Not applicable
Not applicable
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to printing systems and more particularly to high-speed printing systems that use a sense mark on a substrate to control the printing of images or data on the substrate.
2. Description of the Background of the Invention
High-speed printing systems typically print on a paper web by moving the paper web along a paper path using rollers or drums past printheads. A controller controls the printheads to print images on the paper web as the paper web moves under and/or over the printheads. In printing systems that include multiple imaging units, each imaging unit may include a plurality of printheads and each imaging unit may print a different color on the paper web. A first imaging unit prints a first color used for an image and a subsequent imaging unit prints a second color overlaid on the same image and so on with additional imaging units and colors. In order to align the printed images, it is important to track the position of the printed images with respect to the printheads included in each imaging unit.
In high-speed printing systems, the speed at which the paper web is moving along the paper path can be on the order of hundreds of feet/meters per second. In addition, the paper web dimensions may change due to moisture and other forces exerted on the paper web. These and other factors make it difficult to accurately track the position of the paper web and provide accurate control of the printheads.
Prior print systems and methods have included the printing of a sense mark on the substrate that indicates a top of the page. A sensor detects the sense mark and a controller tracks the position of the sense mark with respect to the printheads on each imaging unit. The controller instructs the printheads to print on the paper web in accordance with the detection of the sense mark. Prior print systems use a first printhead on a first imaging unit to print the sense mark on the paper web. Consequently, the sense mark is located along a side margin of the paper web, where subsequent images are not printed. This arrangement requires a larger paper web width to produce a printed image of a particular size because of the unused margin where the sense mark is printed. Further, these prior systems have not adequately addressed the issue of accurately detecting the sense mark and tracking the paper web.
In one embodiment, a printing system includes a printer that prints a sense mark on a substrate and an imaging unit. The imaging unit prints data onto the substrate and includes a plurality of printheads positioned around the circumference of a drum associated with the imaging unit. The substrate is fed onto the drum is driven past the plurality of printheads by the rotation of the drum. The printing system further includes a single sensor associated with the plurality of printheads that detects the sense mark at a position where the substrate is in contact with the drum and a controller that instructs the imaging unit to print data onto a portion of the substrate that is in contact with the drum, wherein the controller distributes print data among the plurality of printheads in accordance with the detection of the sense mark by only the single sensor.
In another embodiment, a method of printing includes the step of printing a plurality of sense marks on a substrate, wherein consecutive sense marks are separated by a predetermined distance. The method further includes the step of feeding the substrate onto a drum associated with the imaging unit, wherein the imaging unit includes a plurality of printheads positioned around a circumference of the drum. Additionally, the method includes the steps of driving the substrate past the plurality of printheads by the rotation of the drum, detecting the sense marks with a single sensor associated with the plurality of printheads at a position where the substrate is in contact with the drum and instructing an imaging unit to print images onto a portion of the substrate that is in contact with the drum, wherein the instructing step distributes print data among the plurality of printheads in the imaging unit in accordance with the detection of the sense marks by only the single sensor.
In yet another embodiment, a printing system includes a sense mark printer that prints only a plurality of sense marks on a paper web, wherein consecutive sense marks are separated by predetermined distances, and an imaging unit that prints images on the paper web, wherein the imaging unit includes a plurality of printhead assemblies. The printing system further includes a drum that drives the paper web past the printhead assemblies, a single sensor associated with the plurality of printhead assemblies that detects the sense marks after the paper web has contacted the drum, and a controller. The controller instructs the printhead assemblies to print images onto the paper web, wherein the controller tracks the position of multiple sense marks concurrently and accounts for the speed of the paper web so that the printhead assemblies print images onto the paper web in accordance with the sense marks by only the single sensor.
Other aspects and advantages of the present invention will become apparent upon consideration of the following detailed description.
Generally, the imaging units 12, 14 contain four printhead assemblies, two on each side of the imaging unit, wherein each printhead assembly includes a plurality of printheads. The printhead assemblies 30 are positioned to guarantee that the direction of travel of a drop of ink from each printhead is substantially perpendicular to the surface of the associated drum 34 (and hence the paper web 18).
In the embodiment of
The printing system in other embodiments includes a series of modular units that can be utilized as needed for the printing task to be undertaken. In other words, each imaging unit may include only two printhead assemblies (one on the left half of the imaging unit and another on the right half of the unit) and the same or different inks may be fed to each printhead assembly so that each assembly can print one side of a 12-inch (30.48 cm) page. As noted above, each imaging unit may further include two additional printhead assemblies. The additional assemblies are positioned to overprint the color(s) deposited by the first two printhead assemblies. In this configuration, each imaging unit can simultaneously print two simplex 12 inch (30.48 cm) pages in two different colors. Two such imaging units operating in series can produce two simplex 12 inch (30.48 cm) four-color pages and four imaging units can produce two duplex 12 inch (30.48 cm) four-color pages. In addition, as noted above, depending upon the number of imaging units that are used, one could alternatively produce 24-inch (60.96 cm) simplex or duplex pages in one to four colors.
As seen in
In
In
The sense mark printer 52 is located upstream from the imaging unit 54 to print a sense mark 64 (
The sense mark printer 52 prints a plurality of sense marks 64 on the paper web 18, wherein consecutive sense marks are separated by a predetermined distance depending on the size of the finished page. Any type of ink may be used to print the sense mark; however, generally an ink is chosen that is both relatively inexpensive and easily detected by the sensor 66. In addition, the separate printer 52 uses an inexpensive printhead to print the sense mark 64 on the paper web 18. The embodiment of
The sensor 66 associated with the imaging unit 54 detects the sense mark 64, and a sensor 68 associated with the drum 58 is used to track the speed and/or the position of the drum (and thus the paper web 18) as the drum rotates. In one embodiment, the sensor 68 associated with the drum 58 is a transducer located on the drum itself. In another embodiment, the sensor 66 that detects the sense mark 64 is a conventional optical sensor. For example, the optical sensor may include a light emitting diode (“LED”), a photodiode, and an amplifier, wherein the LED reflects light off of the substrate and the reflected light is detected by the photodiode to generate a sense signal when the light is reflected off of the sense mark. The sense signal is amplified and supplied to a control circuit 70, which controls the printheads in each printhead assembly 60a, 60b to print images onto the paper web 18.
In other embodiments, the sense mark printer 52 prints a plurality of sense marks 64 on the paper web using infrared inks that absorb infrared light or invisible inks that reflect ultraviolet light. In these embodiments, the sensor 66 will be adapted to detect the infrared or invisible inks.
The size of the sensor 66 and the size of the sense mark 64 can be adjusted so that the sensor can easily detect the sense mark. For example, the length and/or the width of the sense mark 64 can be matched to the dimensions of the sensor 66. In one embodiment, the sense mark 64 is about ⅛ of an inch (0.3175 cm) in the direction that the paper web 18 is traveling and ¼ to ⅜ of an inch (0.635-0.9525 cm) across the width of the paper web.
In
The controller 70 associated with each printhead assembly 60a, 60b controls the printheads thereof so that the color components of the images are printed substantially in synchronism with the sense marks 64 and the registration or alignment of the color components of the images is accurately controlled. That is, the controller 70 receives a signal from the sensor 66 that the sense mark 64 has been detected and uses the speed and/or position of the drum 58, and hence the speed and/or position of the paper web 18, to control the respective printheads to print a raster line at a particular position of the paper web. The controller 68 then distributes segments of a raster line among the printheads in accordance with the position of each inkjet printhead. Each printhead has local circuitry (not shown) to translate the digital raster line data into analog signals that generate drops of ink deposited onto the paper web 18.
In another embodiment, the controller 70 electronically compensates for inherent delays in the sensor 66 and other electrical components. The controller 70 builds in an electronic delay before sending instructions to the printheads to print raster lines on the paper web 18. The electronic delay will vary depending on the speed of the paper web 18. For example, at full speed a shorter delay may be built in than at a slower speed. Consequently, the controller 70 instructs the printheads to begin printing on the paper web 18 at consistent distances from the sense mark 64.
The controller 70 stores and tracks the positions of a plurality of consecutive sense marks 64 to control the printing of each page moving past the printhead assemblies 60a, 60b. In one example, consecutive sense marks are separated by a short distance and the finished page size is small so that multiple pages are being printed by a single printhead assembly at the same time. The paper web 18 contacts the drum and the sensor 66 detects a first sense mark 64. The sensor 66 sends a detect signal to the controller 70, which stores the timing of the detect signal and tracks the position of the sense mark. At the appropriate time, the controller 70 instructs the printheads of the left printhead assembly 60a to begin printing the first page. While the first page is being printed, the drum 58 continues to rotate and the sensor 66 detects and the controller 70 tracks a second sense mark 64. The controller 70 instructs the printheads to begin printing the second page as the first page is being printed by the same left printhead assembly 60a. The drum 66 continues to drive the paper web 18 and consecutive sense marks are detected and tracked to control the printing of each page. After the left printhead assembly 60a has printed an image on the first page, the controller 70 continues to track the position of the first sense mark so that the right printhead assembly 60b can be controlled to print an image that is aligned with the image printed by the first printhead assembly. Likewise, the positions of consecutive sense marks are tracked to control the alignment of images printed by the left and right printhead assemblies 60a, 60b. Consequently, printed images can be aligned with the sense marks and with other images.
Referring to
In the duplex printing system of
A further embodiment of a duplex printing system is similar to the previously described embodiments and includes the sense mark printer upstream 52 from first and second imaging units, wherein the sense mark printer only prints a sense mark on the front side of the paper web 18. The first imaging unit detects the sense mark as described above. The second imaging unit is similar to
The previously described embodiments have included a separate printer to print a sense mark on a paper web and a sensor that detects the mark, wherein the detection of the mark is used to control printheads that print images on the paper web. It will be apparent to one of skill in the art upon reading this document that other systems and methods of using a sense mark to control printing on a substrate are contemplated and fall within the scope of the disclosure.
This invention is useful in controlling printheads to print images on a substrate that are aligned with a sense mark.
Numerous modifications to the present invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art in view of the foregoing description. Accordingly, this description is to be construed as illustrative only and is presented for the purpose of enabling those skilled in the art to make and use the invention and to teach the best mode of carrying out the same. The exclusive rights to all modifications that come within the scope of the appended claims are reserved.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/765,353, filed Feb. 3, 2006, and incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
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