DIGITAL-TO-GARMENT INKJET PRINTING MACHINE
20210394529 · 2021-12-23
Inventors
Cpc classification
B41J11/002
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J11/00216
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J11/00218
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J11/0024
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B41J3/407
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J11/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
Disclosed is a carriage for a direct to garment inkjet printing machine. The machine has a frame having a leading edge, a trailing edge, and a pair of opposed lateral edges. A first row of slots is positioned on the leading edge and a second row of slots is positioned on the trailing edge. The second row of slots is spaced from the first row of slots by a gelling gap. A shelf on the frame supports tanks of white ink and tanks of color ink and a first plurality of tubing connects a tank of white ink positioned on the shelf with a print head in the first row of slots. A second plurality of tubing is for connecting a tank of color ink positioned on the shelf with a print head in the second row of slots. A pair of side heaters attached to opposed lateral edges of the first frame.
Claims
1-20. (canceled)
21. A carriage for a direct to garment inkjet printing machine comprising: a frame having a bottom wall and a leading edge and a trailing edge; a first plurality of slots in a row on the bottom wall proximate the leading edge of the frame; a second plurality of slots in a row on the bottom wall proximate the trailing edge of the frame and spaced from the first plurality of slots by a gelling gap; a first plurality of print heads in the first plurality of slots, each of the first plurality of print heads coupled to a tank of white ink; and, a second plurality of print heads in the second plurality of slots, each of the second plurality of print heads coupled to tank of color ink.
22. The carriage of claim 21 further comprising a first heater connected to the frame.
23. The carriage of claim 22 further comprising a second heater connected to the frame.
24. The carriage of claim 23 wherein the first heater is connected to a first side of the frame and the second heater is connected to a second side of the frame.
25. The carriage of claim 21 further comprising a shelf on the frame supporting a first tank of white ink and a first tank of color ink having an ink having a first color different than white.
26. The carriage of claim 25 further comprising tubing for connecting the tank of white ink to one of the first plurality of print heads.
27. The carriage of claim 26 further comprising tubing for connecting the tank of color ink to one of the second plurality of print heads.
28. The carriage of claim 25 wherein each of the tank for white ink and the tank for color ink includes a stirring mechanism.
29. The carriage of claim 25 further comprising a second tank of white ink supported on the shelf
30. The carriage of claim 25 further comprising a second tank of color ink supported on the shelf wherein the second tank of color ink contains an ink having a second color different than the first color.
31. The carriage of claim 21 further comprising a print head board receiving area.
32. The carriage of claim 21 wherein the frame is mounted for reciprocating translational movement.
33. The carriage of claim 21 wherein the first plurality of slots includes six slots and the second plurality of slots includes six slots.
34. The carriage of claim 21 further comprising a humidor capping station for flushing the first plurality of print heads and the second plurality of print heads.
35. The carriage of claim 34 wherein the humidor capping station includes a squeegee for wiping a faceplate of each print head.
36. The carriage of claim 34 wherein the humidor capping station is configured to seal each print head to prevent it from drying out.
37. The carriage of claim 22 wherein the first heater is a thermal heat source.
38. The carriage of claim 22 wherein the first heater is an inductive heat source.
39. The carriage of claim 38 wherein the first heater is an infrared source.
40. The carriage of claim 39 wherein the infrared source is an infrared quartz lamp.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0011] To understand the present invention, it will now be described by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings and attachments in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0025] While this invention is susceptible of embodiments in many different forms, there is shown in the drawings and will herein be described in detail preferred embodiments of the invention with the understanding that the present disclosure is to be considered as an exemplification of the principles of the invention and is not intended to limit the broad aspect of the invention to the embodiments illustrated.
[0026]
[0027] The heating press 14 applies heat to the pallet and a textile on the pallet to preheat the textile. Thus, the heating press 14 may sometimes be referred to as the heating station 14. The heating station 14 increases the temperature of the textile using a thermal heat source or an inductive heat source. The thermal heat source can be a contact heat source of a thermal radiator. Inductive heat sources cause an optional pretreatment solution to heat upon exposure to electromagnetic radiation including an ultra violet light (UV) source, an infrared (IR) light source, a visible light source, a microwave source, a radio wave source, and combinations of the same. In a preferred form of the invention, the heating press 14 is a contact heat source such as a heat sink. Pretreatment solutions are well known in the art and preferably speed the drying of the white ink.
[0028] In a preferred form of the heating station 14, the heating press 14 is a contact heat source which sometimes will be referred to as a heat sink. The heating press 14 is mounted for reciprocal translational motion from a stowed position to an operating position. Preferably, when in the stowed position it is outside of the heating station 14 such as adjacent to the heating station but not sufficiently close to heat the pallet as desired. In one form of the invention, the heating press is mounted for movement transverse to the direction the pallet is moved and more preferably along a vertical axis drawn perpendicular to a surface of the pallet which extends horizontally. Heat can be generated in the heat sink through passing current through an electrically resistive material to heat the resistive material.
[0029] The carriage 16 is shown in greater detail in
[0030] In one preferred form of the invention shown in
[0031] A second plurality of tubing 56 connects tanks 52 of color ink with a print head 62 in the second row of slots. It should be understood that using a plurality of tubing segments is optional and could be replaced by a single tubing segment connecting a single tank of ink with a print head. However, it is believed a single segment of tubing is not as effective as a plurality of tubing in this application.
[0032] The carriage 16 also has a pair of side heaters 80 (see also
[0033] The quartz lamps 80 have a generally rectangular frame 84 defining a chamber 86 with electrical connectors 88 at opposed ends for mounting and supplying electricity to the bulb 82 from a source not shown. A pair of inwardly sloping walls 90 are provided to act as reflectors to focus the IR radiation. The sloping walls 90 each have a plurality of vents 92 cut through the thickness of the wall and are spaced from one another along a line. On a top surface 94 of the frame 84 there is a pair of upstanding fans 96 at opposed ends of the top surface and a centrally located electrical connector 98 is disposed between the air intakes 96. A pair of arms 99 are provided for connecting the IR quartz lamp to the carriage frame.
[0034] Suitable conveyor systems for moving the pallet from the loading zone to the heating station includes a screw conveyor, a linear conveyor, and other conveying systems well known to those of ordinary skill in the art.
[0035] Suitable print head assemblies for inkjet printing, shown in
[0036]
[0037] Now will be described how the machinery described is used to preheat a textile and pallet prior to an inkjet printing procedure. A textile is mounted on the pallet in the loading area (
[0038] After the textile is determined by the controller to be in a condition for printing, it is moved by the conveyor, in response to a signal received from the controller, away from the heating station 14 into the printing area as shown in
[0039] During each printing pass, the white ink is applied by the white print head in the shape of a rectangular band having a print height and a print length determined by the size of the print head. The print height typically is small in comparison to the image height so numerous print passes must be taken as shown in
[0040] The desired image will have an image height dimension and an image length dimension that are orthogonally disposed with respect to one another. The desired image can be oriented on a textile or garment such as a T-shirt in a printing area that covers from an entire side of a T-shirt including the sleeves to a smaller fraction of the T-shirt such as a portion of a body of the T-shirt. In one example of image orientation, a top of the image is disposed below a neck hole of the T-shirt and a bottom of the image is positioned somewhere just above a body opening of the T-shirt. The lateral edges are disposed along a line drawn from a junction between the sleeves and the body of the T-shot vertically to the body opening. A printing direction typically will proceed along the length dimension with a printing pass defined by any number of trips from one lateral edge to the opposed lateral edge. For example, for each 1-5 full-length printing passes, the print head is moved along the height dimension by a prescribed amount. The printing typical proceeds from the bottom of the image toward the top of the image or vice versa. The white ink and the color ink area will cumulate until the cumulated print height of the white ink and the cumulated print height of color ink is equal to or greater than the desired image height. More preferably, the cumulated print height will equal to the image height and will not exceed the image height. At this point the inkjet printing is completed and the inkjets stop depositing ink.
[0041] Typically the prescribed amount the print head is moved along the image height dimension is on the order of from 0.1 inch to 2 inch, more preferably from 0.2 inch to 1 inch, and most preferably 0.3 inch to 0.75 inch. A servo motor or servo motors drive the carriage along two perpendicular axes in accordance with instructions received from the controller 22. A Y-axis corresponds to the height dimension of the image and an X axis corresponds to the image length dimension. The controller 22 instructs the X-axis server motor drive controller to move the carriage 16 a calculated distance along the X-axis and is provided encoder position feedback and moves status inputs from the X-axis servo drive controller. When the X-axis drive controller indicates the desired move is finished, the controller 22 instructs a Y-axis servo drive controller to move the print head a calculated distance along the Y-axis. The controller 22 is provided with encoder position feedback and move status inputs from they-axis servo controller until the movement along the Y-axis is complete. The process then repeats until the print job is complete.
[0042] In a first printing pass shown in
[0043] Only white ink is printed on the textile until the height of the cumulating white image equals the gelling gap 42. At this point the color inkjets in the second row come into alignment with the white ink of the first pass. Color ink is applied over the gelled (or gelling) white ink as is shown in
[0044] What is meant by gelling of the white ink is the ink is partially dried to a point where it is almost dry to the touch so that is accepts color ink printed on top thereof without that the color ink bleeding into the white ink layer. The gelling of the white ink is also enhanced through its interaction with the pretreatment solution. An ink is fully cured when the moisture has been fully evaporated and the textile or garment is ready for washing or wearing.
[0045] Suitable white inkjet inks and suitable color inks are of the type that are jettable through a piezoelectric print head. Suitable inks include be aqueous-based inks, heat-curable inks, plastisol inks, solvent inks, and UV curable inks to name a few examples.
[0046] Suitable color inkjet inks are available in subtractive colors: cyan, magenta, yellow, and black (CMYK), and additive colors: red, green and blue (RGB).
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[0048] The resulting gelled-white-ink-textile prepared in the method of
[0049] Many modifications and variations of the present invention are possible in light of the above teachings. It is, therefore, to be understood within the scope of the appended claims the invention may be protected otherwise than as specifically described.