This specification relates to industrial printing systems, including systems and techniques relating to drop-on-demand (DOD) inkjet printing systems.
Various industrial printing technologies enable the printing of important information (e.g., sell by dates) on packaging. DOD inkjet printing systems can be used to print images on commercial products using various types of inks, including hot melt inks. These images can include graphics, company logos, alphanumeric codes, and identification codes, and so forth. For example, such images can be observed on the corrugated cardboard boxes containing consumer products.
Hot melt inks (sometimes referred to as phase change inks) can include modified waxes and are usually solid at ambient temperature and liquid at temperatures above ambient temperature. Hot melt inks can be used, for example, in digital printing methods. During printing, the ink is typically heated until it becomes a liquid, which is then ejected through a printhead onto a substrate. The ink can solidify on the substrate at ambient temperature. The hot melt ink can be used with DOD inkjet printers having heating capabilities, which can eject droplets of ink through tiny nozzles to form small dots, which in turn form an image on a substrate. Some DOD inkjet printing systems that use hot melt inks may require at least 60 minutes after startup to allow the system to reach its operating temperature for printing (for example, DOD inkjet printing systems that use a large “single stage” aluminum reservoir such as a 1.5 liter single stage reservoir).
This specification describes technologies relating to industrial printing systems, and in particular, systems and techniques relating to drop-on-demand (DOD) inkjet printing systems. A DOD inkjet printing system can include a “hold chamber” including a “two-stage” receptacle configured to hold a first quantity of ink in a first portion and a second quantity of ink in a second portion, in which the second portion is smaller than the first portion (and therefore, the second quantity of ink is less than the first quantity). The “two-stage” receptacle can facilitate a “two-stage heating” technique that ensures the second quantity of ink in the second portion is completely molten after a shorter heating period when compared with the first quantity of ink in the first portion. Rapid melting can be facilitated by the geometry of the second portion, which can be sized to minimize the thermal mass of ink to be melted before printing can begin, and which can be designed to stimulate heat conduction from the surrounding walls.
In general, one or more aspects of the subject matter described in this specification can be embodied in one or more apparatus that include: a receptacle defining a hold chamber to receive ink, the receptacle including a first portion configured to hold a first quantity of ink, and a second portion that is smaller than the first portion and configured to hold a second quantity of ink, the second portion including a first heat conducting surface, and a second heat conducting surface offset from the first heat conducting surface by a distance determined in accordance with a melting point of the ink, the second heat conducting surface defining a barrier between the first portion and the second portion and including at least one opening configured to allow flow of the ink from the first portion to the second portion; and at least one heating element configured to heat the receptacle.
The at least one heating element can include a first heating element and a second heating element. The first heating element can have a first wattage rating and the second heating element can include a second wattage rating that is higher than the first wattage rating. The second at least one heating element can be located closer to the second portion than the first portion, and, when the heating element is heating the receptacle, the distance can be sized to reduce a thermal mass of the second quantity of ink, thereby causing all of the second quantity of ink to melt before the first quantity of ink.
The apparatus can include a pressure relief valve coupled to the receptacle and configured to actuate when a pressure of the receptacle exceeds a threshold pressure. The first portion can include a first chamber and the second portions can include a second chamber, and the barrier can include a baffle plate that separates the first chamber and the second chamber. The at least one opening can include a first opening located at a first end of the barrier and a second opening located at a second end of the barrier that is opposite of the first end. Moreover, the barrier can include a plate attached to a bottom surface of the receptacle.
One or more aspects of the subject matter described in this specification can also be embodied in one or more systems that include a first receptacle defining a melt chamber configured to receive a container of ink; a second receptacle in fluidic communication with the first receptacle and defining a hold chamber configured to receive the ink from the container; the second receptacle including: a first portion configured to hold a first quantity of the ink; and a second portion that is smaller than the first portion and configured to hold a second quantity of the ink, the second portion including: a first heat conducting surface; and a second heat conducting surface offset from the first heat conducting surface by a distance in accordance with a melting point of the ink, the second heat conducting surface defining a barrier between the first portion and the second portion and including at least one opening configured to allow flow of the ink from the first portion to the second portion; a first at least one heating element configured to heat the first receptacle; a second at least one heating element configured to heat the second receptacle; a print head including a plurality of nozzles and a third at least one heating element configured to heat the print head, the print head configured to eject melted ink through the plurality of nozzles; an ink supply system including an ink line configured to fluidly couple the print head with the hold chamber and a fourth at least one heating element configured to heat the ink line; and control circuitry configured to: cause the first at least one heating element to heat the first receptacle; cause the second at least one heating element to heat the second receptacle; cause the third at least one heating element to heat the print head; and cause the fourth at least one heating element to heat the ink line.
The system can include a sensor located within the first portion of the second receptacle, wherein the control circuitry is further configured to: determine, based on information captured by the sensor, a current quantity of ink being held in the second receptacle; and cause the first at least one heating element to heat the first receptacle when the current quantity of ink does not exceed a threshold quantity. The control circuitry can be further configured to: cause the third at least one heating element to heat the print head to a threshold temperature; cause the fourth at least one heating element to heat the ink line to the threshold temperature; and cause the second at least one heating element to heat the hold chamber to the threshold temperature.
The second at least one heating element can include: a primary heating element that includes a first wattage rating; and a secondary heating element that includes a second wattage rating being higher than the first wattage rating; and the startup procedure can include turning off the secondary heating element when the second receptacle is heated to the second threshold temperature. The startup procedure can include causing the third at least one heating element to heat the print head to the second threshold temperature. The system can include a pressure relief valve coupled to the second receptacle and configured to actuate when a pressure of the second receptacle exceeds a threshold pressure. The at least one opening can include a first opening located at a first end of the barrier and a second opening located at a second end of the barrier that is opposite of the first end. The second at least one heating element can be located closer to the second portion than the first portion and the distance is configured to cause all of the second quantity of ink to melt before the first quantity of ink, when the second at least one heating element is heating the second receptacle, by reducing a thermal mass of the second quantity of ink relative to the first quantity of ink.
One or more aspects of the subject matter described in this specification can also be embodied in one or more non-transitory computer-readable storage mediums encoding instructions that cause control circuitry of a printing system to perform operations including: regulating, using at least one heating element, an ink line of the printing system at a threshold temperature; regulating, using at least one heating element, a print head of the printing system at the threshold temperature; and causing the at least one heating element to heat a hold chamber of the printing system to a second threshold temperature.
The operations can include: determining, based on information captured by a sensor within a first portion of the hold chamber, a current quantity of ink being held in the hold chamber; and causing the at least one heating element to heat a melt chamber of the printing system when the current quantity of ink does not exceed a threshold quantity. The at least one heating element can include: a primary heating element that includes a first wattage rating; and a secondary heating element that includes a second wattage rating being higher than the first wattage rating; the primary heating element and the secondary heating element can be used to heat the hold chamber to the second threshold temperature; and the operations can include turning off the secondary heating element when the hold chamber is heated to the second threshold temperature. Moreover, the operations can include causing the at least one heating element to heat the print head to the second threshold temperature.
When compared with conventional technology, implementations of the present disclosure can provide one or more of the following advantages. A printing system can be configured to implement a staged heating technique at startup by using a reservoir (e.g., a 1.5 liter aluminum reservoir) having two ink holding portions, one portion being substantially smaller than the other portion. The time required for molten ink to become available for printing after a cold start up can be reduced. Costs associated with downtime caused by start-up times can be reduced. Potential damage to the printing system as a result of faster heating times can be reduced.
The details of one or more embodiments of the subject matter described in this specification are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, aspects, and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the description, the drawings, and the claims.
Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements.
DOD inkjet printing systems can include ink delivery modules (IDMs) configured to supply the system's print heads with ink for printing. Hot melt inks typically include modified waxes. At room temperature, they are usually solid. When they are heated, they may transition first to a “mushy” phase (for example, a phase between a solid and liquid phase), in a broad temperature region around 50° C. and 90 C, then become liquid. Print heads and inks can be designed to jet at, for example, 125° C., 10-14 centipoise.
Implementations of the present disclosure can help overcome one or more disadvantages of conventional printing systems caused by, for instance, the implementation of a large “single stage” aluminum reservoir (for example, a 1.5 liter single stage reservoir), and the low thermal conductivity (for example, 0.1756-0.25 W/mK) of some hot melt inks. For example, implementations of the present disclosure can reduce the downtime caused by heating processes needed for reaching operational temperatures for printing, which can be costly (in terms of time and money) to the user. In some implementations, a printing system is configured to implement a staged heating technique to reduce the thermal mass of hot melt ink by using a reservoir (e.g., a 1.5 liter aluminum reservoir) having two ink holding portions, one portion being substantially smaller than the other portion. In some implementations, this reduction in thermal mass allows the heat from the aluminum walls of the smaller portion to penetrate thermally insulating ink by heat conduction and raise its internal temperature at a much faster rate compared to the large portion, thus reducing the time for molten ink to become available for printing after a cold start up. Many hot melt inks expand and shrink during heating and cooling periods. The smaller portion prevents some hot melt inks from shrinking away from the aluminum walls during cooling period. This ensures that the solid hot melt ink during cold start up is always in contact with walls (e.g., aluminum walls) in the smaller portion stimulating heat conduction from surrounding walls.
The printed images can include alphabetical and/or numeric characters (e.g., date codes or text serial numbers), barcode information (e.g., 1D or 2D barcodes), graphics, logos, etc. The controller device (for example, as discussed later with reference to
The substrate(s) can be labels that are added to products, packaging material for products (either before or after the product(s) are placed in the packaging), and/or surface(s) of the products themselves. For example, the substrate can be corrugated cardboard boxes containing one or more products. Thus, the print head(s) 110 can be repositioned and/or reoriented on the print bar 108 with respect to one or more product lines, including conveyor belt(s) and/or other product movement mechanism(s), that move products through a facility. The facility can be a product manufacturing facility, a product distribution facility, and/or other industrial/business facilities/buildings, and the product line can include a product packaging system, a product sorting system, and/or other product handling/management systems. As will be appreciated, the printing system 100 is only one example, and many other suitable structures can be used to construct a printing system that employs the print head systems and techniques described herein.
The receptacle 300 defines a chamber to receive ink having a first portion 330a and a second portion 330b. The first portion 300a forms a primary reservoir and the second portion 300b forms a secondary reservoir. As shown, the first portion 300a is larger than the second portion 300b. The first portion 300a is designed to hold a first quantity of ink 340a, and the second portion 300b is designed to hold a second quantity of ink 340b. In the illustrated implementation, the first quantity of ink has a volume of 1.35 liters (L), and the second quantity of ink has a volume of 120 milliliters (mL). However, in other implementations, the size of the first portion 300a and the second portion 300b are designed to hold larger or smaller quantities of ink. In some cases, based on printing needs, it can be advantageous for the volume of the second quantity of ink to be equal to greater than 120 mL to provide sufficient ink for printing after a short heat up time. The size of the first portion 300a and the second portion 300b can be based on factors such as printing needs, ink shrinkage percentage(s), and the melting point of the ink used, among others.
The ink receptacle 300 is manufactured from a heat conducting material, such as aluminum. The receptacle 300 includes a heating element 320 configured to heat the receptacle. In some implementations, the heating element 320 has a power wattage rating between 200 W and 800 W. In some implementations, the heating element 320 includes a 48 volt (V) direct current (DC) heater. Although the shown implementation includes just one heating element 320, in other implementations, the receptacle 300 includes more than one heating element 320 (for example, such as the implementations described with reference to
Referring to
During startup of the printing system using the receptacle 300 (for example, the printing system 100 described previously with reference to
Printing systems (such as the printing system 100 described previously with reference to
As shown, the heating element, having a 700 W rating, can be used to heat the receptacle 300 for 900 seconds (15 minutes). At 15 minutes, the entire ink volume inside the second portion 300b in the two-stage receptacle 300 is comfortably above its peak melting point (60° C.) (e.g. Region 401). At the end of the 15 minutes, the melted ink of the second portion 300b can begin to be pumped through the inlet port 333 to the print head(s) of the printing system for printing operations. As
The design of the ink receptacle 300 also allows for quicker startup time for multiple different types of inks. For example, compared with inks that have a relatively lower melt point, the ink receptacle 300 can be used with inks having a higher melt point, without having significant impact on the startup time.
The receptacle 600 includes a first portion 630a and a second portion 630b, separated by a continuous barrier 650 having one or more openings (not shown) to allow ink to flow from the first portion 630a to the second portion 630b. The receptacle 600 is similar to the receptacle 300 described previously with reference to
As shown, a substantial portion of the ink in the second portion 630b was heated beyond its peak melting point (60° C.) after 15 minutes (see, e.g., regions 701 and 702), and thus printing can begin even though most of the ink in the first portions 630a remains well below its peak melting point temperature (see, e.g., regions 703-705).
Referring to
The receptacle 800 includes two design dimensions D1, D2. The first design dimension D1 represents the width of the openings 852a, 852b at the ends of the baffle plate barrier 850. Although, in the shown implementation, the dimension D1 is the same for both openings 851a, 852b, in some implementations, the width of these openings are different. In some implementations, the first design dimension D1 is limited (for example, less than or equal to 15 mm) to ensure complete melting of ink on the edges of the second portion 830b after a short heating period (for example, less than or equal to 15 minutes). If the size of this dimension D1 is substantially limited (for example, less than 10 mm), it can enhance the heat transfer performance, but may hinder the re-circulation of pigmented inks from the first portion 830a to the second portion 830b. In some implementations, this dimension D1 is fixed at 15 mm to optimize heat transfer performance with respect to ink re-circulation between the portions 830a, 830b. Although the dimension D1 can be larger or smaller than 15 mm in other implementations, the dimension D1 can be limited to not exceed 15 mm in some implementations to ensure proper melting of ink in the second portion 830b.
The second design dimension D2 represents the distance between the surface 851 of the baffle plate barrier 850 that is facing the second portion 830b and the surface 831 of the receptacle 800 that runs the length of the second portion 830b.The second dimension D2 can directly affect the heat transfer performance of the second portion. Smaller D2 dimensions can ensure good heat transfer within the second portion, but can limit the molten ink volume after the short heating period (for example, less than or equal to 15 minutes) for continuous printing. In some implementations, this dimension D2 is limited between 12-20 mm to optimize heat transfer performance while accounting for the volume of ink needed for continuous printing after shorter heat up times.
The melt chamber 910 can be configured to receive and hold an ink bottle 901. The ink bottle 901 can be, for example, a 1 liter recyclable polypropylene bottle. The bottle 901 can be filled with 900 ml of molten ink at 125° C. The ink can then cool to a solid state in the bottle 901 and shrink about 14% in volume during the cooling period. Access to the melt chamber 910 is controlled by a solenoid door lock 905 and an ink door lockout switch 906. Loading ink into the system 900 can begin with accessing the melt chamber 910 (for example, by opening a door of the chamber 910) and loading the bottle 901 into the melt chamber 910. The melt chamber 910 is mechanically designed to prevent the possibility of leaving an access means (such as a door) in an open condition. This can reduce the risk of causing a burn to the operator when the melt chamber 910 begins heating (which can cause an operating temperature of 125° C.) and can prevent dust contamination from entering the system 910.
To prevent the user from coming in contact with heated portions of the melt chamber 910, the solenoid lock 905 physically locks access route(s) to the melt chamber 910. In some implementations, the solenoid lock 905 defaults to the locked state when power is removed and opens only when power to the solenoid 905 is applied. In some implementations, during a melt cycle, when the temperature in the melt chamber 910 rises above 69.9° C., the switch 906 engages the solenoid door lock 905. In some implementations, when the melt chamber cools to below 70° C., it can be considered safe to the user and the solenoid door lock 905 is disengaged so that an empty ink bottle 901 can be removed, and a new ink bottle 901 can be added. To cool the melt chamber 910 after melting a bottle of ink 901, a 68 cubic feet per meter (CFM) 24V DC cooling fan 903 with pulse width modulation (PWM) and tachometer can be used to blow cooling air directly at the melting area. The PWM can operate at 25 kilohertz (kHz) with a duty cycle of 99%.
The melt chamber 910 includes one or more heating elements 913 configured to heat the melt chamber 910 to cause the ink in the ink bottle 901 to melt and flow out of the bottle 901. In some implementations, the one or more heating elements 913 remain off until a new bottle 901 of ink is to be melted. In some implementations, the one or more heating elements 913 include a 48 VDC, 200 W heater. In some implementations, heating elements 913 are provided in the form of a cartridge heater. The melt chamber 910 includes a first hard wired thermistor 911 and a first redundant hard wired thermistor 912, which are configured to sense an over-temperature condition (for example, due to a runaway heating element) and shut down power to the one or more heating elements 913.
Referring to
Referring back to
As previously indicated, in some implementations, the hold chamber 920 includes an aluminum sheet metal receptacle designed to divide the hold chamber 920 into a first portion and a smaller second portion where enough ink can melt within 15 minutes after a cold start up to facilitate purge and print operations. Ink pumping can happen if a portion of the ink in the hold chamber 920 is liquid. In some implementations, the second portion is sized such that enough ink can melt to pump ink to 4 print heads, for the equivalent of three, 1.5 second purges per print head, after a warm up time of 15 minutes.
The hold chamber 920 also includes an ink level sensor 924 configured to sense the amount of ink remaining in the hold chamber 920. In the shown implementations, the ink level sensor 924 includes a floating dual position level sensor that includes two switches 924a, 924b. In some implementations, the sensor 924 is manufactured using stainless steel and combines two single pole single throw reed switches 924a, 924b contained inside a shaft of the sensor 924. Position sensing can be activated by a magnet carried by the sensor 924. When the sensor 924 is in the vicinity of one of the switches 924a, 924b, the magnetic field causes the switch to bend and either make contact to close the switch, normally open, or break contact, normally closed. Both the top and bottom reed switches 924a, 924b are normally open. When the sensor 924 is in contact with the top retaining clip, the top reed switch 924a is active (closed). When the float is in contact with the bottom retaining clip, the bottom reed switch 924b is active (closed). The sensor 924 is configured to sense three conditions: (1) ink level full, which is detected when the top switch 924a is closed and the bottom switch 924b is open; (2) ink level OK (which can indicate, for example, the hold chamber 920 contains at least a threshold ink fill amount, such as being at least 30% filled with ink), which is detected when both switches 924a, 924b are open; and (3) ink level empty, which is detected when the top switch 924a is open and the bottom switch 924b is closed. The sensor 924 can be configured to activate an alarm module 904 of the printing system 900, e.g., on an alarm tower, to indicate the level of ink in the hold chamber 920 to a user of the printing system 900. The alarm module 904 can include, for example, one or more colored lights or speakers configured to emit an audible sound.
Because the shown ink sensor 924 is configured to float in the ink, when the ink level in the hold chamber 920 drops, the sensor 924 is caused to move to the various switch positions. In some implementations, when the ink level sensor 924 is frozen in ink or when the ink level sensor 924 is floating in molten ink, it will give true readings. However, when the ink is transitioning from frozen to molten, the ink level sensor may give false ink level empty reading. That is, as the ink in the hold chamber 920 melts, the ink around the ink level sensor 924 may remain solid because the thermal mass of the sensor may wick heat away from the ink around it. The denser ink hanging from the ink level sensor 924 may cause the sensor 924 to sink into the molten ink. Accordingly, the following table of conditions can be used for reading the ink level sensor 924:
The ink supply system 930 includes a first check valve 932, a piston pump 934, a stroke switch 933, a second check valve 935, a manifold 936, a filter 931, and ink lines 940. The ink passes from the hold chamber 920 through the filter 931 (which can be a stainless steel filter) before being pumped to the print heads 950. In some implementations, the filter 931 is a 10 micron, absolute, filter having an effective filter area can be 20 square inches. In one implementation, filter 931 is between 5 and 10 microns.
The piston pump 934 includes a motor for pumping ink from the hold chamber 920 to the ink lines 940. In the illustrated implementation, the motor is a 24V brushed DC motor. It is capable of operating at 3500 rpm and driving a 5-gear gear train with a 190:1 gear ratio. An eccentric can be attached to the shaft of the motor. The rotation of the eccentric can drive the upward and downward motion of the piston of the piston pump 934, which can draw ink from the hold chamber 920 through the filter 931 and through the first check valve 932 (which can be a 2 PSI stainless steel check valve) into a chamber of the piston of the pump 934. The piston then pushes the ink out of the chamber through the second check valve 935 (which can be a 2 PSI stainless steel check valve) into the manifold 936, which is connected to the ink lines 940. The stroke switch 933 (which is sometimes referred to as a limit switch 933 or a home position sensor 933 or a pump stroke count switch 933) is configured to indicate when the eccentric, attached to the ink pump motor shaft, has completed a rotation. In one implementation, the piston pump includes a 24 VDC gear motor.
The ink lines 940 include 1 to 4 ink lines. In some implementations, the ink lines are manufactured using seamless fully annealed “316” stainless steel tubing. In some implementations, the ink lines 940 are used as passive valves that allow ink to flow to the print heads 950. As shown, the ink lines 940 include a heater 941 to ensure that ink in the ink lines 940 does not become frozen and clog the ink lines 940.
In some implementations, the print heads 950 include one or more print heads discussed previously in this specification, such as the print heads 110 discussed previously with reference to
The hold chamber 920 also includes a pressure relief valve 925 to relieve pressure of the hold chamber 920 that builds from the check valves 932, 935 and the manifold 936. For instance, during a cold start up, the components of the system 900 can be heated in a specific order to prevent ink expansion pressure from damaging the components of the system 900. The heating elements 923 of the hold chamber 920 can be activated only after the print head(s) 950 and ink lines 940 reach a first threshold temperature (for example, 80° C.). This can create a lag time before the hold chamber's 920 heating elements 923 are activated. To reduce the warm up time of the entire system 900 and facilitate printing operations after a short heating period (for example, less than or equal to 15 minutes), the heating elements 923 of the hold chamber 920 can be activated at the very beginning. To facilitate this, the relieve valve 925 can be used to relieve the ink pressure that builds up from the check valves 932, 935 and the manifold 936. In the shown implementation, the pressure relief valve 925 is installed in the hold chamber 920 and rated at 300 PSI and relieves the pressure as soon as it reaches approximately 260 PSI. In one implementation, the relief valve is rated at 20 bar.
Various implementations are possible for the pressure relief valve 925, and in some implementations, a pressure relief valve is not needed.
In some implementations, the check/pressure relief valve for the holding chamber is constructed using an internal angle bore 987, as shown in
In some implementations, the check/pressure relief valve for the holding chamber is constructed using cross drilled intersecting holes 988, 989, as shown in
In some implementations, the check/pressure relief valve for the holding chamber is constructed using bottom insertion with external drain, as shown in
Referring to
The described start-up sequence can work for cold start up and for scenarios in which a printer is shut off for an extended period of time (for example, more than an hour) and then restarted, such as to service the filter 931. An objective of the heat up sequence can be to start printing within 15 minutes while also assuring that the expansion of the frozen ink does not damage any components of the system 900. In some implementations, if the sensor 924 indicates the ink-empty state at t=0, the controller circuit 960 can initiate an ink melt cycle. In some implementations, printing cannot begin until the sensor 924 indicates at least the ink-OK state (for example, the hold chamber 920 contains a threshold amount of ink, such as being at least 30% filled).
In some implementations, if the sensor 924 was not read at start-up due to the fact that the ink temperature was >50° C., resulting in a potentially false ink empty reading (as previously described), and the sensor 924 indicates ink empty state, the sensor 924 is not read until 30 minutes after entering the idle state and a bottle melt is not initiated. However, if the sensor 924 indicates an ink-OK state or an ink-full state, the controller circuit 960 can activate the pump module 932 and ink can be pumped to the print heads 950, for the equivalent of three, 1.5 second purges per print head 950.
In some implementations, once the 400 W heater of the heating elements 923 of the hold chamber 920 is deactivated, the heating element 913 of the melt chamber 910 is activated to stay within a prescribed power budget for the system 900 (that is, in some implementations, the 400 W hold heater of the hold chamber 920 heating elements 923 and the melt chamber 910 heating element 913 are never powered-on at the same time). In some implementations, the 400 W heater of the heating elements 923 of the hold chamber 920 has priority over the heating element 913 of the melt chamber 910, and if the 400 W heater of the heating elements 923 of the hold chamber 920 needs be powered-on to bring the hold chamber 920 back to the previously described set-point range, the heating element 913 of the melt chamber 910 is deactivated during that duration.
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
At 1040, once the printing system is powered-on but before heating the hold chamber and the print head, the quantity of ink in the hold chamber is determined using, for example, a floating sensor (such as the floating sensor 924 discussed previously with reference to
At 1041, it is determined whether the determined 1040 quantity of ink exceeds an ink quantity threshold. In some implementations, determining that the ink quantity exceeds the ink quantity threshold includes determining that the float sensor indicates at least an “ink level ok” reading, as discussed previously with reference to
At 1042, after determining 1041 that the ink quantity exceeds the ink quantity threshold, the method 1000A of
As used herein, a “hold chamber” includes any chamber in which ink can be held. As used herein, a “melt chamber” includes any chamber in which ink can be melted.
While this specification contains many implementation details, these should not be construed as limitations on the scope of the invention or of what may be claimed, but rather as descriptions of features specific to particular embodiments of the invention. Certain features that are described in this specification in the context of separate embodiments can also be implemented in combination in a single embodiment. Conversely, various features that are described in the context of a single embodiment can also be implemented in multiple embodiments separately or in any suitable subcombination. Moreover, although features may be described above as acting in certain combinations and even initially claimed as such, one or more features from a claimed combination can in some cases be excised from the combination, and the claimed combination may be directed to a subcombination or variation of a subcombination. Thus, unless explicitly stated otherwise, or unless the knowledge of one of ordinary skill in the art clearly indicates otherwise, any of the features of the embodiment described above can be combined with any of the other features of the embodiment described above. Thus, while particular embodiments of the invention have been described, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims. In addition, the systems and methods described are applicable outside of printer technologies, e.g., to fluid jetting devices generally.
This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119 to U.S. Application Ser. No. 63/071,847, filed on Aug. 28, 2020, and entitled “Systems and Techniques for Melting Hot Melt Ink in Industrial Printing Systems,” the entire contents of which are incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63071847 | Aug 2020 | US |