This disclosure relates generally to devices for handling substrates in printers prior to printing the substrates, and more particularly, to de-skewing the substrates prior to printing in such printers.
Accurate and reliable registration of substrate media as the media travel in a process direction through the printer are important for the production of quality images. Even a slight skew or misalignment of the substrate media as the substrate passes the printheads for image formation can lead to image and color registration errors. As substrate processing speeds increase, nip assemblies or belts used to correct skew and adjust for lateral registration of the substrate media intensify the force applied by the rollers in these assemblies so the skew and lateral registration can be corrected within the decreasing time provided for such correction. The force applied by the rollers may wrinkle, tear, or buckle medium and light-weight substrate media. Accordingly, a printer that can register images on substrates and de-skew substrate media before printing in these high-speed printing systems without applying forces that can wrinkle, tear, or buckle the substrate media would be beneficial.
A new printer includes a mechanical de-skewing device and an electronic image registration system to handle substrates efficiently prior to printing to increase the speed of substrate printing beyond that achieved with printers that use mechanical devices to both de-skew and laterally register images on substrates. The printer includes a mechanical de-skewing device configured to identify an amount of skew in an incoming substrate and to remove the identified amount of skew from the incoming substrate to de-skew the substrate, and an electronic lateral registration system configured to identify a lateral position of the de-skewed substrate in a print zone and send image data only to inkjets that correspond to a width of the de-skewed substrate at the identified lateral position of the de-skewed substrate in the print zone.
A method of printer operation mechanically de-skews substrates and electronical registers images on the substrates to increase the speed of printing to that achieved by printers that use mechanical devices for both de-skewing and laterally registering images on the substrates. The method includes identifying with a mechanical de-skewing device an amount of skew in an incoming substrate, removing with the mechanical de-skewing device the identified amount of skew from the incoming substrate to de-skew the substrate, identifying with an electronic lateral registration system a lateral position of the de-skewed substrate in a cross-process direction in a print zone, and sending with the controller image data only to inkjets that correspond to a width of the de-skewed substrate at the identified lateral position of the de-skewed substrate in the print zone.
The foregoing aspects and other features of a printer that includes a mechanical de-skewing substrate device and an electronic image registration system to increase the speed of printing beyond what can be achieved with printers that use mechanical devices to both de-skew substrates and laterally register images on the substrates are explained in the following description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawings.
For a general understanding of the present embodiments, reference is made to the drawings. In the drawings, like reference numerals have been used throughout to designate like elements.
The system 100 limits the processing speed of the substrates in the printer and applies significant forces to the substrates to perform the simultaneous correction of skew and lateral offset. These forces can be capable of wrinkling, buckling, or tearing the lighter weight substrates. This type of de-skewing and image registering system is a mechanical system because while electronic sensors and a controller are used to detect the edges of substrates, the physical de-skewing and lateral registration is performed with mechanical components that realign and shift the substrates.
To address the issues arising from the system 100, de-skewing has been decoupled from lateral image registration so the de-skewing can be performed mechanically and the image registration be performed electronically without having to shift the position of the substrate after de-skewing has occurred. The new system 200 is shown in
The controller 212 is configured with programmed instructions stored in a memory operatively connected to the controller 212 and the execution of these instructions by the controller enables the controller to receive signals generated by photoelectric sensors and CCD devices as described above with regard to
Once the substrate is de-skewed, the controller 212 uses CCD sensor data to identify the lateral position of the substrate and the process direction path of the substrate into and through the print zone 224. As used in this document, “print zone” means an area aligned with the process direction of a substrate in which an ink image is either transferred to or printed directly on the substrate. The print zone 224 is an area in which an image generator 216 forms an ink image on the de-skewed substrate. In some printers, the image generator is an array of printheads, each of which has a plurality of inkjets that form an ink image on an intermediate rotating member and the intermediate rotating member forms a nip with a rotating transfer member underlying the intermediate member and the path of the substrate through the print zone so the image formed on the intermediate member is transferred to the substrate as the substrate passes through the nip. In other printers, the image generator 216 includes an array of printheads, each of which has a plurality of inkjets. The printheads are positioned within the print zone and oriented to enable the inkjets to eject drops of ink directly onto the substrate to form an ink image on the substrate as the substrate passes through the print zone. The image generator 216 that uses an intermediate rotating member to transfer an ink image to the substrate or the image generator 216 that includes a printhead array that forms an ink image directly on the substrate is wider than the widest substrate that passes through the print zone. This excess capacity on either side of a substrate enables the controller 212 to shift laterally the image data that drives the inkjets in the printheads to shift laterally the image formed by the ejected ink on either the intermediate rotating member or the substrate directly.
In the image generator having the intermediate rotating member, the image is formed on a portion of the intermediate rotating member that enables the image to be centered on the de-skewed substrate as the image on the intermediate rotating member and the de-skewed substrate passed through the nip between the intermediate rotating member and the rotating transfer member long. Of course, the inboard and outboard sides of the de-skewed substrate must be completely within the lateral registration zone as shown in the figure. In the embodiment of the image generator that directly ejects ink onto the substrate, the shifting of the image data operates the inkjets in the printheads so the formed image is centered on the de-skewed substrate as it passes through the print zone. The shifting of the image in the print zone eliminates the need for laterally centering the de-skewed substrate between the inboard and outboard sides of the lateral registration zone as required in previously known printers. Because the substrate does not require lateral movement prior to passing through the print zone, the forces needed to achieve that lateral substrate movement are also eliminated. Thus, the substrate is not slowed for mechanical lateral registration and the speed of printing is increased over printing systems that use mechanical devices for both de-skewing and lateral registration of the substrates. Additionally, the risk of tearing, wrinkling, or cockling of the substrate is reduced with the elimination of the forces generated by mechanical lateral registration devices. As used in this document, the term “electronic lateral registration system” refers to a controller configured with programmed instructions that cause the controller to identify a lateral position for a de-skewed substrate as it passes through a print zone and send image data to inkjets in printheads that operate only those inkjets that correspond to a width of the de-skewed substrate at the identified lateral position in the print zone.
A process for operating the printer 200 is shown in
It will be appreciated that variations of the above-disclosed apparatus and other features, and functions, or alternatives thereof, may be desirably combined into many other different systems or applications. Various presently unforeseen or unanticipated alternatives, modifications, variations, or improvements therein may be subsequently made by those skilled in the art, which are also intended to be encompassed by the following claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
6137517 | Furst et al. | Oct 2000 | A |
6736394 | Herrmann et al. | May 2004 | B2 |
6862375 | Keithley et al. | Mar 2005 | B1 |
7748697 | Fujita et al. | Jul 2010 | B2 |
8169657 | Wang | May 2012 | B2 |
8206048 | Ferrara | Jun 2012 | B2 |
20080296835 | Dejong et al. | Dec 2008 | A1 |
20110156345 | deJong et al. | Jun 2011 | A1 |
20110273502 | Eun | Nov 2011 | A1 |
20180326721 | Tatsuda | Nov 2018 | A1 |