing mechanism.
In some examples, the cover-part 12 comprises two spit-through opening zones extending along the longitudinal direction where spit-through openings 13 are located. The two spit-through opening zones are separated in a direction transverse to the longitudinal direction by a spacer zone lying between the two spit-through opening zones. In the spacer zone, no spit-through openings 13 are located. The spacer zone runs along the longitudinal direction above a belt 22 (shown in
The cover part 12 includes a U-shaped clamping element 17 and a flat sealing element 18. The legs of the U-shaped clamping element 17 embrace the outer surfaces of the sidewall portions 15 of the bottom part 11. In some examples, the U-shaped clamping element 17 is adhered to the bottom part 11 by a double self-adhesive foam. In other examples, the U-shaped clamping element 17 is screwed with the sidewall portions 15 of the bottom part 11. The U-shaped clamping element 17 is made of a resilient material, in particular of sheet metal. In some examples, the U-shaped clamping element 17 is made of plastic material.
The flat sealing element 18 is attached to the outer surface of the base of the U-shaped clamping element 17. In some examples, clips being made of plastic are used to attach both elements 17, 18. The flat sealing element 18 is made of rubber material. During the spitting process, the flat sealing element 18 tightly abuts the print-heads, i.e. the rubber material of the flat sealing element 18 is formed such that the spit-through openings 13 are complementary to the print-heads. In some examples, the flat sealing element 18 is formed such that it abuts the print-heads in an airtight manner during the spitting process. The spit-through openings 13 are formed through the base of the U-shaped clamping element 17 and the flat sealing element 18. In some examples, the flat sealing element 18 comprises sealing lips 19 that protrudes at the circumferences of the spit-through openings 13 from the outer surface of the flat sealing element 18 and abuts the print-heads during the spitting process. The provision of such sealing lips 19 allows the closing of gaps between the flat sealing element 18 and the print-heads during the spitting process. Thus, aerosol particles existing in the reservoir 10 cannot escape through the spit-through openings 13.
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The two face sides of the cleaning carriage 21 extending transverse to the longitudinal direction form its scraping sides 27. The cleaning carriage 21 has a scraper roof 28, a spring 25, a seal 26, and a pusher 24. The width of the cleaning carriage 21, in particular of its scraping sides 27 corresponds to the width of the bottom part 11. The cleaning carriage, in particular the bottom edge of its scraping sides 27 is formed to fit with the inner surface of the bottom part 11. Similarly, the seal 26 is coupled to the cleaning carriage 21 to fit with the inner surface of the bottom part 11. The spring 25 is loaded between the pusher 24 and the seal 26. The seal 26 engages the bottom part 11, and the pusher 24 engages a portion of the reservoir 10 to produce, loaded by the spring 25, a contact pressure between the seal 26 and the bottom part 11 of the reservoir 10.
In some examples, the sidewall portions 15 of the bottom part 11 have pusher-engaging portions 16 with respective inner surfaces facing the inner surface of the floor portion 14. In these examples, the pusher 24 engages the inner surfaces of the pusher-engaging portions 16, and the seal 26 engages the floor portion 14 of the bottom part 11. Thus, the pre-loading force exerted by the spring 25 and acting between the seal 26 and the pusher 24 ensures that no printing fluid residue passes through the gap between the cleaning carriage 21 and the bottom part 11.
In some examples, two seals 26, two scraper roofs 28, two springs 25 and one pusher 24 are part of the cleaning carriage 21 assembly. In some examples, each of the two scraping sides 27 extends over the width of the floor portion 14. Further, each of the two seals 26 is arranged next to its respective scraping side 27, i.e. the two seals 26 are spaced apart by almost the length of the cleaning carriage 21. In some examples, the two springs 25 are installed in the middle region of the cleaning carriage 21, arranged on opposite transverse sides of the cleaning carriage 21. Each of the two scraper roofs 28 is attached at the respective scraping side 27 to the cleaning carriage 21 and covers at least in part the cleaning carriage 21. In some examples, the scraper roof 28 covers at least in part the scraping sides 27 and the upper side of the cleaning carriage 21. In some examples, the upper surface of the scraper roof 28 is generally flat to prevent abrasion of the upper strand of the belt 22 running above the upper side of the cleaning carriage. The two ends of the lower strand of the belt 22 that are fixed to the opposite scraping sides 27 of the cleaning carriage 21, are lead through respective protrusions of the two scraper roofs 28 which cover the connection of the belt ends to the cleaning carriage 21. Similar to the two springs 25, the pusher 24 is installed in the middle region of the cleaning carriage 21. The pusher 24 forms part of the upper side of the cleaning carriage 21, where the pusher 24 is upwardly connected to the springs 25. When the cleaning carriage 21 is installed in the reservoir 10, the pusher 24 is clamped in between the pusher-engaging portions 15 and the floor portion 14 of the bottom part 11 of the reservoir 10. It thereby compresses the two springs 25, leading to a vertical pre-loading force which produces contact pressure between the two seals 26 and the bottom part 11 of the reservoir.
The cleaning carriage 21 is connected to the belt 22 of the belt drive mechanism 52. In some examples, the belt 22 is connected to one scraping side 27 of the cleaning carriage 21 by a pin mounted to this scraping side 27 and to the other scraping side 27 via a belt clamp end of the belt 22 connected to a spring 29, such as a traction spring, mounted to this scraping side 27.
In the above example, the belt 22 of the spittoon system 20 is an open belt, i.e. the (traction) spring 29 is used as tensioner of the belt. The belt 22 runs inside the reservoir 10 in longitudinal direction of the bottom part 11, and is driven by the drive mechanism 52. The latter one has a driven pulley 54 to apply a traction force to the cleaning carriage 21, which is transmitted depending on the cleaning carriage running direction either via the pin or via the traction spring 29 to the cleaning carriage 21. In some examples, the belt 22 is a toothed belt for the driven pulley 54 being able to provide sufficient traction force. The belt drive mechanism 52 selectively drives the belt 22 in both directions, and thereby moves the cleaning carriage 21 in both directions along the bottom part 11 of the reservoir 10 to clean the floor portion 14 and the sidewall portions 15 from printing fluid residue. In some examples, the belt 22 is arranged inside the reservoir 10 to run along a section that is not exposed to residue printing fluid spit into the reservoir 10 during the spitting process. In some examples, the belt 22 is located inside the reservoir 10 below the spacer zone of the cover part 12 running along the longitudinal direction. In other examples (not shown), in which no spacer zone exists (e.g. due to the arrangement of the print-heads in the PWA printing mechanism), two parallel belts are provided each one running close to the respective sidewall 15 of the bottom part underneath a respective zone of the cover part 12 with no spit-through openings.
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The second zone 30 has a drain outlet 32 to drain the printing fluid residue from the reservoir 10. Further, in some examples, the drain outlet 32 is connected via a drain tube 36 to a drain collector 34.
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The driven pulley 54 of the belt drive mechanism 52 is located in the third zone 50 of the bottom part 11 to drive the belt 22. The driven pulley 54 is rotated by a splined shaft having its driven gear 58 located outside of the reservoir 10. A drive (not shown) meshes the driven gear 58 for selectively driving the belt 22 in the two directions. Further, a baffle 56 is located between the driven pulley 54 and the first zone 40 to prevent the printing fluid residue received in the first zone 40 during the spitting process from leaking to the driven pulley 54. The baffle 56 of the third zone 50 is made of a rubber material and its shape is adapted to the inner surface of the bottom part 11, i.e. the baffle 56 is formed to precisely fit into the bottom part 11 of the reservoir 10. In some examples, the baffle 56 is a massive rubber part. In some examples, the baffle 56 has a passage to allow the belt 22 running through it.
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In some examples, the cover part 12 has an airflow window 60 which allows air flowing into the reservoir 10 during spitting or purge process. In some examples, the airflow window 60 is arranged adjacent to the spit-through openings 13. In some examples, the airflow window 60 is located in longitudinal direction opposite to the drain outlet 32. In some examples, two airflow windows 60 are formed in the cover part 12. The spittoon system 20 further includes a suction fan (not shown), wherein the suction fan is connected to the drain outlet 32 to create an airflow in the longitudinal direction from the airflow window 60 through the reservoir 10 to the drain collector 34. Thus, the suction ensures the aerosol present in the reservoir 10 immediately after the spitting process to be transported to a fan filter. This airflow inside the reservoir 10 and the rubber parts of the flat sealing element 18 ensuring an airtight abutment to the print-heads renders the printer compliant against parallelism errors.
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In block 72, aerosol particles existing inside the reservoir 10 are exhausted by a suction fan connected to the drain outlet 32. In some examples, an airflow window 60 is located in the cover part 12 at the third zone 50 to allow air flowing into the reservoir 10. The suction fan (not shown) is mounted at the drain outlet 32 and produces when activated an airflow from the airflow window 60 through the first zone 40 to the second zone 30 of the reservoir 10. In some examples, the suction fan is connected to the drain collector 34 through the drain tube 36. The suction fan includes a waste fan filter to filter the aerosol particles from the air. The airflow inside the reservoir makes the spittoon system compliant against parallelism errors.
In block 74, the cleaning carriage 21 arranged inside the reservoir 10 and coupled to the drive mechanism 52 slides along the bottom part 11 to clean its V-shaped floor portion 14 and its two vertical sidewall portions 15. In some examples, the cleaning carriage 21 slides from the first longitudinal end of the reservoir 10 to the second longitudinal end of the reservoir 10 and back. In some examples, the cleaning carriage 21 moves from the third zone 50 through the first zone 40 to the second zone 30 each time the print-heads have spitted onto the first zone 40 of the bottom part 11. As the cleaning carriage 21 has not to be in continuous movement, the lifetime of the spittoon system is increased.
By sliding the cleaning carriage 21 along the bottom part 10, the spit printing fluid residue is transferred, as in block 74, from the first zone 40 of the bottom part 11 to a second zone 30 of the bottom part 11 of the reservoir 10. In some examples, the cleaning carriage 21 is formed to clean the floor portion 14 and the sidewall portions 15 of the reservoir 10 from printing fluid residue received during the spitting of the print-head. The second zone 30 serves as a drain collector 34 which is to collect the printing fluid residue transferred from the first zone 40 by the cleaning carriage 21. This allows collecting the printing fluid residue spit by all print-heads in one shot and later moving it to a waste container coupled to the drain collector 34. In some examples, the cleaning cycle can be done simultaneously a job is being printed.
In block 76, the printing fluid residue from the second zone 30 of the reservoir 10 is drained through the drain outlet 32 into a waste container. The floor portion 14 of the second zone 30 is formed to assist the collected printing fluid residue to flow out of the reservoir 10 through the drain outlet 32. In some examples, this floor portion 14 is formed as a ramp running into the vertical drain tube 36. Thus, the collected printing fluid residue flows down the ramp by gravity and out of the reservoir 10 through the drain tube 36. In some examples, a waste container is fixed to the drain outlet 32 to receive the printing fluid residue flown down by gravity. In some examples, the waste container is consumable that can be replaced periodically.
While several examples have been described in detail, it is to be understood that the disclosed examples may be modified. Therefore, the foregoing description is to be considered non-limiting.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2015/001160 | 6/9/2015 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2016/198083 | 12/15/2016 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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WO-2016198083 | Dec 2016 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20180126734 A1 | May 2018 | US |