Drop-on-demand printer with bottle ink supply and keyed bottle cap
10899135 ยท 2021-01-26
Assignee
Inventors
- Kyle Johnson (Shakopee, MN, US)
- Randy Jordan (Shakopee, MN, US)
- Brian O'Dell (Shakopee, MN, US)
- Daniel Sarkinen (Shakopee, MN, US)
Cpc classification
B41J2/17509
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J13/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J3/50
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J2/1754
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J2/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B41J2/175
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J2/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
An ink bottle is mounted in a DOD printer with the ink bottle acting as an ink supply reservoir that supplies ink to a DOD print head. A unique cap is provided that is configured to be affixed to an end of the ink bottle via threads or the like. The cap can be provided with one or more mechanical keying features used to limit mounting of the cap and the bottle assembly to a correct receiver in the DOD printer. The cap can also be provided with a valve controlled ink passage that allows ink to flow out of the bottle through the cap and a valve controlled vent passage that allows air to enter the bottle through the cap.
Claims
1. A plastic card processing system, comprising: a card input that is configured to hold a plurality of plastic cards to be processed; a card output that is configured to hold a plurality of processed plastic cards; at least one of a magnetic stripe reading/writing system and an integrated circuit chip programming system between the card input and the card output; a drop-on-demand card printer between the card input and the card output that is configured to print on a plastic card using ultraviolet curable ink, the drop-on-demand card printer includes: at least one drop-on-demand print head; an ink bottle mounted in the drop-on-demand card printer and fluidly connected to the at least one drop-on-demand print head, the bottle containing ultraviolet curable ink, the ink bottle having a neck defining an ink outlet, and the neck having an exterior surface with threads thereon; a cap affixed to the neck of the ink bottle, the cap having a connection sleeve with an interior surface with threads thereon, and the threads on the interior surface of the connection sleeve are engaged with the threads on the exterior surface of the neck; a receiver that is configured to receive the cap when the ink bottle is mounted in the drop-on-demand card printer, the receiver having a quick connect coupler; the cap includes a quick connect valve that is connected with the quick connect coupler of the receiver; and a manual release mechanism mounted in the drop-on-demand card printer that is engageable with the quick connect coupler to permit manual release of the connection between the quick connect valve and the quick connect coupler; an ultraviolet curing station between the card input and the card output, the ultraviolet curing station is configured to cure ultraviolet curable ink applied to a plastic card by the drop-on-demand card printer.
2. The plastic card processing system of claim 1, wherein the drop-on-demand card printer further includes a receiver that is configured to receive the cap when the ink bottle is mounted in the drop-on-demand card printer, and the cap includes a mechanical keying feature that limits mounting of the cap to the receiver.
3. The plastic card processing system of claim 2, wherein the ink bottle further includes a shoulder, and further comprising a capacitance sensor mounted on the receiver and positioned adjacent to the shoulder when the ink bottle is mounted in the drop-on-demand card printer.
4. The plastic card processing system of claim 2, wherein the cap includes a cap body with a first end and a second end, the connection sleeve projects from the first end; and the mechanical keying feature comprises a plurality of bores formed in the cap body at the second end.
5. The plastic card processing system of claim 2, wherein the mechanical keying feature comprises a shape of an outer periphery of the cap, and the receiver has a shape that is configured to match the shape of the outer periphery of the cap.
6. The plastic card processing system of claim 1, wherein the cap includes a quick-connect valve that controls flow of the ultraviolet curable ink from the ink bottle through an ink passage in the cap, and the cap further includes a check valve adjacent to the quick-connect valve that provides venting by allowing air into the ink bottle through a vent passage in the cap.
7. The plastic card processing system of claim 6, further comprising a cap liner within the cap at a base end of the connection sleeve that is configured to seal with an end of the neck of the ink bottle, and the cap liner is configured to permit passage of the ultraviolet curable ink through the cap liner and permit passage of air through the cap liner.
8. The plastic card processing system of claim 1, further comprising a radio frequency identification tag mounted on the cap.
9. The plastic card processing system of claim 1, wherein the drop-on-demand card printer includes: a plurality of the drop-on-demand print heads; a plurality of the ink bottles mounted in the drop-on-demand card printer, each ink bottle contains ultraviolet curable ink, each ink bottle is fluidly connected to a corresponding one of the drop-on-demand print heads via a pump, each ink bottle having a neck defining an ink outlet, and each neck having an exterior surface with threads thereon.
10. The plastic card processing system of claim 1, wherein the cap includes a non-circular cap body, and the connection sleeve extends from the non-circular cap body.
11. A card processing system, comprising: a card input that is configured to hold a plurality of cards to be processed; a card output that is configured to hold a plurality of processed cards; at least one of a magnetic stripe reading/writing system and an integrated circuit chip programming system between the card input and the card output; a drop-on-demand card printer between the card input and the card output that is configured to print on a card using ultraviolet curable ink, the drop-on-demand card printer includes: at least one drop-on-demand print head; an ink bottle mounted in the drop-on-demand card printer and fluidly connected to the at least one drop-on-demand print head, the ink bottle having a neck defining an ink outlet, and the neck having an exterior surface with threads thereon; a cap affixed to the neck of the ink bottle, the cap having a connection sleeve with an interior surface with threads thereon, and the threads on the interior surface of the connection sleeve are engaged with the threads on the exterior surface of the neck; the cap includes a quick-connect valve that controls flow of ink from the ink bottle through an ink passage in the cap, and the cap further includes a check valve adjacent to the quick-connect valve that provides venting by allowing air into the ink bottle through a vent passage in the cap; a removable plug disposed in the vent passage to seal the vent passage, and a removable seal fixed to the cap and surrounding the quick-connect valve; an ultraviolet curing station between the card input and the card output, the ultraviolet curing station is configured to cure ultraviolet curable ink applied to a card by the drop-on-demand card printer.
12. A system, comprising: a plastic card processing system that includes: a card input that is configured to hold a plurality of plastic cards to be processed; a card output that is configured to hold a plurality of processed plastic cards; at least one of a magnetic stripe reading/writing system and an integrated circuit chip programming system between the card input and the card output; a drop-on-demand card printer between the card input and the card output that is configured to print on a plastic card using ultraviolet curable ink, the drop-on-demand card printer includes: at least one drop-on-demand print head; a receiver having a non-circular recessed mounting location that is configured to receive a cap of an ink bottle, the receiver is fluidly connected to the at least one drop-on-demand print head; an ultraviolet curing station between the card input and the card output, the ultraviolet curing station is configured to cure ultraviolet curable ink applied to a plastic card by the drop-on-demand card printer; and a cap and bottle assembly mountable in the drop-on-demand card printer; the cap and bottle assembly includes an ink bottle and a cap; the ink bottle contains ultraviolet curable ink for use in printing on the plastic card by the at least one drop-on-demand print head, the ink bottle having a neck defining an ink outlet, and the neck having an exterior surface with threads thereon; the cap is removably mounted to the neck of the ink bottle, the cap having a non-circular cap body, a connection sleeve extending from the non-circular cap body with an interior surface with threads thereon, and the threads on the interior surface of the connection sleeve are engaged with the threads on the exterior surface of the neck to removably mount the cap to the ink bottle, wherein the non-circular cap body of the cap is removably receivable in the non-circular recessed mounting of the receiver; the cap includes a quick-connect valve that controls flow of the ultraviolet curable ink from the ink bottle through an ink passage in the cap, and the cap further includes a check valve adjacent to the quick-connect valve that provides venting by allowing air into the ink bottle through a vent passage in the cap.
13. The system of claim 12, wherein the drop-on-demand card printer includes: a plurality of the drop-on-demand print heads; a plurality of the receivers, each one of the receivers has a non-circular recessed mounting location that is configured to receive a cap of a corresponding ink bottle, and each one of the receivers is fluidly connected to a corresponding one of the drop-on-demand print heads.
14. The system of claim 12, further comprising a cap liner within the cap at a base end of the connection sleeve that is configured to seal with an end of the neck of the ink bottle, and the cap liner is configured to permit passage of the ultraviolet curable ink through the cap liner and permit passage of air through the cap liner.
15. The system of claim 12, further comprising a radio frequency identification tag mounted on the cap.
16. The system of claim 12, wherein the ink bottle further includes a shoulder, and further comprising a capacitance sensor mounted on the receiver and positioned adjacent to the shoulder when the ink bottle is mounted in the drop-on-demand card printer.
17. The system of claim 12, wherein the receiver includes a quick connect coupler; the cap includes a quick connect valve that is connectable with the quick connect coupler of the receiver; and a manual release mechanism mounted in the drop-on-demand card printer that is engageable with the quick connect coupler to permit manual release of a connection between the quick connect valve and the quick connect coupler.
Description
DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(17) A cap is provided that is configured to be affixed to an end of an ink bottle that supplies ink for use in a DOD printer. The cap can be affixed to the ink bottle via any suitable affixing means, such as by threads or other type of affixing means. The cap can be provided with one or more mechanical keying features used to limit mounting of the cap and the bottle assembly to a correct receiver in the DOD printer. For example, the mechanical keying feature can be formed by a plurality of bores formed in the cap that are configured to receive one or more pins therein, and/or by the shape of the outer periphery of the cap body as described below. The specific arrangement of the pins in select ones of the bores dictates whether or not the cap can be received by a particular receiver in the DOD printer.
(18) The cap may also include other features in addition to or separate from the keying feature(s). For example, the cap may include a surface for mounting an RFID tag, and data can be read from and/or written to the RFID tag by a suitable reader/writer, for example mounted on the receiver. The cap may also include a quick-connect valve, for example a male quick-connect valve, that controls the flow of ink from the bottle through the cap, and a check valve adjacent to the quick-connect valve that provides venting by allowing air into the bottle through the cap. The quick-connect valve of the cap is intended to engage with a corresponding quick-connect valve, such as a female quick-connect valve, of the receiver, with the quick-connect valve in the cap automatically opening upon mounting of the cap and bottle assembly to its corresponding receiver. The cap may also include a cap liner on the interior thereof that is intended to interface and seal with an end of the bottle. The cap liner can be provided with one or more openings therethrough that are aligned with the quick-connect valve and the check valve in the cap. The opening(s) permits passage of ink and air through the cap liner.
(19) The ink bottle, with or without the cap, can be mounted in the DOD printer with the ink bottle acting as an ink supply reservoir that supplies ink to a DOD print head of the DOD printer. The DOD printer can be part of any system that uses the DOD printer to print on a substrate. In one specific, non-limiting application, the DOD printer can be part of a card processing system 10 that may also include one or more additional card processing mechanisms. An example of the card processing system 10 is illustrated in
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(21) The cards to be processed as described herein include, but are not limited to, plastic cards which bear personalized data unique to the intended cardholder and/or which bear other card information. Examples of plastic cards can include, but are not limited to, financial (e.g., credit, debit, or the like) cards, driver's licenses, national identification cards, business identification cards, gift cards, and other plastic cards.
(22) In the system 10 illustrated in
(23) The card processing system 10 illustrated in
(24) In
(25) The system 10 may include additional card processing systems not illustrated in
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(27) The DOD print heads 26a-e can print using any suitable ink or coating used in drop-on-demand printing and that is suitable for use on the types of cards described herein. For example, the ink can be a UV curable ink, a heat curable ink that can be cured by applying heat to the heat curable ink, or other ink or materials that can be deposited by DOD print heads. In the case of the five DOD print heads 26a-e, each DOD print head can print a specific color ink. For example, the DOD print head 26a can print cyan colored ink, the DOD print head 26b can print magenta colored ink, the DOD print head 26c can print yellow colored ink, the DOD print head 26d can print black ink, and the DOD print head 26e can print white ink. An example of a drop-on-demand printer that prints using UV curable ink in a card printing system is the Persomaster card personalization system available from Atlantic Zeiser GmbH of Emmingen, Germany. If printing on the opposite surface 34 of the card 30 is required, a card flipper or card reorienting mechanism (not shown) can be located in the system 10 to flip or rotate the card 30 180 degrees so that the surface 34 now faces upward and the surface 28 faces downward, and the card 30 is then transported back upstream of the print heads 26a-e to print on the surface 34. Examples of card flippers are disclosed in U.S. Published Application No. 2013/0220984 and U.S. Pat. No. 7,398,972 the entire contents of each are incorporated herein by reference. In other embodiments, a card flipper followed by a second DOD card printer could be provided in order to print on both sides of the card. This would eliminate the need to transport the card 30 back upstream of the print heads 26a-e of the single DOD card printer.
(28) The specific construction and operation of the print heads 26a-e is well known and can be identical to the construction and operation of DOD print heads known in the art. The DOD print heads each includes a bottom surface that faces downward toward the card to be printed on, and a nozzle plate, through which ink is ejected, is provided on the bottom surface.
(29) Still referring to
(30) As described in further detail below, each ink color for the ink supplies 36a-e comes in a separate bottle from the ink supplier, and the bottles may be substantially identical in appearance to one another. A system is described below whereby the bottles are mounted in the DOD card printer 12 and are used as the ink supplies. However, because the bottles may be substantially identical in appearance, this can lead to an end user or other personnel mounting an incorrect bottle containing an incorrect color ink at an incorrect location in the DOD card printer 12. To prevent such errors, as described further below, the caps that come with the bottles are removed, and a unique cap is secured to each of the bottles. The unique caps are designed to ensure that only the correct bottle containing the correct color ink can be mounted at the correct location in the DOD card printer 12 to supply the correct ink to the correct print head 26a-e.
(31) Referring to
(32) In the illustrated example, the bottle 40 is the bottle that the ink comes in from the ink supplier or other retailer of the ink. The bottle 40 is longitudinally elongated and is generally cylindrical in construction with a length greater than its maximum diameter. The bottle 40 includes a body 40a with a closed end 40b, a neck 40c defining an ink outlet 40d (best seen in
(33) The cap 42 is configured to be affixed to the bottle 40, in particular to the neck 40c, once the original cap that is detachably secured to the neck 40c is removed. Alternatively, the cap 42 could be attached to the bottle 40 during the manufacturing process and thus in this instance the cap 42 could also be considered the original cap. The cap 42 is provided with affixing means that can engage with the affixing means on the neck 40c to affix the cap 42 to the neck 42. For example, the cap 42 can include threads that engage with the threads 40f on the neck 40c. The cap 42 can be made of any suitable material, for example from plastic, and the cap 42 is configured to be keyed to the specific color of ink contained within the bottle 40. For example, the cap 42 can include mechanical keying features (described further below) that are specific to the color of ink contained within the bottle 40. The mechanical keying features may be modifiable, or fixed or unchangeable. The cap 42 may also be color coded to denote the color of ink contained within the bottle 40.
(34) The receiver 44 is part of the DOD card printer 12 and is designed to receive the cap 42 when mounting the bottle 40 in the DOD card printer 12. The receiver 44 includes a recessed mounting location 44a in which the cap 42 can fit. As described in further detail below, the mounting location 44a includes mechanical keying features that interact with the mechanical keying features on the cap 42 to dictate whether or not the cap 42 correctly fits within the mounting location 44a.
(35) The receiver 44 further includes a quick-connect coupler 44b (see
(36) Returning to
(37) Referring to
(38) An ink passage 60 is formed through the cap body 50 to allow passage of ink from the bottle 40 through the cap body 50. The ink passage 60 has an ink passage inlet end 62 formed in the first end 52 within the connection sleeve 56 and an ink passage outlet end 64 in the second end 54. A quick-connect valve 66 is disposed in the ink passage 60 to control the flow of ink through the ink passage 60 from the ink passage inlet end 62 to the ink passage outlet end 64. The quick-connect valve 66 is a male quick-connect valve that is configured to couple to the female quick-connect coupler 44b of the receiver 44 when the cap 42 is correctly mounted in the receiver 44. In addition, the female quick-connect coupler 44b of the receiver 44 is configured to automatically open the quick-connect valve 66 to permit the flow of ink through the ink passage 60. This type of quick-connect coupler 44b and quick-connect valve 66 are available from Colder Products company of St. Paul, Minn.
(39) Referring to
(40) Returning to
(41) An alternative embodiment of the cap 42 is illustrated in
(42) Referring to
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(44) The cap 42 further includes one or more mechanical keying features that dictate whether or not the cap 42 correctly fits within the mounting location 44a of the receiver 44. For example, with reference to
(45) As best seen in
(46) As depicted in
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(48) In the example of the cap 42 illustrated in
(49) Referring to
(50) Another embodiment of the cap liner 110 is illustrated in
(51) Returning to
(52) Referring to
(53) When designed for use in the DOD card printer 12, the cap 42 can have various dimensions that are unique to such an application. For example, referring to
(54) When UV curable ink is used for the printing, the card processing system 10 described herein may be configured as what may be referred to as a desktop card processing system. Such a desktop card processing system would include at least a card input and a card output (which may be at opposite ends of the system or at the same end of the system), a DOD card printer that prints on the cards using UV curable ink, and a UV cure station for curing the UV curable ink applied to the card. Additional card processing systems, such as those described above, may also be included. A desktop card processing system is typically designed for relatively small scale, individual card processing. In desktop processing systems, a single card to be processed is input into the system, processed, and then output. These systems are often termed desktop machines or desktop printers because they have a relatively small footprint intended to permit the machine to reside on a desktop. Many examples of desktop machines are known, such as the SD or CD family of desktop card machines available from Entrust Datacard Corporation of Shakopee, Minn. Other examples of desktop card machines are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,434,728 and 7,398,972, each of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
(55) Additional aspects of the described apparatus, systems and methods include a DOD printing system with a drop-on-demand printer that is configured to print on a substrate using ultraviolet curable ink. The drop-on-demand printer can include at least one drop-on-demand print head, an ink bottle mounted in the drop-on-demand printer and fluidly connected to the at least one drop-on-demand print head, the ink bottle having a neck defining an ink outlet, and the neck having an exterior surface with affixing means, such as threads, thereon. A unique cap is provided with affixing means, such as threads, that are engageable with the affixing means on the neck to secure the cap to the bottle. The cap includes a mechanical keying feature and/or a quick-connect valve that controls flow of ink from the ink bottle through an ink passage in the cap. The cap can also include a vent passage to allow air to enter the bottle.
(56) The examples disclosed in this application are to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not limitative. The scope of the invention is indicated by the appended claims rather than by the foregoing description; and all changes which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are intended to be embraced therein.