When scanning nozzles in a die, multiple drop detection sensors or a larger and wider drop detection sensor are often used. The nozzles are instructed to fire and the drop detection sensor(s) are configured to measure ink fired from the nozzles with a light beam emitted from the drop detection sensor(s).
Various features and advantages of the disclosed embodiments will be apparent from the detailed description which follows, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, which together illustrate, by way of example, features of the disclosed embodiments.
As illustrated in
As noted above, the printing machine 100 includes a sheet advance system 150 which advances media on the printing machine 100 using a rotor and/or an additional moving mechanism under an image printing system 140 to print images and/or patterns on the media. Additionally, as illustrated in
As illustrated in
A drop detection sensor 180 is a device coupled to additional moving platform 190 on the printing machine 100 that is configured to detect an emission or firing of nozzles from on the print array 160 utilizing a beam light. In one embodiment, additional drop detections sensors are utilized separately or in conjunction with the drop detection sensor 180. In one embodiment, additional moving platform 190 is instructed by a nozzle health application 110 to reposition the drop detection sensor 180 orthogonally or in parallel under firing nozzles so that the drop detection sensor 180 scans and measures ink drops for the nozzle health application 110 to analyze and store.
As noted above and illustrated in
The nozzle health application 110 is firmware that is embedded onto the print controller or the printing machine 100. In other embodiments, the nozzle health application 110 is a software application stored on the printer machine 100 through a storage medium readable and accessible by the printing machine 100 or the nozzle health application 110 is stored on a computer readable memory or medium readable and accessible by the printing machine 100 from a different location. The nozzle health application 110 communicates with the print controller and/or other additional devices and/or components connected to the printing machine 100 physically or wirelessly through one or more communication channels included in or attached to the printing machine 100.
As noted above, the nozzle health application 110 analyzes and stores a nozzle health for the nozzles on the print array 160 by instructing nozzles on the print array 160 to fire and instructing a drop detection sensor 180 to scan the ink fired from the nozzles. In analyzing and storing a nozzle health the nozzles in the print array 160, the nozzle health application 110 initially subsets the nozzles on the print array 160 into sets of nozzles to scan.
In one embodiment, the sets of nozzles subsetted by the nozzle health application 110 have a fixed size that is previously defined by the nozzle health application 110. Additionally, the number of nozzles included in the sets (the size of the set) is based on a rate of firing for nozzles in the dies 165 and a speed variability of the rate of firing for nozzles in the print array 165. Once the print array 160 has been subsetted, the nozzle health application 110 proceeds to determine a location of the drop detection sensor 180 and which set of nozzles in the print array 160 to scan.
The nozzle health application 110 determines a current position of the drop detection sensor 180 by scanning the storage memory or a digital map of nozzles 120 on the printing machine 100 for a last know recorded position in memory. In other embodiments, the nozzle health application 110 determines the current position by instructing the nozzles in the print array 160 to refresh by firing the nozzles and scanning the digital map 120 for hits. Additionally, the position of the drop detection sensor 180 is determined using an encoder strip in conjunction with a sensor (not shown).
The digital map of nozzles 120 is a binary map indicating a position of the nozzles in the print array. In other embodiments, additional memory maps and/or storage devices are used to store positions of nozzles. As a result, the nozzle health application 110 has knowledge of which nozzle is firing at what time utilizing the digital map 120 of nozzles in order to accurately identify the location of the drop detection sensor 180. In other embodiments, additional moving platform 190 is linked to a grid, not shown, and the position and movement of the moving platform is monitored by the nozzle health application 110.
After determining the current position, the nozzle health application 110 identifies a set of nozzles from the print array 160 that has not been scanned by polling the storage memory or scanning the digital map 120. The nozzle health application 110 proceeds to update the drop detection sensor 180 position when a set of nozzles has been identified to not have been scanned. Additionally, the nozzle health application 110 will identify the first nozzle, the last nozzle, and the nozzles in between the first nozzle and the last nozzle, from the set of nozzles to scan.
In one embodiment, the nozzle health application 110 synchronizes the drop detection sensor 180 with a set of nozzles identified to be scanned by sending an instruction for additional moving platform 190 to position and align a beam light outputted from the drop detection sensor 180 under a first nozzle of the set of nozzles. In another embodiment, the nozzle health application 110 synchronizes the drop detection sensor 180 with the set of nozzles by configuring moving platform 170 to reposition the print array 160 so that the first nozzle of the set of nozzles is aligned over the beam light from the drop detection sensor 180.
Once the first nozzle is aligned of the beam light from the drop detection sensor 180, the synchronized position has been reached and the nozzle health application 110 determines a synchronized speed for additional moving platform 190 to advance the drop detection sensor 180 and/or moving platform 170 to reposition the print array 160 over the drop detection sensor 180. In one embodiment, the synchronized speed is constant if the rate of firing for the nozzles in the set of nozzles is constant and a distance between the nozzles is constant. In other embodiments, the synchronized speed is variable when the rate and/or speed of firing for the nozzles in the set of nozzles are different from one other.
In one embodiment, the synchronized speed is determined in consideration of at least one from the group consisting of a rate and speed of firing for nozzles in the set of nozzles, a distance between nozzles in the set of nozzles, a total number of nozzles in the set of nozzles, a width and/or length of the beam light emitted from the drop detection sensor, an amount of time to refresh nozzles in the set of nozzles, and/or a speed and position tolerance of at least one moving platform 170, 190.
The rate and speed of firing includes an amount of time for ink to be emitted from nozzles from the set of nozzles and a time difference between the firings of the nozzles in the set of nozzles. In one embodiment, the distance between the nozzles in the set of nozzles is determined by measuring a distance the drop detection sensor 180 travels when moving from one nozzle to another. In one embodiment, the nozzle health application 110 determines the rate and speed of firing. In other embodiments, a user defines the rate and speed of firing. Further, a nozzle set length is calculated by accumulating a length of the nozzles in the set of nozzles and a distance between the nozzles in the set of nozzles. The synchronized speed is determined in consideration of additional factors in addition to and/or in lieu of those noted above.
In one embodiment, an average synchronized speed is determined utilizing the following formula: Nozzle set length/[(Rate and speed of firing of the nozzles in the set of nozzle)*(Number of nozzles in set of nozzles)+Amount of time to refresh the nozzles in the set].
Further, in another embodiment, a max synchronized speed is determined utilizing the following formula: [Nozzle set length+(A width of the beam light from the drop detection sensor/2)]/[(Rate and speed of firing of the nozzles in the set of nozzle)*(Number of nozzles in set of nozzles)+Amount of time to refresh the nozzles in the set].
Additionally, a minimum synchronized speed is determined utilizing the following formula: [Nozzle set length−(A width of the beam light from the drop detection sensor/2)]/[(Rate and speed of firing of the nozzles in the set of nozzle)*(Number of nozzles in set of nozzles)+Amount of time to refresh the nozzles in the set].
In other embodiments, the nozzle health application 110 utilizes additional formulas to determine the synchronized speed. In instructing at least one moving platform 170, 190 to reposition, the nozzle health application 110 may utilize any of above noted, average, max, or minimum synchronized speeds. Additionally, the synchronized speed is further adjusted in consideration of a speed and position tolerance of at least one moving platform 170, 190. Further, in one embodiment, the rate of firing for the nozzles in the set of nozzles is also modified in consideration of a speed and position tolerance of at least one moving platform 170, 190.
After determining the synchronized speed, the nozzle health application 110 refreshes the set of nozzles by pre-firing the nozzles in the set of nozzles to be scanned. The nozzles are refreshed simultaneously before the drop detection sensor 180 begins to scan a set of nozzles. After the nozzles have been refreshed, the nozzle health application 110 proceeds to instruct the first nozzle of the set of nozzles to fire over the drop detection sensor 180 and through a beam light emitted from the drop detection sensor 180. The drop detection sensor takes signal measurements from the beam light for the nozzle health application 110 to analyze.
In one embodiment, once measurements have been taken from the firing of the first nozzle, the nozzle health application 110 instructs the additional moving platform 190 to reposition the drop detection sensor 180 to scan and measure subsequent nozzles in the set of nozzles at the synchronized speed following a direction orthogonal or parallel to firing nozzles. In other embodiments, the nozzle health application 110 instructs both moving platform 170 and additional moving platform 190 to reposition the print array 160 and the drop detection sensor 180 at the synchronized speed following a direction orthogonal or parallel to one another so that the drop detection sensor 180 will be aligned to receive and scan ink fired from subsequent nozzles in the set of nozzles.
The speed that at least one moving platform 170, 190 moves is synchronized when ink fired from the nozzles in the set of nozzles is received by the beam light on the drop detection sensor 180 while at least one moving platform 170, 190 is being repositioned. In addition, while scanning and measuring ink drops from subsequent nozzles in the set, the nozzle health application 110 concurrently analyzes the measurements from the first nozzle scanned and/or any additional nozzles already scanned to identify a corresponding nozzle health for the scanned nozzles. In another embodiment, the nozzle health application 110 postpones analyzing and identifying corresponding nozzle health of the scanned nozzles for a future time or until all of the nozzles in the set of nozzles have been scanned.
In analyzing the measurements, in one embodiment, the nozzle health application 110 compares measurement values to values stored or accessible by the printing machine 100 indicating that the nozzles are functioning correctly. If the compared measurements are outside a tolerance of the stored values, the nozzle health application 100 determines that the nozzle is not functioning correctly and need to be replaced or have maintenance performed on the corresponding nozzle. In other embodiments, the nozzle health application 110 stores these results in a storage device and/or computer readably memory on the printing machine and/or a device accessible by the printing machine 100 for future use.
After scanning and measuring the nozzle health of the last nozzle in the set of nozzles, the nozzle health application 110 determines whether the health of the nozzles in the set of nozzles was identified and whether there are any additional sets of nozzles in the print array that have not been scanned. The nozzle health application scans the digital map of nozzles to determine whether each nozzle has a corresponding nozzle health stored. In one embodiment, if the nozzle health application 110 determines that one or more nozzle health of previously scanned nozzles in the set were not able to be identified, the nozzle health application 110 instructs the moving platform 170 or additional moving platform 190 to reposition so that the drop detection sensor 180 is under the corresponding nozzles whose health was not identified. The nozzle health application then instructs the corresponding nozzle to re-fire and the drop detection sensor 180 to rescan and measure the ink fired.
Additionally, as noted above, the nozzles on the print array 240 are subsetted into one or more sets of nozzles 200 by a nozzle health application. A set of nozzles 200 is a group of nozzles that includes less than all of the nozzles on the print array 240. As illustrated in
Further, as illustrated in
As illustrated in
In the present embodiment, the nozzle health application sends an instruction for the moving platform 250 to align the first nozzle in the identified set of nozzles 230 to be scanned at the synchronization point and determine a synchronized speed to reposition the moving platform 250 using one of the formulas disclosed above, over the drop detection sensor 210, and fire. The nozzle health application then instructs the moving platform 250 to continually reposition to the left following a direction parallel to the drop detection sensor 210 so that the subsequent nozzles in the set of nozzles 200 which are about to fire are aligned over the drop detection sensor 210 when firing. The moving platform 250 is configured by the nozzle health application to repeat this repositioning to the left at the synchronized speed and firing until the last nozzle of the set of nozzles 200 has fired into the beam light of the drop detection sensor 210. As noted above, the nozzle health application scans the ink drops and determines a corresponding nozzle health for the nozzles in the identified set of nozzles to scan. Further, as noted above, the nozzle health application stores the corresponding nozzles health to memory.
As illustrated in
Additionally, as noted above, the synchronized speed is determined using one of the formulas disclosed above or using additional formulas in consideration of a rate and speed of firing from nozzles in the set of nozzles 320, a distance between nozzles in the set of nozzles 310, a total number of nozzles in the set of nozzles (6 in the present embodiment), a width and/or length of the beam light emitted from the drop detection sensor 350, an amount of time to refresh nozzles (amount of time in firing every nozzle in the set of nozzles 300), and/or a speed and position tolerance of moving platform 340.
As illustrated in
Further, as illustrated in
With the repositioning of the drop detection sensor 330 at the synchronized speed, time spent in scanning nozzles is saved in not waiting until ink from the first nozzle has been scanned before additional nozzles from the set of nozzles 300 begin firing. Additionally, with the repositioning of the drop detection sensor 330 and/or a print array at the synchronized speed, the drop detection sensor 330 is positioned below the corresponding firing nozzles to scan the corresponding inks with the beam light.
The nozzle health application continues to instruct additional moving platform 340 to reposition and advance the drop detection sensor 330 following the direction and flow of subsequent firings to scan and measure the nozzle health for the subsequent nozzles in the set of nozzles 300. Once the nozzle health of the last nozzle in the set of nozzles has been determined and stored in memory, the nozzle health application determines whether the nozzle health of the nozzles in the set of nozzles has been identified.
If not, the nozzle health application sends an instruction for the moving platform 340 to reposition the drop detection sensor 330 under a nozzle whose health was not identified and configures the corresponding nozzle to re-fire. In one embodiment, the nozzle health application determines that the nozzle health of the first nozzle in the set of nozzles 300 was not identified and the nozzle health application instructs the drop detection sensor 330 to reposition to the first nozzle and instruct the first nozzle to refire.
Further, as noted above, in one embodiment, the nozzle health application 410 is firmware that is imbedded into one or more components of the printing machine 400. In another embodiment, the nozzle health application 410 is a software application which is stored and accessed from a hard drive, a compact disc, a flash disk, a network drive or any other form of computer readable medium that is coupled to the printing machine 100. In other embodiments, the nozzle health application 410 is stored and accessed from additional devices in addition to and/or in lieu of those noted above and depicted in
In one embodiment, in identifying a health of a nozzle, the nozzle health application initially identifies a set of nozzles in a print array to scan. After choosing the set of nozzles to scan, the nozzle health application instructs at least one moving platform to align a drop detection sensor and a first nozzle of the set of nozzles so as to synchronize with the set of nozzles. As noted above, the drop detection sensor is aligned when a beam light emitted from the drop detection sensor is under a first nozzle of the set of nozzles to scan. Once the drop detection sensor is in place, the nozzle health application repositions at least one moving platform at a synchronized speed so that the drop detection sensor scans the nozzles in a set of nozzles firing 500. As noted above, at least one moving platform will continue to reposition until the last nozzle in the set of nozzles has been scanned.
While scanning nozzles in the set of nozzles, the nozzle health application analyzes and stores the health of the nozzles in a computer readable memory accessible by a machine 510. In other embodiments, the nozzle health application analyzes and stores the nozzle heaths at a later time or once all of the nozzles from the set have been scanned. The method is then be complete, or the nozzle health application proceeds to instruct the moving platform to reposition the drop detection sensor at the next synchronized position of the next set of nozzles to scan and repeat the method disclosed above. In other embodiments, the method for identifying a health of a nozzle includes additional steps in addition to and/or in lieu of those noted above and illustrated in
As illustrated in
In scanning the nozzles, the nozzle health application initially determines a current position of the drop detection sensor by pre-firing nozzles or scanning a digital map of nozzles 610. As noted above, in one embodiment, the nozzle health application scans a memory on a printing machine for the last know position or instructs the nozzles to refresh by firing the nozzles and examining a digital map of nozzles. Once the position of the drop detection sensor has been identified the nozzle health application synchronizes the drop detector with the set of nozzles by instructing at least one moving platform to reposition and align a beam light from the drop detection sensor under a first nozzle of the set of nozzles 620.
Once at least one moving platform has aligned at the synchronized point, the nozzle health application calculates a synchronized speed for the moving platform to advance the drop detection. As noted above, in one embodiment, the synchronized speed is based on at least one from the group consisting of a rate and speed of firing of nozzles in the set of nozzles, a distance between nozzles in the set of nozzles, a total number of nozzles in the set of nozzles, a width and/or length of the beam light emitted from the drop detection sensor, an amount of time to refresh nozzles in the set of nozzles, and/or a speed and position tolerance of at least one moving platform 630.
After identifying the synchronization speed, the nozzle health application refreshes the set of nozzles by pre-firing the nozzles in the set of nozzles and instructs the drop detection sensor to scan and measure a health of the first nozzle 640. As noted above, the drop detection sensor emits a beam light from one end to the other end of the drop detection sensor. Additionally, in scanning and measuring the health of a nozzle, the nozzle health application instructs the corresponding nozzle, to fire so that ink from the corresponding nozzle passes through the beam light and is analyzed by the nozzle health application.
Once the first nozzle from the set of nozzles has been fired and the beam light has scanned and measured the firing, the nozzle health application instructs at least one moving platform to reposition the print array and/or the drop detection sensor such that the drop detection sensor scans and measures the health of subsequent nozzles firing in the set of nozzles following an orthogonal or parallel direction 650. As noted above, at least one moving platform will reposition at the synchronized speed until a last nozzle in the set of nozzles has been scanned 650. In one embodiment the rate of firing is modified based on a speed or position tolerance of at least one moving platform.
In repositioning the drop detection sensor, the nozzle health application instructs the moving platform to reposition the drop detection sensor following a direction orthogonal to the direction and/or flow of firing from the set of nozzles according to an embodiment of the invention. In other embodiments, the nozzle health application instructs both the moving platform and an additional moving platform to reposition the drop detection sensor and the print array following a direction that is parallel to the direction and/or flow of firing.
While continuing to scan any un-scanned nozzles in the set of nozzles, the nozzle health application identifies a corresponding nozzle health of nozzles in the set of nozzles based on corresponding firing results from the drop detection sensor 660. In other embodiments, the nozzle health application identifies the corresponding nozzle health of the nozzles in the set after all of the nozzles from the set of nozzles have been scanned by the drop detection sensor. In identifying a corresponding nozzle health of the nozzles, the nozzle health application analyzes and stores the health of the nozzles in a computer readable memory accessible by a printing machine and concurrently rescans any nozzles in the set of nozzles if the health of the nozzle health application determines that the corresponding nozzle was not identified 670.
While identifying the corresponding nozzle health of the scanned nozzles, in one embodiment, the nozzle health application concurrently determines whether the nozzle health of all of the nozzles in set of nozzles has been identified before advancing to scan additional set of nozzles 680. The method is then complete or the nozzle health application proceeds to any additional un-scanned set of nozzles and continue to identify the corresponding health of the nozzles utilizing the method disclosed above.
By determining a synchronized speed to reposition at least one moving platform when scanning nozzles in a set of nozzles, at least one moving platform is repositioned at the synchronized speed so that the nozzles in the set of nozzles are scanned. As a result, resources and time are saved in not using a larger drop detection sensor or multiple drop detection sensors. Further, down time is decreased by not trouble shooting multiple drop detection sensors or a larger drop detection sensor.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5627571 | Anderson et al. | May 1997 | A |
7163275 | Yeh et al. | Jan 2007 | B2 |
20070064041 | Sugahara | Mar 2007 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2006110964 | Apr 2006 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100289846 A1 | Nov 2010 | US |