A persistent goal of many image forming devices is precise registration of images formed on media sheets. This may be particularly true of color printers using multiple color cartridges to create a single color image. In an effort to improve image registration, many image forming devices use an alignment mechanism to control the position and timing of media sheets traveling from various media sources, through the media path, and to the image forming location within the device. Thus, the image forming device relies on the alignment mechanism, which may include a variety of optical, electrical, or mechanical sensors, to know precisely where to form an image on the sheet.
As image forming devices are incorporated in smaller packages, rigid space constraints on the media transport components within the device create problems for devices having multiple feed sources. One example of this type of device is a laser printer with multiple media trays, a duplex path, and perhaps a manual feed path. Devices such as these may route media sheets from each of these sources through a common media path. As these devices become smaller, so too does the internal space used to align media fed from the multiple sources into the common media path.
A disadvantage of smaller device packaging is that, in general, more space and longer paths are desirable to accurately direct media sheets that are fed from multiple sources toward a common alignment point. Where sufficient space is available, the various media paths can be gradually merged to a common path so that sheets traveling in this common path may then repeatably arrive at a common alignment point. Further, with sufficient spacing, sheets arriving at this common alignment point may be sensed using a single leading edge sensor or other equivalent sensor. Thus, the timing of image processing and media transport events may be predictably determined. Thus, given sufficient space, the fact that media sheets arrive at the common alignment point from media paths converging from different directions and different approach angles may be nearly irrelevant.
Unfortunately, as image forming devices get smaller, alignment nips, rollers, and other alignment points move closer to the various media sources. Consequently, the distances previously relied on to align media from different sources get smaller and it has become increasingly difficult to provide consistent media sheet entry into these alignment points. Other factors such as media curl, media weight, and environmental conditions make it even more difficult to reliably control where the leading edge of a media sheet contacts the alignment point. For example, in an alignment nip formed at the contact surface between two registration rollers, the above factors may contribute to the leading edge of media sheets unpredictably striking either roll or both rolls simultaneously, leading to feed reliability problems such as skew, folding, or treeing.
Furthermore, the timings for each media source may not be consistent. With the sheets approaching the alignment point from varying angles and the leading edge of the sheets contacting the alignment point at different locations, the time that elapses between sensing a leading edge approaching the alignment point and passing of the leading edge through the alignment point may vary drastically. Thus, transport and image processing algorithms must accommodate this variation by implementing different feed times for the different sources or implementing large delay windows to account for the various feed times, neither of which is optimal.
Embodiments of the present invention relate to controlling the approach and entry of media to an alignment nip as may be formed between alignment or registration rollers. Media sheet approach may be controlled with a conduit through which media sheets originating from a plurality of sources pass. The conduit may be positioned adjacent and upstream of an alignment nip. The conduit may comprise a diverting path or jog to alter the course followed by the media sheets passing through the conduit to focus the approach of the media sheets toward the alignment nip. The diverting path may alter an angle of approach of the media sheets to the alignment nip. The diverting path may also improve the likelihood that media sheets from the various sources contact the alignment nip at a repeatable point. In an exemplary system where the alignment nip comprises a contact area between a driven roller and a drive roller, the diverting path may be configured to direct the media sheets to a contact point at the alignment nip or to a point on the drive or driven rollers.
Other embodiments comprise separate conduits through which media sheets pass in approaching the alignment nip. The separate conduit may also be configured to direct media sheets to a common contact point near the alignment nip. The alignment nip may also have an associated media sensor associated with each media sheet path. The sensor, an example of which is a leading edge sensor, may be adapted to trigger when a leading edge of a media sheet traveling through either the media sheet paths passes a substantially common distance away from the common point at the alignment nip.
Embodiments of the present invention are directed to media alignment in an image forming apparatus. One application of the embodiments disclosed herein is for moving media sheets from a plurality of sources into an image forming path within an image forming apparatus as generally illustrated in
The image forming device 10 of
From the various input sections 13, 32, 50 and their associated media paths, media sheets are fed into the media path 21. One or more registration rollers 39, 40 disposed along the media path 21 align the media sheet and precisely control its further movement. A media transport belt 20 forms a section of the media path 21 for moving the media sheets past a plurality of image forming units 100. In a typical color electrophotographic printer such as exemplary device 10, three or four colors of toner—cyan, yellow, magenta, and optionally black—are applied successively to a print media sheet to create a color image. Correspondingly, the embodiment of
Once the media sheet moves past the image forming stations 100, a fuser 24 thermally fuses the loose toner to the media sheet. The sheet then passes through reversible exit rollers 26 to the output stack 28 formed on the exterior body 12 of image forming device 10. Alternatively, the exit rollers 26 may reverse motion after the trailing edge of the media sheet has passed the entrance to a duplex path 38, thus directing the media sheet through the duplex path 30 and again into media path 21 to print a duplex image on the opposite side of the media sheet. It should be understood that while the foregoing description relates to a color electrophotographic printer as shown in
Referring to
In one embodiment, the registration rollers 39, 40 are comprised of a drive roller 40 and a backup roller 39. The drive roller 40 is rotated by a drive motor and, optionally, an associated drive mechanism (not shown). The backup roller 39 may also be rotated by a drive motor, but is more advantageously rotated by frictional forces created by contact with the drive roller 40 at the nip 42. Thus, backup roller 39 operates as a follower roller that rotates in a direction opposite to that of drive roller 40. Friction between the rollers 39, 40 may be increased by incorporating a material having a high coefficient of friction on one or both of the outer surfaces 46, 44 of the rollers 39, 40. In addition, the nip force between the rollers 39, 40 may be increased with a bias member such as a spring. For reasons discussed in greater detail below, the outer surface 46 of backup roller 39 is preferably comprised of a wear-resistant material such as a hardened resin, composite, steel, or other metal.
In the exemplary embodiment, media sheets traveling along feed paths 60-62, which originate from widely different directions, are routed through a common channel or conduit 64 prior to reaching alignment nip 42. Routing these feed paths in a converging manner like this improves the likelihood that media following these paths will reach a common point at the alignment nip 42, such as focal point 70 on backup wheel 39 (or on drive wheel 40 or at the nip 42). A diversion or jog 66 in the conduit 64 further diverts the sheets traveling through the conduit 64 so that the leading edge of sheets following paths 60-62 contacts focal point 70. Diversion 66 tends to harmonize the direction from which the media paths 60-62 approach the focal point 70 in addition to normalizing the point of contact 70 at or near the alignment nip 42. In the absence of conduit 64 and diversion 66, the media paths 60-62 are more likely to contact other areas around alignment nip 42, including on drive wheel 40 or at the nip 42 itself. The diversion 66 and conduit 64 also advantageously operate to prevent media sheets from missing the nip altogether, as would happen, for example, if a leading edge of a media sheet were to contact a right side of backup wheel 39 shown in
In the exemplary embodiment, diversion 66 may alter the direction followed by heavy-weight sheets fed from pick roller 16 along path 60. Diversion 66 may also alter the direction followed by media sheets on paths 61-62 to more closely follow that of path 60. For example, in
With the media constrained as described along paths 60-62, individual sheets may also be ironed out in a widthwise (or perpendicular to the direction of travel) direction. In one embodiment, the media sheets may be intentionally directed at contact point 96 immediately prior to contacting the alignment roller 39 to eliminate leading edge curl effects such as dog ears, treeing, nip stubs and the like.
In addition to media paths 60-62 converging at focal point 70, media path 63 from duplex path 30 also advantageously converges at the focal point. In certain document handling devices, such as the exemplary embodiment shown, space constraints may prevent certain feed paths from being routed through a common conduit 64. As an alternate or parallel solution to the inherent problem of alignment nip 42 approach, certain paths may be directed individually or in groups to a common focus point 42. Thus, in the embodiment provided, whereas three feed paths 60-62 are diverted through conduit 64 and past diversion 66, one feed path 63 is routed to focal point 70 outside of conduit 64 and diversion 66. For instance, with sufficient space, duplex path 30 and paper path 63 may also be routed through conduit 64. Alternatively, paths 62, 63 might be combined and routed to focal point 70 independent of paths 60, 61. Certainly other combinations of individual or grouped media paths may be utilized depending on the particular application.
As alluded to above, the focal point 70 in the present embodiment is positioned on a surface 46 of roller 39. The focal point 70 may also be positioned at other locations in the vicinity of the nip 42, such as on drive wheel 40, as shown in
A sensor 72, shown in
In an alternative embodiment shown in
The present invention may be carried out in other specific ways than those herein set forth without departing from the scope and essential characteristics of the invention. For instance, the embodiments described have been depicted in use with a diversion 66 within an elongated media conduit 64. The diversion 66 and conduit 64 may also be integrated into a short guide through which media passes. It is also possible to implement one-sided deflecting plate as a suitable diverting jog. Still another possibility is the use of a series of jogs to achieve the intended diversion. The present embodiments are, therefore, to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive, and all changes coming within the meaning and equivalency range of the appended claims are intended to be embraced therein.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060188305 A1 | Aug 2006 | US |