Claims
- 1. An inkjet printer for printing ink droplets onto a receiver, comprising:
a printhead having at least one nozzle for ejecting a stream of ink droplets; a droplet deflector for generating a flow of gas that impinges on said stream of ejected droplets to deflect a trajectory of said droplets, and a controller for varying the velocity of said gas flow to vary a degree of trajectory deflection for said droplets.
- 2. The inkjet printer defined in claim 1, wherein said printer is a continuous stream inkjet printer, and said printhead ejects a stream of ink droplets of different sizes, and said droplet deflector deflects said droplets of different sizes different distances.
- 3. The inkjet printer defined in claim 2, further comprising an ink gutter for catching deflected ink droplets of one of said different sizes before said droplets print onto a receiver.
- 4. The inkjet printer defined in claim 1, wherein said droplet deflector includes a tube for directing said gas flow onto impingement with said droplets and said controller includes a gas flow restrictor for varying said gas flow velocity by variably restricting said gas flow through said tube.
- 5. The inkjet printer defined in claim 4, wherein said air flow restrictor includes an expandable bladder disposed within said tube.
- 6. The inkjet printer defined in claim 5, wherein said bladder is disposed within said tube near an outlet end thereof.
- 7. The inkjet printer defined in claim 5, wherein said bladder is disposed within said tube near a central portion thereof.
- 8. The inkjet printer defined in claim 4, wherein said gas flow restrictor includes at least one movable cantilever disposed within said tube.
- 9. The inkjet printer defined in claim 8, wherein said cantilever is electrostatically moved from positions causing greater and lesser resistance to gas flow in said tube.
- 10. The inkjet printer defined in claim 8, wherein said cantilever is bimetallically moved from positions causing greater and lesser resistance to gas flow in said tube.
- 11. The inkjet printer defined in claim 4, wherein said gas flow restrictor includes at least one movable vane disposed within said tube.
- 12. The inkjet printer defined in claim 1, wherein said droplet deflector includes a tube for directing said gas flow into impingement with said droplets, and said controller includes a pressure pulse generator for varying said gas flow velocity by generating variable pressure pulses in said tube.
- 13. The inkjet printer defined in claim 12, wherein said pressure pulse generator includes a diaphragm connected to an armature for rapidly moving said diaphragm.
- 14. The inkjet printer defined in claim 13, wherein said armature is moved by a piezoelectric transducer.
- 15. The inkjet printer defined in claim 12, wherein said pressure pulse generator includes a diffuser disposed within said tube, and a vibrational mechanism for variably vibrating the tube and diffuser toward and away from said droplet stream.
- 16. The inkjet printer defined in claim 1, wherein said droplet deflector includes a tube for directing said gas flow into impingement with said droplets, and said controller includes an oscillating mechanism for variably oscillating an outlet of said tube with respect to said droplet stream.
- 17. The inkjet printer defined in claim 16, wherein said oscillating mechanism oscillates said tube in a direction substantially perpendicular to a longitudinal axis of said tube.
- 18. The inkjet printer defined in claim 16, wherein said oscillating mechanism oscillates said tube around a point on a longitudinal axis of said tube.
- 19. The inkjet printer defined in claim 1, wherein the controller varies a degree of trajectory deflection for said droplets such that droplets intended for printing on a selected pixel of a receiver are deposited substantially on top of one another.
- 20. The inkjet printer defined in claim 1, wherein said gas flow is a flow of air.
- 21. A method of operating an inkjet printer wherein ink droplets are ejected by nozzles of a printhead toward a relatively moving receiver, comprising the step of:
deflecting the trajectories of different droplets different amounts so that droplets intended to land at a particular location on said receiver all land at said location despite said relative movement between said printhead.
- 22. The method of operating an inkjet printer according to claim 21, wherein said printer is a continuous stream inkjet printer including a droplet deflector for deflecting printing droplets from non-printing droplets such that non-printing droplets are captured by a gutter, and wherein said droplet deflector is used to deflect said droplet trajectories.
- 23. The method of operating an inkjet printer according to claim 22, wherein said droplet deflector utilizes an airstream that impinges on said ink droplets, and wherein a velocity of said airstream is modulated to deflect said droplet trajectories.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] Reference is made to U.S. application Ser. No. 09/750,946, entitled Printhead Having Gas Flow Ink Droplet Separation And Method Of Diverging Ink Droplets, filed in the name of Jeanmaire and Chwalek on Dec. 28, 2000; U.S. application Ser. No. 09/751,232, entitled A Continuous Ink-Jet Printing Method And Apparatus, filed in the names of Jeanmaire and Chwalek on Dec. 28, 2000; U.S. application Ser. No. 09/751,563, entitled Ink Jet Apparatus Having Amplified Asymmetric Heating Drop Deflection, filed in the names of Chwalek, Delametter and Jeanmaire on Dec. 28, 2000; and U.S. application Ser. No. 09/777,426, entitled Continuous Inkjet Printhead and Method of Translating Ink Drops, filed in the names of Hawkins and Jeanmaire on Feb. 6, 2001.