Printer with movable carriage
10173447 · 2019-01-08
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B41J2202/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J19/142
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B41J2202/11
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A printer having a carriage (10) movable along a guide beam (12) in a main scanning direction (y), and a number of print heads (14) mounted on the carriage (10), each print head having a plurality of printing elements (16), wherein the carriage (10) has at least two sub-carriages (38) each of which carries at least one of the print heads (14) and is independently guided at the guide beam (12), and the sub-carriages (38) are coupled for joint movement in the main scanning direction (y) but are movable relative to one another in a sub-scanning direction (x) normal to the main scanning direction (y).
Claims
1. A printer having a carriage movable along a guide beam in a main scanning direction, and a number of print heads mounted on the carriage, each print head having a plurality of printing elements, wherein the carriage has at least two sub-carriages each of which carries at least one of the print heads and is independently guided at the guide beam, and the sub-carriages are coupled for joint movement in the main scanning direction, characterized in that the sub-carriages are movable relative to one another in a sub-scanning direction normal to the main scanning direction, and wherein the sub-carriages are configured to follow a curvature of the guide beam, wherein each sub-carriage comprises a runner which contacts and follows the guide beam, such that each runner actuates its respective sub-carriage in the sub-scanning direction in correspondence to the curvature of the guide beam.
2. The printer according to claim 1, wherein the sub-carriages are configured to follow a curvature of the guide beam independently of one another.
3. The printer according to claim 1, wherein adjacent sub-carriages are coupled to one another to prevent relative movement of said sub-carriages in the main scanning direction, but wherein adjacent sub-carriages are moveably coupled to one another to allow for relative movement of said sub-carriages in the sub-scanning direction.
4. The printer according to claim 1, wherein the sub-carriages are interconnected by links which are rigid in the main scanning direction to prevent movement of the sub-carriages with respect to one another in the main scanning direction and which links are flexible in the sub-scanning direction to enable movement of the sub-carriages with respect to one another in the sub-scanning direction.
5. The printer according to claim 1, wherein each runner is configured to individually move its respective sub-carriage independent of the other sub-carriages.
6. The printer according to claim 1, wherein each sub-carriage comprises a support beam for supporting one or more print heads, wherein each runner is mounted at an end of its respective support beam adjacent the guide beam.
7. The printer according to claim 1, wherein each sub-carriage comprises a restrictor which limits movement of the sub-carriage such that each sub-carriage follows the curvature of the guide beam.
8. The printer according to claim 7, wherein the guide beam comprises a rail, wherein the rail has a profile providing a form-fit for restricting the movement of the sub-carriages.
9. The printer according to claim 8, wherein each runner engages the rail, and wherein the rail has a profile providing a form-fit for restricting the movement of the runners.
10. The printer according to claim 1, wherein each sub-carriage is in engagement with a rail formed at the guide beam and having a profile which profile defines the position of the sub-carriage in the sub-scanning direction.
11. The printer according to claim 1, wherein the carriage comprises a frame which is guided along the guide beam independently of the sub-carriages.
12. The printer according to claim 1, wherein a support beam extends in parallel with the guide beam, and each sub-carriage is supported on the support beam by a low-friction bearing.
13. The printer according to claim 12, wherein the low-friction bearing comprises a spherical ball.
14. The printer according to claim 1, wherein the carriage has an ink curing device disposed in a gap between two adjacent sub-carriages.
Description
(1) Embodiment examples will now be described in conjunction with the drawings, wherein:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8) The printer shown in
(9) The four print heads 14 shown in this example may be provided for printing with inks in four different colors and are aligned with certain spacings in the main scanning direction y.
(10) When the carriage 10 scans the recording medium in the main scanning direction y, the printing elements 16 of the four print heads may be fired at appropriate timings for printing a swath of an image. Then, the recording medium will be advanced in the sub-scanning direction x by a distance corresponding to the width of the sprinted swath and, accordingly, the length of the print heads 14 in the sub-scanning direction x, so that an adjacent swath of the image may be printed in the next scan pass.
(11) Adjusting mechanisms 20 and 22 are provided for each print head 14 so that the positions of the print heads relative to the carriage 10 may be adjusted in some or all of their six degrees of freedom. In this way, the print heads 14 may be adjusted such that ink dots 24, 26 (
(12) The carriage 10 is composed of a plurality of parts that are movable relative to one another. A first part is configured as a frame 28 having longitudinal beams 30, 32 connected by cross-beams 34. The ends of the cross-beams 34 facing the guide beam 12 are configured as runner blocks which engage a rail 36 that is attached to the guide beam 12 so that the frame 28 is guided along the guide beam (see also
(13) Other parts of the carriage 10 are configured as sub-carriages 38 which extend in the sub-scanning direction x. In the embodiment shown in
(14) Similarly as the cross-beams 34, the ends of the sub-carriages 38 facing the guide beam 12 are configured as runner blocks engaging the rail 36, so that each sub-carriage is individually guided along the guide beam 12.
(15) The sub-carriages 38 and the cross-beams 34 are chained together by links 40 which are rigid in the main scanning direction y but flexible in the sub-scanning direction x. Consequently, the sub-carriages 38 are movable relative to one another and relative to the frame 28 in the sub-scanning direction x.
(16) In case of a wide format printer the guide beam 12 may have a length of more than 840 mm (width of an A0 sheet) and it is therefore difficult to provide a guide beam that is perfectly straight. It must therefore be considered that the guide beam 12 can be curved or wavy as has been shown exaggeratedly in
(17) As an example,
(18) For comparison,
(19) In general, the waviness of the guide beam 20 induces a rotation of the frame 28 of the carriage about an axis normal to the x-y-plane, and if the print heads were mounted rigidly on the frame, as in
(20) In the example shown in
(21) Another advantage achieved by the invention is that the procedures and mechanisms for adjusting and aligning the print heads and the carriage 10 as a whole can be simplified. For example, in a conventional printer, the alignment of the print heads would be affected by a rotation of the carriage 10 as a whole about an axis normal to the x-y plane, and this effect would have to be compensated for by adjusting the print heads 14 individually or by adjusting the rotary position of the entire carriage 10. In the printer according to the invention, these adjustment operations can be dispensed with because the x-position of all print heads depends only upon the position of the surface of the guide beam 12 and upon the design of the sub-carriages 38 (which can have an identical design and can be manufactured with high accuracy).
(22) Moreover, the positions of the print heads 14 in the sub-scanning direction x are less sensitive to any possible deformations of the carriage frame which may be induced by external forces acting upon the frame. For example, such forces may occur when a carriage cover 46 (shown in phantom lines in
(23) As can further be seen in
(24) In an alternative embodiment the sub-carriages could be guided in the frame 28 so as to be slidable in the frame 28. Further, the sub-carriages 38 could be spring-biased against the rail 36 so that the rail would not need to be profiled.
(25)
(26) It is not mandatory that each sub-carriage 38 carries only a single print head.
(27)