This invention relates to an apparatus for allowing the refilling and sealing of a toner hopper used in toner cartridge assemblies for dry toner imaging machines such as printers, copiers and facsimile machines.
The use of “throw-away” type toner cartridge assemblies is common in the dry toner imaging industry. The user of the printer, copier or facsimile machine must buy a new toner cartridge assembly from the manufacturer when the original assembly is depleted of toner. Toner cartridge assemblies are expensive and their disposal is a waste of good components. This expense and waste has created a need for remanufacturing and sealing used toner cartridge assemblies for shipment to the user.
The manufacturers seal the toner hopper assemblies of the new toner cartridge assemblies at their manufacturing location, and there is no leakage of the toner during shipment. For example, the manufacturers seal closed the top of the toner reservoir section of the toner hopper with a plastic sheet, then fill the toner hopper, located in the cartridge assembly, with dry toner. The plastic sheet is attached to both sides and ends of the hopper prior to assembling the toner hopper and fusing/plastic welding/ultrasonic welding the toner hopper together from its sub-components. Of course, this is done before assembling the toner hopper with the other sub-components of the cartridge. The original manufacturer has a slight advantage because they can seal the toner hopper before it is permanently assembled and fused/plastic welded. Aftermarket manufacturers, commonly known as rechargers or cartridge remanufacturers do not always have this luxury of working with the toner hopper prior to its permanent assembly. This would require splitting the hopper which is very expensive and requires greater expertise, equipment and labor. Many such rechargers are small “mom and pop” companies and cannot afford the extra expense. Consequently, applicants had to develop a product that would be practical for an already fused/plastic welded toner hopper, however, this development may also be used for a split hopper. After the toner hopper is sealed, assembled, joined, and filled with toner, it is assembled as a sub-component of a modular toner cartridge. This toner cartridge may be shipped to the end-user's location without spillage of the dry toner because the plastic sheet seals it. When the toner cartridge assembly is received at the end-user's location, the plastic sheet is removed from the toner reservoir in the hopper and the toner is exposed to the feed roller device for use in the imaging process of the printer, copier or facsimile machine. The plastic sheet and other original manufacturer sealing devices are not reusable and, furthermore, are not meant to be re-sealable as they are designed to be throwaway items.
Toner cartridge assembly remanufacturers have come up with various ways of sealing the toner hopper for shipment after refilling used cartridges. Applicant's U.S. Pat. No. 5,296,902 discloses a seal-insert applied over the passage from the toner hopper. The seal-insert has a slot covered with a removable adhesive tape/heat-tape that is peeled off or torn by the customer when the refilled toner cartridge is ready for use. The same patent also discloses a seal-insert with a slot that is covered or uncovered by a seal which slides over the seal-insert. Applicant's U.S. Pat. No. 5,282,003, now Pat. No. Re 35,529, discloses a seal-insert which includes slotted outer pieces sandwiching a slotted middle piece of resilient two-sided foam tape. A seal slides into or out of the seal-insert to close or open the slots. Applicant also has other U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,184,182 and 5,337,126, and application Ser. No. 07/850,930 filed on Mar. 13, 1992, currently abandoned and Ser. No. 08/019,300 filed on Feb. 18, 1993, also abandoned, disclosing similar seals and seal-inserts. U.S. Pat. No. 5,335,831 to Foster discloses a layered, compliant strip for sealing the toner hopper opening.
One problem that arises with the use of these seals and seal-inserts used in a toner hopper (of the style that has a narrow opening for the seal to pull through) is toner blockage in the passage between the reservoir and feed roller compartment, caused by the narrowness of the slot or slots in the seal-insert. But the slot has to be narrower than the sliding seal (in order that the seal completely closes the slot), and the sliding seal has to be narrow enough to slide through the opening in the side of the toner hopper. Applicant has application Ser. No. 08/333,055, filed on Nov. 1, 1994, now abandoned, which uses a seal-insert with a wider slot to prevent toner blockage while printing but still allow the seal and seal-insert to operate properly and prevent toner leakage during shipment of the refilled and remanufactured toner cartridge assembly. The seal must be able to slide through a very narrow opening on the side of the toner hopper, yet seal over a passage from the toner hopper wider than the narrow opening. Although the seal and seal-insert of application Ser. No. 08/333,055 solve the toner blockage problem by disclosing a seal made from a material that flexes as it is pulled through the narrow opening and allows a wider slot in the seal-insert, the seal and seal-insert are more difficult to manufacture and install and have an increased cost. Some toner cartridge remanufacturers may not want to use it for these reasons.
Through more careful study, applicant has found the cause of toner blockage associated with the use of the seals and seal-inserts in the patents and patents pending. The seal-insert is a slotted strip of rigid plastic affixed to the perimeter of the passage in the toner hopper. The slot is closed by a seal strip during the original cartridge manufacturing process. This prevents toner leakage until the seal strip is removed by the end-user, allowing toner to pass through the seal-insert as the toner cartridge assembly operates within the imaging machine.
Toner is generally composed of magnetic oxides of iron with a small amount of carbon black for die, all encapsulated or mixed in styrene. The styrene is the major component, making up over fifty percent of the toner in many formulations used in the market. Styrene is a great static electricity generator when put into motion. For example, if one rubs a low density, lightweight block of STYROFOAM (which is polystyrene, made from styrene with many similar properties) on a wool material, the STYROFOAM would stick to a wall or ceiling in the same way that an inflated balloon would, overcoming the force of gravity. When the toner cartridge operates, the toner that passes through the hopper passage and seal-insert slot generates electrostatic electricity. The styrene in toner becomes charged, and therefore, may stick to the plastic seal-insert as toner moves through the slot. Toner is also charged from the bias voltage of the developer roller component of the cartridge. Some of the toner that lands on the developer roller might bounce off the roller onto the plastic seal-insert where it adheres and collects with the toner charged through the rubbing motion.
To further aggravate the situation, the magnetic oxides of iron within the toner stuck to the seal-insert attract still more toner to the seal-insert slot area, causing a “snowball effect” as the toner accumulates. Eventually, the toner begins to block the slot in the seal-insert, causing a condition commonly known as “toner starvation”. When toner starvation takes place, a portion of the developer roller is starved of toner and thus, no toner is transported from the developer roller to the photoreceptor drum over a given region. The net result is that over this region, a white streak of no-toner and therefore, no print occurs on the output page of the imaging machine. This toner starvation problem has plagued toner cartridge remanufacturers of such cartridges as the LX variety. Through careful observation, applicant has identified the problem or source of the problem, and has come up with a solution different than, and more effective than, simply making the slot wider. Furthermore, applicant has also developed a simple way to also solve the problem by making the slot wider. Both embodiments may be also used simultaneously, however. By using both embodiments simultaneously, toner starvation should never occur.
Tear-seals are used by themselves or with seal-inserts to seal the passage from the toner hopper to the feed roller compartment usually prior to refilling the toner hopper with toner. Tear-seals are torn off by the end-user before the remanufactured toner cartridge is inserted in the imaging machine for operation. The problem is that prior art tear-seals sometimes do not rip in a straight, even line, in some cases partially blocking the toner passage. These tear-seals are also hard to install over the toner passage thus, causing the problem they are supposed to prevent. In some cartridges, such as those of the LX variety, unremovable remains of the original equipment manufacturer (OEM) seal are present on the toner hopper, affecting the quality of any new seal used. While conventional tear-seals have previously been used with flexible seal-inserts, a device is needed which ensures a straight, even-width rip in the tear-sheet of the tear-seal that matches the slot in the seal-insert. Many of the tear-seals have had problems such as uneven tear, premature tearing off of rip portion, constriction of toner opening, difficulty in installing, and other problems.
Accordingly, it is an object of this invention to provide a shipping seal that will prevent toner blockage inside a toner hopper, between the reservoir and feed roller compartment of a toner hopper assembly, which is a component of a toner cartridge, which is used in imaging machines. In general, one way to prevent toner blockage is to use a conductive/antistatic material in the seals and then the seal-insert opening does not have to be widened. Alternatively, a new seal/seal-insert system is introduced that can allow a wider opening.
It is a further object of this invention to provide a seal and seal-insert for the passage from the reservoir which, when the seal is removed from the seal-insert, allows uninterrupted flow of toner from the reservoir to maintain the quality of the image produced.
Another object of this invention is to design a slotted seal-insert which does not attract toner to its surfaces and cause toner build-up and clogging of the slot. Thus, toner starvation may be prevented.
A still further object of this invention is to provide a tear-guide for the tear-sheet of a tear-seal on a seal-insert which enables the tear-sheet to be torn in a straight line with an even-width rip, opening up a wider opening in the seal-insert or the passage from the reservoir to the feed roller compartment. The tear-guide is used with a seal-insert and tear-seal. Also, with this tear-guide enhanced tear-seal, when the tear is controlled, the opening for toner flow is controlled, and thus when the tear is controlled, a wider than otherwise opening may be made because this torn strip in some cartridges such as LX must be then pulled through a very narrow constriction. By pulling a consistent strip, both the opening may be made wide enough and the even remains of the torn strip may be consistently pulled through the narrow constriction without problems. One such problem in prior technology is premature ripping of the entire tear portion causing a toner blockage.
A still further object of this invention is to provide an install tail for easy installation, whereby the seal may be easily installed. When the recharger pulls simultaneously on the install tail and the pull strip at the same time, the entire seal may be kept taut, and thus installation is greatly enhanced. With previous technology, many seals get ruined while installing, because there is no means for pulling the seal taut. With the development of the install tail, a very important part of this development, installation is significantly easier, less wastage is made, installation is quicker, and an OEM style seal may be installed in an already joined (non-split) toner hopper which is more difficult to do than when the OEM did it prior to joining. In fact, with this install tail, all the previous tear-seal and other art may be done in a more practical manner as well as the other new art of this invention.
In carrying out this invention in the illustrative embodiment thereof, a seal-insert is comprised of two rectangular, slotted outer pieces attached together by an inner-layer of two-sided tape. The two-sided tape is configured in a long u-shape such that it has an open end through which a seal is inserted or removed from between the outer pieces to block or open the slot. The seal-insert is attached over the passage from the toner hopper to the feed roller compartment of the toner cartridge assembly. The outer pieces are designed to be antistatic and/or conductive. The outer pieces may be made from antistatic and/or conductive materials or may be more conventional material covered with antistatic and/or conductive sprays, laminates, creams, waxes, coatings or films. Since the seal-insert is grounded through its attachment to the electrically grounded toner hopper, charged toner particles do not stick to the seal-insert and clogging of the slot in the seal-insert and passage from the toner hopper is eliminated. This insures a steady flow of toner to the feed roller compartment and prevents white streaks on the output paper of the imaging machine caused by toner starvation.
In another embodiment, a conventional tear-seal used with a seal-insert is improved by securing a tear-guide to the tear-sheet of the tear-seal. The tear-guide has a narrower width than the tear-sheet, approximately equal to the width of the slot in the seal-insert. The tear-guide material is chosen for good adhesion to the tear-sheet and good longitudinal strength so it will not break when pulled by the end-user. It may be an adhesive tape. If using an adhesive tape, part of the tear-guide must be kept free from adhesive so it will pull through the slot. This may be done either by not removing some of the tape backing material or by not applying adhesive along the full length of the film tape material. An end of the tear-guide is fed through the opening in the side of the toner hopper, and when pulled will tear the tear-sheet in a straight line and provide an even width rip or opening that will not block toner flow through the toner passage and seal-insert slot. The tear-sheet is also optionally made from or coated or laminated with antistatic and/or conductive material to prevent toner attraction. It may optionally include a stiffener, internal or external, to enable the tear-seal to be easily and efficiently attached to the toner hopper.
This invention, together with other objects, features, aspects, and advantages thereof, will be more clearly understood from the following description, considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
a shows the tear-seal, tear-guide and insert after assembly.
b demonstrates how the tear-seal is gripped when adhering it to the toner hopper.
c shows the removal of the liner process of the seal system using the tear-seal, tear-guide and seal-insert.
d shows how the seal system may be burnished after assembly.
a shows a toner hopper assembly with a seal in the process of being torn.
This section will begin with a definition of some terms used in this patent application. The purpose of this section is to try to avoid ambiguity in the meaning of any of the terms defined.
Nomenclature
Referring to
An opening 5 in the side of the toner hopper 1a enables a seal for the passage 3 to be pulled, and thereby, removed through the side of the hopper 1a. A plug 6, shown enlarged for clarity in
It should be apparent from the drawings that without a seal for the passage 3, if the dry toner hopper 1a was rotated from the upright position shown, the toner would spill from the reservoir 1 through the passage 3 into the feed roller compartment 2 and out into the remainder of the cartridge assembly. This would cause a great mess, would waste toner, and would reduce the quality of the image produced when the toner cartridge assembly is put into operation within the printer, copier or facsimile machine.
The drawings are not to scale. The outer pieces 9 and 10 are usually about eight and one quarter inches long and about nine-sixteenths of an inch wide when used for the LX cartridge. The slots 11 are about one-eighth to one quarter inch wide and seven and three-quarter inches long for the LX cartridge. The legs 13 of the two-sided tape 12 are about three-sixteenths of an inch wide and the cross-piece 14 is approximately one-sixteenth of an inch wide. The legs 13 and cross-piece 14 may be applied flush with the perimeter edges of the outer pieces 9 and 10, making the channels 16 about one-sixteenth of an inch wide and the pocket 17 about three sixteenths of an inch long. But all measurements could change depending on the type of toner cartridge assembly and the size of the passage 3. For example in the BX cartridge and the FUJI-XEROX long cartridge, the dimensions of each parameter may be much larger since it handles a much larger paper size, larger in both length and width.
The seal 8 comprises a length of thin flexible material such as plastic, polycarbonate, PETG or polyester. It is at least nine inches in length for the LX toner hopper 1a so it will extend a fair amount from the opening 5 in the side of the reservoir 1 and may be easily gripped and manipulated. The seal 8 for the LX toner hopper 1a is three sixteenths to a quarter inch wide for easy sliding into or out of the seal-insert.
7.
As shown in
Before the reservoir 1 is refilled with toner, the seal 8 is fed through the opening 5 in the side of the reservoir 1 into the seal-insert 7. The cartridge is then assembled and shipped to the end-user. The seal system does not leak. When the end-user receives the refilled and remanufactured toner cartridge assembly, the end-user pulls the seal 8 from the opening 5 in the side of the reservoir 1. The seal 8 slides out of the seal-insert 7 and opens the slots 11 in the outer pieces 9 and 10. The cartridge assembly is placed into the printer, copier or facsimile machine. When the assembly is in operation, toner moves from the reservoir 1 through the passage 3 and slots 11 in the outer pieces 9 and 10 of the seal-insert 7 to the feed roller compartment 2, and the feed roller then provides dry toner to the photoreceptor drum.
For the reasons discussed in detail in the Background, prior art seal-inserts can sometimes cause toner blockage between the reservoir 1 and feed roller compartment 2, resulting in poor quality images. To prevent this problem, the rectangular, slotted outer pieces 9 and/or 10 of the seal-insert 7 are made from conductive and/or antistatic material. For example, there are antistatic/conductive plastics available on the market, and there are also antistatic/conductive plastics impregnated with conductive materials such as conductive carbon black, graphite, metal bits, metal powder, and other conductive pigments. Additionally, plastics may be covered or coated with antistatic and/or conductive sprays, coatings, paints, treatments, or films. These covering layers may be applied over the surfaces of the outer pieces 9 and 10 after the seal-insert 7 is assembled.
A particularly effective and suitable material for outer pieces 9 and 10 of the seal-insert 7 is an aluminum laminate used in the construction industry for static electricity and fire prevention. This material is from 0.010 to 0.050 inches thick and contains a layer of aluminum usually around 0.003 inches thick. A reduced cost version uses PVC plastic as the laminate, and other cheap plastics, as well as other conductive metals, may be used. The aluminum laminate has the advantage of being eighty percent less expensive than polycarbonate sheets or rolls. The aluminum also gives the seal-insert 7 greater stiffness and rigidity, making the seal-insert easier to apply over the passage 3 from the reservoir 1 and making the seal 8 easier to insert into and remove from the seal-insert 7.
The seal-insert may be electrically grounded through its attachment to the reservoir 1. By having the outer pieces 9 and 10 of the seal-insert 7 be conductive and/or antistatic, toner will not stick to the seal-insert 7. Toner will therefore not build up on the seal-insert 7 and block the slots 11 through the seal-insert 7 and the passage 3 from the reservoir 1. The toner starvation problem is eliminated and no white streaks appear on the output paper. Seal-inserts can continue to be made with narrow slots without fear of toner blockage. This is important because this type of seal-insert is easier to manufacture and install than seal-inserts with wider slots.
It should be noted that while a particular seal and seal-insert design has been disclosed, the antistatic and conductive features may be used with any of the seals and seal-inserts of the prior art patents and patents pending, including applicant's co-pending application Ser. No. 08/333,055, filed Nov. 1, 1994. Regardless of the seal-insert design, the antistatic and/or conductive material prevents toner from clogging the slot.
The tear-sheet 20 may be a ribbon of material made from MYLAR, acetate, cellophane, polyolefin, woven or unwoven material, paper, plastic, fabric or other such material. The tear-sheet 20 may itself be a laminate, and in this case both layers of the tear-sheet would tear. The tear-sheet 20 is sized to either provide coverage over the toner passage from the reservoir 1 or, if a seal-insert is used, over the slot in the seal-insert. It has been found through experimentation that by using a composite formed from one layer of any of the above mentioned tear-sheet materials and a second layer (tear-guide 21) of, for example, a heat-seal type material, the tear-sheet layer may be torn in a controlled manner when the second layer is pulled.
The tear-sheet 20 and tear-guide 21 form a layered seal. The tear-guide 21 material is laminated to the tear-sheet 20. This can be done by using tape, chemical adhesive, infrared-cured adhesive, pressure fusing, heat-pressure fusing, or other adhesives or methods. The tear-guide 21 material is chosen or designed such that it does not tear or rip. The desired properties are tear resistance, strength, good adhesion to the tear-sheet 20, longitudinal strength and pull strength. The tear-guide 21 material may itself be a laminate of any number of layers. It may be comprised of strands of material with a good longitudinal strength. The tear guide 21 could be a woven, unwoven, plastic or urethane material. It may be a heat-tape, as previously mentioned, or an adhesive tape. It may even be one of the heat-tape materials to give it the OEM look and have adhesive on it for easy manufacturing. Of the different heat-tape materials, there are very many available, too numerous to mention, each version by a different manufacturer, and so these materials, in general, will be referred to as heat-tape. Most of them, however, are multilayer, usually two layers, usually copolymers. Generally, heat-tapes consist of a layer of strength and a heat-adhesive layer or heat-activated adhesive layer. The layer of strength can be most any plastic but polyester or polyethylene are popular strength layers in the heat adhesive industry. The heat-activated adhesive layers may vary immensely in the heat-tape-adhesive market.
The tear-guide 21 is narrower than the tear-sheet 20 so it will control the width to be torn from the tear-sheet 20. The tear-guide 21 is well over twice as long as the tear-sheet 20. The tear-guide 21 has a long free length portion 22 with a pull end 23. The tear-guide 21 also has a short grip portion 24. The long free length portion 22 of the tear guide 21 extends from a first end 25 of the tear-sheet 20. The short grip portion 24 of the tear-guide 21 extends from a second end 26 of the tear-sheet 20. Each end 25 and 26 of the tear-sheet 20 optionally has two short cuts 27 through it adjacent each side of the attached tear-guide 21. The cuts 27 in the first end 25 of the tear-sheet 20 provide a starting point for the tear and ensure an opening through the tear-sheet 20 of the right width, approximately the same width as the tear-guide 21. The cuts 27 in the second end 26 of the tear-sheet 20 ensure that the tear-guide 21 and the torn area of the tear-sheet 20 separate cleanly from the tear-sheet 20 and the width of the torn opening remains constant and that the short grip portion will cleanly pull through. As a result, the tear-sheet 20 tears in a straight, even line, providing an uninterrupted opening of constant width and thereby allowing evenly distributed toner flow, emulating, improving on and replacing the OEM seals.
As discussed, the tear-guide 21 could be a heat tape or simple adhesive tape. Further specific examples of materials used as the tear-guide 21 would be polypropylene of a polypropylene co-laminate. When polypropylene is co-laminated with polyethylene or other materials to form a tear-guide 21, the tear-guide will have excellent strength and will not break or tear apart when pulled. Polypropylene was tested in a co-laminate with polyethylene. The tear-guide 21 consisted of a layer of polypropylene three-thousandths of an inch thick and a layer of polyethylene two-thousandths of an inch thick. Of course the thicknesses could be reversed or could be equal, and could be increased or decreased. The polypropylene provides the heat adhesiveness to attach the tear-guide 21 to the tear-sheet 20 and the polyethylene provides the strength. The tear-guide 21 is laminated on the tear-sheet 20 using a heat roller, heat iron, flat iron, press iron, heat adhering the guide to the sheet. In essence, the tear-guide 21 and tear-sheet 20 form a multiple laminate that tears in a straight line when the guide is pulled and provides an opening in the sheet having an even width. It should be noted that the tear-guide 21 is not limited to the materials noted above. Any plastic or co-laminate of any 2 or more plastics may be used. In general, the thickness will range from 0.001 inch to 0.010 inch, however, 0.02 inch to 0.05 inch is the most suitable range. The most important properties of the tear-guide are tear-strength, tear-resistance, pull strength, and flexibility. As stated, the tear-guide 21 may be attached by heating a beat tape, by using an adhesive tape with the protective backing removed only for the length of the tear-sheet 20, or by applying an adhesive on a plastic strip where the amount of adhesive applied is equal to the length of the tear-sheet 20. The tear-strip 21 or tear-guide 21 may be made of any plastic, single layer, laminate, or multiple laminate. For example, good materials to choose from are polyester, polyethylene, polypropylene, polycarbonate, vinyl, urethane, PETG, TYVEC, among many other plastics.
The tear-seal 19 attaches to a seal-insert for use in the toner cartridge assembly.
Just as with the seal-insert 7, both seal-insert versions 28 and 32 may be made from antistatic and/or conductive material, or may be coated with antistatic and/or conductive material, to prevent toner from sticking to the seal-inserts and blocking toner flow from the passage 3 in the reservoir 1 through the seal-insert slot. But the tear-sheet 20 could also be made from antistatic and/or conductive material since it covers the seal-insert 28 or 32 on the side opposite that facing the reservoir 1. One way of doing this is to make the tear-sheet 20 from metallic material. Many of the previously described materials for the tear-sheet 20 may be found in metallic form, such as metallic MYLAR, or a standard metallic gift-wrap ribbon. For example, a metallic ribbon material is readily available in the gift-wrap industry. Another good example is the silver material that antistatic bags are made from, which could be used to form both the tear-sheet 20 and flexible seal-insert 32. Of course, the tear-sheet 20 could be laminated or coated with a conductive coating. Using a TYVEC-like material will allow the reservoir 1 to “breathe”, if the reservoir 1 is inadvertently compressed, and prevent toner from being forced from the reservoir 1 through its seals. TYVEC itself has too much tear resistance, but applicant is testing different grades and thicknesses of TYVEC, as well as looking for materials which have similar properties, to find a good tear-sheet material that can also breathe.
a illustrate how the stiff seal-insert 28 and tear-seal 19 are used together. The tear-sheet 20 is adhered to the seal-insert 28. The tear-guide 21 is located between the tear-sheet 20 and the seal-insert 28. The tear-guide 21 is sized such that it has a slightly smaller width than the slot 31 in the seal-insert 28, so the tear-guide 21 does not stick or is not adhered to the seal-insert 28. A tear-seal 19 would be secured to a flexible seal-insert 32 in the same manner.
b and 10c show the install process. Installing the seal system, typically done before adding the toner powder, is very easy. First, the adhesive liner 30a or 33a is removed as shown in
The recharger technician would then carefully adhere the seal-insert 28 onto the perimeter of the passage 3 from the reservoir 1 such that the slot 31 and passage 3 align. This tail 24 acts as an easy-grip-handle, for easier installation than other seals and is a very important part of this invention. This method of installation using a tail may be used in the stiff version, the flexible version, or most other seal systems. The free length portion 22 of the tear-guide 21 would be doubled back over the length of the tear-sheet 20. The pull end 23 of the free length portion 22 would be fed under the felt-like sealant material 4 and through the opening 5 in the side of the reservoir 1.
a demonstrate how the seal-insert 28 and tear-seal 19 are used together to form a removable seal for the reservoir 1. The tear-sheet 20 is on the side of the seal-insert 28 which faces away from the reservoir 1 and passage 3. It should be noted here that when using adhesive tape as the tear-guide 21, the liner or tape cover would not be removed from the short grip portion 24 and the long free length portion 22 so the tape does not stick to the reservoir 1, feed roller compartment 2 and opening 5. The plug 6 is inserted into the opening 5 over the pull end 23 of the tear-guide 21, and the toner cartridge is reassembled, filled with dry toner, and shipped to the end-user without fear of toner leakage. Optionally, the short grip portion 24 may be cut off once installed, however, if it remains, it will usually have no adverse effect, so therefore, cutting the short grip portion 24 is not essential.
To use the toner cartridge assembly, the end-user would grasp and pull the pull end 23 of the free length portion 22 of the tear-guide 21 extending from the opening 5. The tear-guide 21 will tear the tear-sheet 20 in a straight line, creating an even rip 35 having a width approximately equal to the width of the slot 31 in the seal-insert 28. The tear-guide 21, as it rips the tear-sheet 20, will pull through the narrow opening 5 in the reservoir 1, and will pull under the plug 6. The slot 31 and the passage 3 will not be accidently blocked by an unevenly torn tear-sheet, so toner clogging is prevented. The tear-sheet 20 will not tear off prematurely. It only tears when the tear-guide 21 is pulled from the tear-sheet 20 by the end-user. The tear-guide 21 is removed completely from the reservoir 1. The toner cartridge assembly is then inserted into the imaging machine for operation.
In some toner cartridge assemblies, such as the LX cartridge, it is convenient to use the remains of the OEM seal in the reservoir 1 as a seal-attach area for the seal-insert 28 or 32.
When the new tear-seal 19 or seal-insert 28 or 32 is not totally adhered to the flexible strips 36, toner pockets will be created. Since the LX cartridge reservoir 1 uses an inner paddle to drive toner through the passage 3 to the feed roller compartment 2, working against gravity, the toner pockets are vertical. These vertical toner pockets fill up with toner and eventually block the passage 3. This has actually been observed in the LX cartridge. Static electricity, the magnetic properties of toner, and other attractive properties within the assembly contribute to the problem, but even if the tear-sheet 20 and seal-insert 28 or 32 have antistatic properties, toner pockets will still form and may cause problems.
Applicant has come up with a new method for adhering the tear-seal 19 or seal-insert 28 or 32 to this flimsy attach area formed by the flexible strips 36 along the entire length of the passage 3 from the reservoir 1, preventing formation of toner pockets. By blowing air into the reservoir 1 or otherwise maintaining a positive air pressure inside the reservoir 1, usually from the toner fill port 37, the flimsy flexible strips 36 will be forced by air pressure to pull up or outward from the reservoir 1. The tear-seal 19 and seal-insert 28 or 32 are then pressed down or inward toward the reservoir 1, and the materials of the new seal and the remains of the OEM seal are adhered together along their entire lengths.
In this case, the flexible seal-insert 32 has the advantage of providing a more thorough or complete attachment to the remains of the OEM seal because the seal-insert 32 can be flexed or manipulated into contact with the strips 36 along the entire length of the passage 3. But the rigidness of the stiff seal-insert 28 makes it easier to apply. The width of the slot 31 of the seal-insert 28 does not spread or pinch as easily as the width of the slot 34 of the seal-insert 32, making the seal-insert 28 more stable.
Alternately, and this is an important part of the invention, for the flexible version of the seal, it may be difficult to apply the die-cut adhesive, which is very thin, in a precise fashion, onto the tear-seal. Among other methods of automation, for simple hand assembly, the adhesive will be thin and difficult to accurately put in place without it sticking all over the place in an undesirable way. To solve this problem, a thick, stiff paper or cardboard adhesive liner may be used, to provide stiffness to the adhesive or tape. Thus, hand assembly of this component is simplified.
It should be noted that one could use this type of tear-seal 19 and seal-insert 28 or 32 in a split hopper system. Some cartridges have a plastic gasket seam where two sections of the toner compartment join together. One section is the reservoir 1 and the other section is the cover or feed roller compartment. There are devices on the market that split the toner compartment into the two sections at this seam to put a new seal between the reservoir 1 and feed roller compartment. The sections are then joined back together using conventional clips, or any other joining means. The next time the cartridge needs to be refilled with toner, the sections do not have to be split. The clips are simply removed. The tear-seal 19 and seal-inserts 28 and 32 of this invention may be used in this type of system. Since there is really no seal-attach area, wider versions of the tear-seal and seal-insert are clamped between the sections. Foam, tape, or foam tape gaskets may be incorporated into the seal-insert as shown earlier in
The seal of U.S. Pat. No. 5,110,646 could also be improved for easy installation using some of the innovations of this invention.
Since minor changes and modifications varied to fit particular operating requirements and environments will be understood by those skilled in the art, the invention is not considered limited to the specific examples chosen for purposes of illustration. The invention includes all changes and modifications which do not constitute a departure from the true spirit and scope of this invention as claimed in the following claims and as represented by reasonable equivalents to the claimed elements. Any ideas shown in any embodiments may be incorporated into any other embodiments. All references are to be considered as background art of this invention.
This patent application is a continuation of patent Ser. No. 08/370,968 filed on Jan. 10, 1995 now U.S. Pat. No. 6,552,780.
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2292469 | Feb 1996 | GB |
55-90979 | Jul 1980 | JP |
1-315779 | Dec 1989 | JP |
4-179976 | Jun 1992 | JP |
4353435 | Dec 1992 | JP |
7-56428 | Mar 1995 | JP |
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Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 08370968 | Jan 1995 | US |
Child | 10336071 | US |