CA1164484A - Document show-around diminisher - Google Patents
Document show-around diminisherInfo
- Publication number
- CA1164484A CA1164484A CA000354903A CA354903A CA1164484A CA 1164484 A CA1164484 A CA 1164484A CA 000354903 A CA000354903 A CA 000354903A CA 354903 A CA354903 A CA 354903A CA 1164484 A CA1164484 A CA 1164484A
- Authority
- CA
- Canada
- Prior art keywords
- platen
- document
- belt
- registration
- copier
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Expired
Links
- 230000006872 improvement Effects 0.000 claims description 2
- 230000004087 circulation Effects 0.000 description 22
- 230000032258 transport Effects 0.000 description 19
- 238000003384 imaging method Methods 0.000 description 6
- 230000002441 reversible effect Effects 0.000 description 4
- 230000008901 benefit Effects 0.000 description 3
- 239000006260 foam Substances 0.000 description 3
- 230000003134 recirculating effect Effects 0.000 description 3
- 230000009191 jumping Effects 0.000 description 2
- 108091008695 photoreceptors Proteins 0.000 description 2
- 230000009467 reduction Effects 0.000 description 2
- 238000012546 transfer Methods 0.000 description 2
- 230000003213 activating effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000007792 addition Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000004026 adhesive bonding Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000013459 approach Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000002537 cosmetic Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000007547 defect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 229920001971 elastomer Polymers 0.000 description 1
- 239000000806 elastomer Substances 0.000 description 1
- 238000012432 intermediate storage Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000000034 method Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000012986 modification Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000004048 modification Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000011084 recovery Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000006748 scratching Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000002393 scratching effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000003860 storage Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000000758 substrate Substances 0.000 description 1
- 238000011144 upstream manufacturing Methods 0.000 description 1
Classifications
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G03—PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
- G03B—APPARATUS OR ARRANGEMENTS FOR TAKING PHOTOGRAPHS OR FOR PROJECTING OR VIEWING THEM; APPARATUS OR ARRANGEMENTS EMPLOYING ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ACCESSORIES THEREFOR
- G03B27/00—Photographic printing apparatus
- G03B27/32—Projection printing apparatus, e.g. enlarger, copying camera
- G03B27/52—Details
- G03B27/62—Holders for the original
- G03B27/6207—Holders for the original in copying cameras
- G03B27/625—Apparatus which relate to the handling of originals, e.g. presence detectors, inverters
Landscapes
- Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- Exposure Or Original Feeding In Electrophotography (AREA)
- Registering Or Overturning Sheets (AREA)
- Holders For Sensitive Materials And Originals (AREA)
- Control Or Security For Electrophotography (AREA)
- Conveyance By Endless Belt Conveyors (AREA)
- Sheets, Magazines, And Separation Thereof (AREA)
Abstract
ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE
An improved document registration system in a copier having a platen for exposing documents and a document registration edge at one end of the platen includes a plur-ality of spaced apart document transporting and aligning belts which extend across only a portion of the platen and over the registration edge so that documents which have been fed onto the platen are subsequently engaged by the belts and driven towards and registered against the registration edge. The belts are adapted to be shorter than the platen and shorter than the smallest document being copied on the platen so as to be fully underlaid by the documents being copied to avoid show-around exposure of the belts.
An improved document registration system in a copier having a platen for exposing documents and a document registration edge at one end of the platen includes a plur-ality of spaced apart document transporting and aligning belts which extend across only a portion of the platen and over the registration edge so that documents which have been fed onto the platen are subsequently engaged by the belts and driven towards and registered against the registration edge. The belts are adapted to be shorter than the platen and shorter than the smallest document being copied on the platen so as to be fully underlaid by the documents being copied to avoid show-around exposure of the belts.
Description
i 1 8 ~
DOCUMENT SHOW-AROUND DIMINISHER
The present invention relates to an automatic document handling apparatus having an improved document registration system.
AS xerographic and other copiers increase in speed and become more automatic, it is increasingly impor-tant to provide higher speed yet more reliable and more automatic handling of both the copy sheets and the indi-vidual original documents being copied. The providing of duplex copying capabilities and pre-collation copying capabilities greatly complicates and increases the copier document and copy sheet handling complexities.
While the present invention is not limited thereto, a desirable feature for a copier is to provide automatic document recirculation for pre-collation cGpying. As dis-cussed, for example, in detail in U.S. Patents 3,963,345, issued June 15, 1976 to D. J. Stemmle et al. at columns 1-4, and 4,116,558, issued September 26, 1978 to J. A. Adamek et al., such pre-collation copying systems provide a number of important advantages. The copies exit the copier in pre-collated sets, and do not require subse~uent sorting in a sorter or collator~ Any desired number of such copy sets may be made by making a corresponding number of re-circulations o~ the document set in collated order past a copying station and copying each document one each time it recirculates. On-line finishing and/or removal of the completed copy sets may be provided while additional copy sets are being made from the same document set.
However, a disadvantage of pre-collation copy-ing systems is that t~le documents must all be repeatedly circulated, and copied in a predetermined order only one in each circulation, by a number of circulations equivalent to the desired number of copy sets. Thus, it may be seen that increased document handling is necessitated for a ~.
~ 36~8~
pre-collation copying system, as compared to a conventional post-collation copying system. Ma~imizing document handling automation and copying cycle efficiency is particularly important in pre-collation copyingn If the document handler cannot circulate and copy documents in coordination with the copy sheets in the correct order, the total copying time for each copy set will be increased.
In a post-collation copying system, all the desired copies are made at one time from each document page and collated by being placed in separate sorter bins. The document set need only be circulated once and multiply copied to fill bins of the copy sheet sorter or collator with the corresponding number of copy sets desired. How-ever, the number of copy sets which can be made in one circulation is limited by the number of available bins, and the sorter adds space and complexity and is not well suited for on-line finishing.
Some examples of art relating to pre-collation document handling units include, besides art cited above:
German Patentschrift 1,228,295, 25 October 1962; and U.S.
Patents Re. 27,976 (originally U.S. 3,499,710~ issued March 10, 1970) to L. W. Sahley U.S. 3,536,320, issued October 27, 1970, to D. R. Derby; U.S. 3,552,739, issued January 5, 1971, to ~. R. Roberts et al.; U.S. 3,556,511, issued January 19, 1971, to A. Howard et al.; U.S. 3,888,579, issued June 10, 1975, to V. Rodek et al.; and U.S. 3,937,454, issued February 10, 1976, to R. H. Colwill. A recent example oE a recirculating pre-collation copying system of this type with circuitry and switches for counting the number of documents recirculated and for counting the completion of each set circulation, is shown in U.S. Patent 4,076,408, issued February 28, 1978, to M. R. Reid et al.
As to some examples of further art of particular interest relating to specific features of this disclosure, U.S. Patent 3,790,158, issued February 5, 1974, to J. E.
Summers et al., and several of the above patents disclose recirculating documents to and from a stack at one side of a platen to a fixed registration edge with a reversible platen belt. A document platen belt which is deformed adjacent platen registration fingers is disclosed in U.~.
Patent 3,910,570, issued October 7, 1975, to C. D. Bleau.
Multiple platen belts are disclosed in U.~. Patent 3,844,552, issued Octo~er 29, 1974, to C. D. Bleau et al. A stationary spaced over-platen plate with a small area document ejec-tion drive is disclosed in U.S. Patent 3,888,581, issued June 10, 1~75, to J. R. Caldwell. A sheet reversing chute system of the type disclosed herein is disclosed in U.S.
Patent 3,856,295, issued December 24, 1974, to the subject inventor.
Examples of copier systems with general docu-ment and sheet handling control systems are described in U.S. Patent Nos. ~,062,061, issued December 6, 1977, to P. J. Batchelor et al.; 4,078,787, issued March 14, 1978, to L. E. Burlew et al.; 4,099,150, issued July 4, 1978, to J. L. Conin; 4,123,155, issued October 31, 1978, to W. I.. Hubert; 4,125,325, issued November 14, 1978, to P. J. Batchelor et al.; and 4,144,550, issued March 13, 1979, to J. M. Donohue et al.
Conventional integral software incorporation into the copier's general microprocessor logic circuitry and software of the functions and logic defined herein as taught by various of the above-cited patents is preferred.
However, it will be appreciated that the functions and systems disclosed herein may be alternatively conventionally incorporated into a copier utilizing any other suitable or known copier software or hard wired logic systems, cam-bank switch controllers, etc. The output control of the exemplary sheet handling systems disclosed herein may be accomplished by activating known electrical solenoid controlled sheet deflector fingers and drive motors or their clutches in the indicated sequences, and conventional sheet path sensors or switches may be uti~ized for counting and keeping 8 ~
track of the positions of documents and copy sheets.
A11 of the patents cited herein for background or art purposes may also act to provide teachings of usable or alterna-tive systems or hardware for the disclosed embodiments herein.
Some document handlers, as for example, U.S.
Patent 4,000,943, issued to Ari Bar-On on January 4, 1977, employ a wide white friction belt, or alternatively, a multiplicity of narrow belts, as platen transports for documents. Each has its own advan~ages and disadvantages.
A wide white belt produces no show-around on copies, yet typically has a pocket near a fixed registration edge which can allow lead edge up-curl or buckling of the document.
The multiple belt transport can hold the document flat at the registration edge since the belts can be interleaved with the edge, but this allows belt show-around on copies, especially in the reduction mode, especially as the multiple belt edges tend to become contaminated and darkened. The multiple belts can be skewed for corner registration, if desired, as disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,147,33~, issued April 3, 1979, and assigned to Ricoh Company, Ltd.
A preferred embodiment of the present invention is intended to overcomle the above disadvantages by providing in a copier having a platen for exposing documents thereon and a document registration system that includes a document registration edge at one end of the platen, the improve-ment in the document registration system comprising a plurality of spaced apart document transport and aligning belts, which extend across only a portion of the platen to the re~istration edge, and extend over the registration edye, so that documen~s which have been fed onto the platen are subsequently engaged by the belts and driven towards and registered against the registration edge, the belts being shorter than the platen and shorter than the smallest document ~`
1 1 6 4 L~
~ 5 --being copied on the platen so as to be fully underlaid by the document being copied to avoid show-around exposure of the belts.
Further features and advantages of the invention will be better understood by reference to the following description, and to the drawings forming a part thereof, wherein:
Fig. 1 is a side view of an exemplary document handling unit incorporating the registration system of the present i~vention mounted over a copier platen;
Fig. 2 is a partial top view of the document handling unit of Fig. l;
~ ig. 3 is an enlarged portion of Fig. 1 illus-trating the disclosed document registration system; and Fig. 4 shows the document handling unit of Fig.
1 on an exemplary duplex xerographic copier.
Referring to the exemplary automatic document feeding unit 1 shown in Fig. 1-4, it will be appreciated that various document feeders and copiers may be utili~ed with the present invention other than those disclosed herein, including various ones disclosed in the above-cited references.
In the recirculating document handler (RDH) 1 here, individual original documents are sequentially fed from the bottom of the stack of documents 4 (placed by the operator face-down in the document storage area or stacking tray) directly to the imaging station, which is the conventional platen 2 of the copier, to be conventionally imaged onto a photoreceptor for the making of copies in a conventional xerographic manner. The documents are thus circulated in 1 to N order, i.e., first to last or forward serial order, for simplified copy duplexing and job recovery.
The document handler 1 has conventional switches for sensing and counting the individual documents fed from the stack 4, i.e., counting the number of document sheets circulated.
A conventional resettable bail and its associated switch will be provided on the stack 4 to indicate the completion i 1 ~AA,~3 t of each circulation of the complete document set and be automatically reset on the top of t:he stack before the next circulation. The document sheets may be conventional sizes and weights of sheets of paper or plastic containing information indicia to be copied, e.g., printed or typed letters, drawings, prints, photographs, etc. A bottom feeder 5 feeds the bottom document sheet, on demand, to a platen sheet feeder 6a and 6b and 7 which moves the docu-ment onto and off of the copier platen. With this document feeder unit 1, the documents are not inverted as they are fed from the tray to the imaging station. They are selectively inverted, if inversion is desired, by an inverter 3 in the return path of the document from the platen to the stack 4 after copying. The inverter 3 provides for inverting duplex documents so that their opposite sides may be copied.
Referring particularly to Fig. 1, the document sheets to be copied are fed individually from the stack 4 by a bottom feeder 5, both of which are closely adjacent one side of the platen 2. Each document is fed onto the platen here by an input roller pair 6a and 6b, which may be directly driven by engagement of the roller 6a by a large roller 7 driven in the arrow direction as shown.
The registration of the document on the platen is accom-plished on the platen here by the belts 8 and a fixed raised registration edge 9. (Note Figs. 2 and 3). Rever-sal of the registration belts 8 by motor M after copying drives the document back toward the nip between the roller 6a and the roller 7, which transports the document into a diverter gate 10.
If the lip of the gate 10 is moved up, as shown by the movement arrow thereon, it will deflect the docu-ment directly into the nip of the return roller pair 11, which will return the document directly to the top of the stack 4, so that the documents may be recirculated in main-tained collated order without inversion. Thus, in this ~ ~ ~ d mode of operation, utilized for simplex documents, the document inverter 3 is not utilized.
For duplex documents the inverting gate 10 is held down, so as to deflect the documents being returned from the platen around the outside o~ the roller 7 and into the nip between the roller 7 and a roller 12b, which may be driven by its engagement therewith. The document, now inverted, is driven into the pocket or chute of the document inverter 3~ until it strikes a resilient reversing pad 13 of a known type at the end thereof, which bounces the document back into the nip between the rollers 12a and 12b, which drive the document into the same return roller pair 11 of restacking on the stack 4 in inverted orientation compared to its original orientation in the stack, (but in the same collated document order).
Note that the document inverter 3 here is a com-pact "Y" configuration with an inverting chute which is parallel to and closely spaced above the platen, so as to reduce the size of the RDH unit 1. The chute may be the same size as the platen since it is overlying the platen.
It may be hinged as shown to pivot up away from the platen
DOCUMENT SHOW-AROUND DIMINISHER
The present invention relates to an automatic document handling apparatus having an improved document registration system.
AS xerographic and other copiers increase in speed and become more automatic, it is increasingly impor-tant to provide higher speed yet more reliable and more automatic handling of both the copy sheets and the indi-vidual original documents being copied. The providing of duplex copying capabilities and pre-collation copying capabilities greatly complicates and increases the copier document and copy sheet handling complexities.
While the present invention is not limited thereto, a desirable feature for a copier is to provide automatic document recirculation for pre-collation cGpying. As dis-cussed, for example, in detail in U.S. Patents 3,963,345, issued June 15, 1976 to D. J. Stemmle et al. at columns 1-4, and 4,116,558, issued September 26, 1978 to J. A. Adamek et al., such pre-collation copying systems provide a number of important advantages. The copies exit the copier in pre-collated sets, and do not require subse~uent sorting in a sorter or collator~ Any desired number of such copy sets may be made by making a corresponding number of re-circulations o~ the document set in collated order past a copying station and copying each document one each time it recirculates. On-line finishing and/or removal of the completed copy sets may be provided while additional copy sets are being made from the same document set.
However, a disadvantage of pre-collation copy-ing systems is that t~le documents must all be repeatedly circulated, and copied in a predetermined order only one in each circulation, by a number of circulations equivalent to the desired number of copy sets. Thus, it may be seen that increased document handling is necessitated for a ~.
~ 36~8~
pre-collation copying system, as compared to a conventional post-collation copying system. Ma~imizing document handling automation and copying cycle efficiency is particularly important in pre-collation copyingn If the document handler cannot circulate and copy documents in coordination with the copy sheets in the correct order, the total copying time for each copy set will be increased.
In a post-collation copying system, all the desired copies are made at one time from each document page and collated by being placed in separate sorter bins. The document set need only be circulated once and multiply copied to fill bins of the copy sheet sorter or collator with the corresponding number of copy sets desired. How-ever, the number of copy sets which can be made in one circulation is limited by the number of available bins, and the sorter adds space and complexity and is not well suited for on-line finishing.
Some examples of art relating to pre-collation document handling units include, besides art cited above:
German Patentschrift 1,228,295, 25 October 1962; and U.S.
Patents Re. 27,976 (originally U.S. 3,499,710~ issued March 10, 1970) to L. W. Sahley U.S. 3,536,320, issued October 27, 1970, to D. R. Derby; U.S. 3,552,739, issued January 5, 1971, to ~. R. Roberts et al.; U.S. 3,556,511, issued January 19, 1971, to A. Howard et al.; U.S. 3,888,579, issued June 10, 1975, to V. Rodek et al.; and U.S. 3,937,454, issued February 10, 1976, to R. H. Colwill. A recent example oE a recirculating pre-collation copying system of this type with circuitry and switches for counting the number of documents recirculated and for counting the completion of each set circulation, is shown in U.S. Patent 4,076,408, issued February 28, 1978, to M. R. Reid et al.
As to some examples of further art of particular interest relating to specific features of this disclosure, U.S. Patent 3,790,158, issued February 5, 1974, to J. E.
Summers et al., and several of the above patents disclose recirculating documents to and from a stack at one side of a platen to a fixed registration edge with a reversible platen belt. A document platen belt which is deformed adjacent platen registration fingers is disclosed in U.~.
Patent 3,910,570, issued October 7, 1975, to C. D. Bleau.
Multiple platen belts are disclosed in U.~. Patent 3,844,552, issued Octo~er 29, 1974, to C. D. Bleau et al. A stationary spaced over-platen plate with a small area document ejec-tion drive is disclosed in U.S. Patent 3,888,581, issued June 10, 1~75, to J. R. Caldwell. A sheet reversing chute system of the type disclosed herein is disclosed in U.S.
Patent 3,856,295, issued December 24, 1974, to the subject inventor.
Examples of copier systems with general docu-ment and sheet handling control systems are described in U.S. Patent Nos. ~,062,061, issued December 6, 1977, to P. J. Batchelor et al.; 4,078,787, issued March 14, 1978, to L. E. Burlew et al.; 4,099,150, issued July 4, 1978, to J. L. Conin; 4,123,155, issued October 31, 1978, to W. I.. Hubert; 4,125,325, issued November 14, 1978, to P. J. Batchelor et al.; and 4,144,550, issued March 13, 1979, to J. M. Donohue et al.
Conventional integral software incorporation into the copier's general microprocessor logic circuitry and software of the functions and logic defined herein as taught by various of the above-cited patents is preferred.
However, it will be appreciated that the functions and systems disclosed herein may be alternatively conventionally incorporated into a copier utilizing any other suitable or known copier software or hard wired logic systems, cam-bank switch controllers, etc. The output control of the exemplary sheet handling systems disclosed herein may be accomplished by activating known electrical solenoid controlled sheet deflector fingers and drive motors or their clutches in the indicated sequences, and conventional sheet path sensors or switches may be uti~ized for counting and keeping 8 ~
track of the positions of documents and copy sheets.
A11 of the patents cited herein for background or art purposes may also act to provide teachings of usable or alterna-tive systems or hardware for the disclosed embodiments herein.
Some document handlers, as for example, U.S.
Patent 4,000,943, issued to Ari Bar-On on January 4, 1977, employ a wide white friction belt, or alternatively, a multiplicity of narrow belts, as platen transports for documents. Each has its own advan~ages and disadvantages.
A wide white belt produces no show-around on copies, yet typically has a pocket near a fixed registration edge which can allow lead edge up-curl or buckling of the document.
The multiple belt transport can hold the document flat at the registration edge since the belts can be interleaved with the edge, but this allows belt show-around on copies, especially in the reduction mode, especially as the multiple belt edges tend to become contaminated and darkened. The multiple belts can be skewed for corner registration, if desired, as disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,147,33~, issued April 3, 1979, and assigned to Ricoh Company, Ltd.
A preferred embodiment of the present invention is intended to overcomle the above disadvantages by providing in a copier having a platen for exposing documents thereon and a document registration system that includes a document registration edge at one end of the platen, the improve-ment in the document registration system comprising a plurality of spaced apart document transport and aligning belts, which extend across only a portion of the platen to the re~istration edge, and extend over the registration edye, so that documen~s which have been fed onto the platen are subsequently engaged by the belts and driven towards and registered against the registration edge, the belts being shorter than the platen and shorter than the smallest document ~`
1 1 6 4 L~
~ 5 --being copied on the platen so as to be fully underlaid by the document being copied to avoid show-around exposure of the belts.
Further features and advantages of the invention will be better understood by reference to the following description, and to the drawings forming a part thereof, wherein:
Fig. 1 is a side view of an exemplary document handling unit incorporating the registration system of the present i~vention mounted over a copier platen;
Fig. 2 is a partial top view of the document handling unit of Fig. l;
~ ig. 3 is an enlarged portion of Fig. 1 illus-trating the disclosed document registration system; and Fig. 4 shows the document handling unit of Fig.
1 on an exemplary duplex xerographic copier.
Referring to the exemplary automatic document feeding unit 1 shown in Fig. 1-4, it will be appreciated that various document feeders and copiers may be utili~ed with the present invention other than those disclosed herein, including various ones disclosed in the above-cited references.
In the recirculating document handler (RDH) 1 here, individual original documents are sequentially fed from the bottom of the stack of documents 4 (placed by the operator face-down in the document storage area or stacking tray) directly to the imaging station, which is the conventional platen 2 of the copier, to be conventionally imaged onto a photoreceptor for the making of copies in a conventional xerographic manner. The documents are thus circulated in 1 to N order, i.e., first to last or forward serial order, for simplified copy duplexing and job recovery.
The document handler 1 has conventional switches for sensing and counting the individual documents fed from the stack 4, i.e., counting the number of document sheets circulated.
A conventional resettable bail and its associated switch will be provided on the stack 4 to indicate the completion i 1 ~AA,~3 t of each circulation of the complete document set and be automatically reset on the top of t:he stack before the next circulation. The document sheets may be conventional sizes and weights of sheets of paper or plastic containing information indicia to be copied, e.g., printed or typed letters, drawings, prints, photographs, etc. A bottom feeder 5 feeds the bottom document sheet, on demand, to a platen sheet feeder 6a and 6b and 7 which moves the docu-ment onto and off of the copier platen. With this document feeder unit 1, the documents are not inverted as they are fed from the tray to the imaging station. They are selectively inverted, if inversion is desired, by an inverter 3 in the return path of the document from the platen to the stack 4 after copying. The inverter 3 provides for inverting duplex documents so that their opposite sides may be copied.
Referring particularly to Fig. 1, the document sheets to be copied are fed individually from the stack 4 by a bottom feeder 5, both of which are closely adjacent one side of the platen 2. Each document is fed onto the platen here by an input roller pair 6a and 6b, which may be directly driven by engagement of the roller 6a by a large roller 7 driven in the arrow direction as shown.
The registration of the document on the platen is accom-plished on the platen here by the belts 8 and a fixed raised registration edge 9. (Note Figs. 2 and 3). Rever-sal of the registration belts 8 by motor M after copying drives the document back toward the nip between the roller 6a and the roller 7, which transports the document into a diverter gate 10.
If the lip of the gate 10 is moved up, as shown by the movement arrow thereon, it will deflect the docu-ment directly into the nip of the return roller pair 11, which will return the document directly to the top of the stack 4, so that the documents may be recirculated in main-tained collated order without inversion. Thus, in this ~ ~ ~ d mode of operation, utilized for simplex documents, the document inverter 3 is not utilized.
For duplex documents the inverting gate 10 is held down, so as to deflect the documents being returned from the platen around the outside o~ the roller 7 and into the nip between the roller 7 and a roller 12b, which may be driven by its engagement therewith. The document, now inverted, is driven into the pocket or chute of the document inverter 3~ until it strikes a resilient reversing pad 13 of a known type at the end thereof, which bounces the document back into the nip between the rollers 12a and 12b, which drive the document into the same return roller pair 11 of restacking on the stack 4 in inverted orientation compared to its original orientation in the stack, (but in the same collated document order).
Note that the document inverter 3 here is a com-pact "Y" configuration with an inverting chute which is parallel to and closely spaced above the platen, so as to reduce the size of the RDH unit 1. The chute may be the same size as the platen since it is overlying the platen.
It may be hinged as shown to pivot up away from the platen
2 for jam clearance or other desired platen access. It is preferably also semi-transparent.
The entire RDH 1 may be a compact lightweight unit which may be pivotably or otherwise removed from the platen 2 to allow alternative manual copying, yet can pro-vide continuous document recirculation ~or pre-collation copying. With this RDH 1 the first document page in the stack 4 may be copied immediately in every circulation, and the entire document recirculation path is very short, thus desirably reducing the movement velocity of the docu-ments needed to keep up with the copying rate of the copier.
The simplex document path is shorter than the duplex path, which is preferable, since that is the more commonly used mode. Clear and simple document loading and jam clear-ance access is provided.
8 ~
To restate the above, after the document sheet has been copied, there is a decision gate 10 in the docu-ment path adjacent the downstream end of the plate comprising pivotable deflector fingers, which determines the further recirculatory movement of the documents through a selected one of two different return transport paths back to the document stack 4. These two paths are a first (simplex) transport path and a second (duplex) transport path. The first or simplex transport path returns the documents to the same restacking tray without any inversions. The second or duplex transport path utilizes inverter 3 and returns the documents for restacking with only a single inversion.
Therefore, the solenoid or other actuation of the selector gate 10 determines whether the documents are recirculated with a total of none or one inversions. With no inversions (the simplex path) the same sides of the documents are exposed in each circulation and are restacked in the tray in each circulation in their original orientation. With one inversion (the duplex path) the documents are restacked in the tray inverted from their previous orientation, which provides for copying of the opposite sides or faces of the documents on their next circulation, i.e., for copying duplex documents. The duplex path transport here comprises the disclosed three roller (7, 12a, 12b) sheet inverter and the over-platen reversing chute 3.
Both the simplex transport path and duplex trans-port path continuously and rapidly restack the sheets after they are copied on the top of the stack 4 of the sheets in the document tray without interferring with simultaneous bottom feeding. Thus, continuous multiple recirculations for pre-collation copying can be provided.
In accordance with the present invention and in further reference to Figs. 1-4, a multiple belt trans-port and registration system for documents is shown that comprises a registration edge 9 located at the forward end of platen 2. Multiple belts 8, instead of spanning d. $ l-l the entire platen, engage documents 15 after they have been fed onto the platen from stack 4 by input roller pair 6a and 6b. The multiple belt transport is positioned within the smallest document imaging area and thus provides no show-around on copies reproduced therefrom. A pivotable white backing plate or platen cover 18 which covers between approximately one third and two thirds of the platen area is stationary during copying cycles, and produces no border defects either in a reduction mode or in the case of a slight misregistration of originals. If desired, the backing plate could exSend to registration edge 9 with appropriate cut outs for the belts.
Short drive belts ~ of elastomer foam, driven by reversible rollers 16, transport the documents against registration edge g with a very low friction drive while working in combination with pressor shoe 17. The belts 8 extend from over the registration edge 9 a short distance toward the document input area. They present a very small containment space for the documents so that up-curl and registration edge jumping is minimized. By butting the foam drive member into the registration edge, document edge load is substantially reduced. Short belts also apply a minimum amount of friction to the documents as well as a minimum load on the paper or other substrate and the platen, thus reducing the likelihood of scratching the platen. A further advantage of the present invention is that the partial-length platen belts, by use of reversible rollers 16, more quickly release one document to allow its return while another document comes in through rollers 6a and 6b to be fed against fixed registration edge 9, thus reducing inter-pitch distance between documents on the copier photoreceptor and thereby allowing more copies to be made in a shorter period of time.
~ s an alternative, movable or fixed registration fingers that extend up between the belts could replace ~ ~ 64~
registration edge 9 for more positive registration. Belts 8 would then be more positively interleaved with the regis-tration fingers with documents being held flat by the belts 8 and pressor member 17. With retractable registration fingers, downstream straight through document egress rather than reversible document ejection could be provided and kicker rolls could be used to ensure that the documents exit the platen area on time. That is, the registration fingers could be solenoid controlled and adapted to retract for document egress to an output tray located to the right of the registration fingers. An additional feature with short belts 8 is that since the belts are never imaged, they need not be cleaned for purely cosmetic reasons.
They may not even need to be white.
In reference to Fig. 3, pressor shoe 17 in con-junction with idler rollers 19 are adapted compress the compressible foraminous belts 8 over the raised registra-tion edge 9 and allows the foraminous belts to expand downwardly below the top of the registration edge to push down the lead edge of a document adjacent the registration edge to improve reliability of stopping the document at the registration edge more positively while at the same time preventing the document from jumping over the registra-tion edge.
Referring to Fig. 4, an exemplary copier 20 pro-cessor and its controller 100 will now be described. This co~pier system is disclosed in more detail in U.S. Patent 4,166,614 and U.S. Patent 4,229,101 as well as German OLS 2,828,669. It provides duplex or simplex pre-collated copy sets from either duplex or simplex original documents copied from the RDH 1. Two separate copy sheet trays 106 and 107 are provided here to feed clean copy sheets onto which the images of the documents are to be printed. The control of sheet feeding is by the machine controller 100. The controller 100 is preferably of the known programmable microprocessor type exemplified by the ~ 3 64~
patents cited in the introduction, which conventionally also controls all of the o~her machine functions described herein including the operation of the document feeder, the document and copy sheet gates, feeder drives, etc.
The copy sheets are fed from trays 106 or 107 to the conventional xerographic transfer station 112 for imaging one side thereof, then to the conventional fusing station 114. From there, depending on the position of a duplex selector finger or gate 118, the copy sheets will be deflected either into a duplex buffer intermediate storage tray 116 for duplex copies, or into the copy output path of the copier via an output transport 126. The copy sheets stacked into the duplex tray 116 are stacked image face-up in the order in which they were copied. The duplex tray 116 here includes a bounce reverser 120 and jogger/normal force wheels 122 for assisting the stacking of copy sheets therein and assistance in bottom feeding from the duplex tray 116 by a bottom feeder 124. For duplex copying the previously simplexed copy sheets in the tray 116 are fed by the feeder 124 back to the transfer station 112 for the imaging of their second or opposite side page image.
Such now-duplexed copy sheets are then fed out past the now-opened gate 118 into the same output transport 126.
The output transport 126 transports the finished copy sheets to an output tray 130 through a gate 128 and inverter as shown, or, preferably, to a finishing station 1~0 for the stapling, stitching, gluing, binding, and/or off-set stacking of the completed, pre-collated, copy sets.
The copy sheets may be stacked in an output tray or in the finisher in a compilier tray in the order produced, without inversion for simplex copies, or with an in~erter or inversion in the output path for duplex copies, in this 1 to N system, in which the odd page side is the second side imaged and the copies are inverted inherently by the processor before the output.
1 1 6 ~ 4 ~ 12 -As disclosed in the cited U.S~ Patent 4,116,558, preferably for simplex/duplex copying only the even page documents are copied in the first document circulation by copying every other document sheet starting with the second document sheet. The odd document pages are circulated, but not copied in this first circulation. Thus, an even side buffer set is preferably always placed in the duplex tray. After the first document circulation, all by the last subsequent circulations proceed with copying of all simplex document pages in each circulation onto copy sheets fed alternately from the copy tray and duplex tray. Then on the last document set circulation only the odd document pages are copied.
Referring now to the duplex/duplex system which can be compatibly provided here, the duplex documents may also be loaded face-down and copied in the same 1 to N
(foward serial) order from the qame single document tray.
Here the document inverter for the duplex documents is downstream of the platen rather than upstream. Thus, the duplex documents may be first run through a single dummy (non-copying) circulation with inversion to restack the documents inverted in the DH tray from their initial orienta-tion. Thus, the even sides of the duplex documents may be copied on the second (first copying) ~irculation. On all subsequent circulations (up to the final one) every duplex document sheet is copied on one side and then inverted before restacking as described in the above-cited U.S.
Patents 4,166,614 and 4,229,101 and OLS 2,828,669.
That is, all the even document page sides may be copied on one circulation and placed in the duplex tray, then all the odd sides copied in the next circulation onto the opposite sides of that buffer set fed from the duplex tray, etc. The duplex documents are inverted during all but the last circulation. On the last duplex document copying pass the documen~s are all copied but are not inverted.
1 1 6'1~4 Therefore, they are automatically re-collated in the docu-ment handler tray during this last copying circulation.
The disclosed document handling unit is parti-cularly suitable for alternatively or additionally providing a non-pre-collation copying mode in which multiple copies are made from the documents and they are not recirculated.
The documents can be placed in the same manner (face-down) in a stack, or manually fed one at a time face-down like a semi-automatic document handler. That is, the same, logical, document placement is provided for all copyiny modes.
As can be seen from the description above, there is disclosed herein a plurality of spaced apart document transporting and aligning belts which extend across only a portion of the platen to and beyond the registration edge. That is, documents which have been fed onto the platen are subsequently engaged by the belts and driven towards and registered against the registration edge with the belts being shorter than the platen and shorter than the smallest document being copied on the platen so as to be fully underlaid by the document being copied to avoid show-around exposure of the belts. It should be understood that a single short belt could replace the multiple document belts if desired.
With either a single or multiple belt registra-tion system, the prior art and obvious approach would be to run the belt or belts completely across the platen to positively feed the document. In contrast, the present registration and document aligning system requires feedlng the documents from one side of the platen with a separate feeder and releasing their edge areas and subsequently recapturing the lead edges of the documents with short belts 9.
Further disclosed herein is at least one compress-ible foam document aligning belt adjacent to and above the registration edge that is adapted to extend a short distance over and conform to the registration edge so that documents that are driven by the belt towards the registra-tion edge are transported with a minimum of friction and engage the registration edge before imaging with no appreci-able impact.
In addition to the method and apparatus disclosed above, other modifications and/or additions will readily appear to those skilled in the art upon reading this dis-closure and these are intended to be encompassed within the invention disclosed and claimed herein.
The entire RDH 1 may be a compact lightweight unit which may be pivotably or otherwise removed from the platen 2 to allow alternative manual copying, yet can pro-vide continuous document recirculation ~or pre-collation copying. With this RDH 1 the first document page in the stack 4 may be copied immediately in every circulation, and the entire document recirculation path is very short, thus desirably reducing the movement velocity of the docu-ments needed to keep up with the copying rate of the copier.
The simplex document path is shorter than the duplex path, which is preferable, since that is the more commonly used mode. Clear and simple document loading and jam clear-ance access is provided.
8 ~
To restate the above, after the document sheet has been copied, there is a decision gate 10 in the docu-ment path adjacent the downstream end of the plate comprising pivotable deflector fingers, which determines the further recirculatory movement of the documents through a selected one of two different return transport paths back to the document stack 4. These two paths are a first (simplex) transport path and a second (duplex) transport path. The first or simplex transport path returns the documents to the same restacking tray without any inversions. The second or duplex transport path utilizes inverter 3 and returns the documents for restacking with only a single inversion.
Therefore, the solenoid or other actuation of the selector gate 10 determines whether the documents are recirculated with a total of none or one inversions. With no inversions (the simplex path) the same sides of the documents are exposed in each circulation and are restacked in the tray in each circulation in their original orientation. With one inversion (the duplex path) the documents are restacked in the tray inverted from their previous orientation, which provides for copying of the opposite sides or faces of the documents on their next circulation, i.e., for copying duplex documents. The duplex path transport here comprises the disclosed three roller (7, 12a, 12b) sheet inverter and the over-platen reversing chute 3.
Both the simplex transport path and duplex trans-port path continuously and rapidly restack the sheets after they are copied on the top of the stack 4 of the sheets in the document tray without interferring with simultaneous bottom feeding. Thus, continuous multiple recirculations for pre-collation copying can be provided.
In accordance with the present invention and in further reference to Figs. 1-4, a multiple belt trans-port and registration system for documents is shown that comprises a registration edge 9 located at the forward end of platen 2. Multiple belts 8, instead of spanning d. $ l-l the entire platen, engage documents 15 after they have been fed onto the platen from stack 4 by input roller pair 6a and 6b. The multiple belt transport is positioned within the smallest document imaging area and thus provides no show-around on copies reproduced therefrom. A pivotable white backing plate or platen cover 18 which covers between approximately one third and two thirds of the platen area is stationary during copying cycles, and produces no border defects either in a reduction mode or in the case of a slight misregistration of originals. If desired, the backing plate could exSend to registration edge 9 with appropriate cut outs for the belts.
Short drive belts ~ of elastomer foam, driven by reversible rollers 16, transport the documents against registration edge g with a very low friction drive while working in combination with pressor shoe 17. The belts 8 extend from over the registration edge 9 a short distance toward the document input area. They present a very small containment space for the documents so that up-curl and registration edge jumping is minimized. By butting the foam drive member into the registration edge, document edge load is substantially reduced. Short belts also apply a minimum amount of friction to the documents as well as a minimum load on the paper or other substrate and the platen, thus reducing the likelihood of scratching the platen. A further advantage of the present invention is that the partial-length platen belts, by use of reversible rollers 16, more quickly release one document to allow its return while another document comes in through rollers 6a and 6b to be fed against fixed registration edge 9, thus reducing inter-pitch distance between documents on the copier photoreceptor and thereby allowing more copies to be made in a shorter period of time.
~ s an alternative, movable or fixed registration fingers that extend up between the belts could replace ~ ~ 64~
registration edge 9 for more positive registration. Belts 8 would then be more positively interleaved with the regis-tration fingers with documents being held flat by the belts 8 and pressor member 17. With retractable registration fingers, downstream straight through document egress rather than reversible document ejection could be provided and kicker rolls could be used to ensure that the documents exit the platen area on time. That is, the registration fingers could be solenoid controlled and adapted to retract for document egress to an output tray located to the right of the registration fingers. An additional feature with short belts 8 is that since the belts are never imaged, they need not be cleaned for purely cosmetic reasons.
They may not even need to be white.
In reference to Fig. 3, pressor shoe 17 in con-junction with idler rollers 19 are adapted compress the compressible foraminous belts 8 over the raised registra-tion edge 9 and allows the foraminous belts to expand downwardly below the top of the registration edge to push down the lead edge of a document adjacent the registration edge to improve reliability of stopping the document at the registration edge more positively while at the same time preventing the document from jumping over the registra-tion edge.
Referring to Fig. 4, an exemplary copier 20 pro-cessor and its controller 100 will now be described. This co~pier system is disclosed in more detail in U.S. Patent 4,166,614 and U.S. Patent 4,229,101 as well as German OLS 2,828,669. It provides duplex or simplex pre-collated copy sets from either duplex or simplex original documents copied from the RDH 1. Two separate copy sheet trays 106 and 107 are provided here to feed clean copy sheets onto which the images of the documents are to be printed. The control of sheet feeding is by the machine controller 100. The controller 100 is preferably of the known programmable microprocessor type exemplified by the ~ 3 64~
patents cited in the introduction, which conventionally also controls all of the o~her machine functions described herein including the operation of the document feeder, the document and copy sheet gates, feeder drives, etc.
The copy sheets are fed from trays 106 or 107 to the conventional xerographic transfer station 112 for imaging one side thereof, then to the conventional fusing station 114. From there, depending on the position of a duplex selector finger or gate 118, the copy sheets will be deflected either into a duplex buffer intermediate storage tray 116 for duplex copies, or into the copy output path of the copier via an output transport 126. The copy sheets stacked into the duplex tray 116 are stacked image face-up in the order in which they were copied. The duplex tray 116 here includes a bounce reverser 120 and jogger/normal force wheels 122 for assisting the stacking of copy sheets therein and assistance in bottom feeding from the duplex tray 116 by a bottom feeder 124. For duplex copying the previously simplexed copy sheets in the tray 116 are fed by the feeder 124 back to the transfer station 112 for the imaging of their second or opposite side page image.
Such now-duplexed copy sheets are then fed out past the now-opened gate 118 into the same output transport 126.
The output transport 126 transports the finished copy sheets to an output tray 130 through a gate 128 and inverter as shown, or, preferably, to a finishing station 1~0 for the stapling, stitching, gluing, binding, and/or off-set stacking of the completed, pre-collated, copy sets.
The copy sheets may be stacked in an output tray or in the finisher in a compilier tray in the order produced, without inversion for simplex copies, or with an in~erter or inversion in the output path for duplex copies, in this 1 to N system, in which the odd page side is the second side imaged and the copies are inverted inherently by the processor before the output.
1 1 6 ~ 4 ~ 12 -As disclosed in the cited U.S~ Patent 4,116,558, preferably for simplex/duplex copying only the even page documents are copied in the first document circulation by copying every other document sheet starting with the second document sheet. The odd document pages are circulated, but not copied in this first circulation. Thus, an even side buffer set is preferably always placed in the duplex tray. After the first document circulation, all by the last subsequent circulations proceed with copying of all simplex document pages in each circulation onto copy sheets fed alternately from the copy tray and duplex tray. Then on the last document set circulation only the odd document pages are copied.
Referring now to the duplex/duplex system which can be compatibly provided here, the duplex documents may also be loaded face-down and copied in the same 1 to N
(foward serial) order from the qame single document tray.
Here the document inverter for the duplex documents is downstream of the platen rather than upstream. Thus, the duplex documents may be first run through a single dummy (non-copying) circulation with inversion to restack the documents inverted in the DH tray from their initial orienta-tion. Thus, the even sides of the duplex documents may be copied on the second (first copying) ~irculation. On all subsequent circulations (up to the final one) every duplex document sheet is copied on one side and then inverted before restacking as described in the above-cited U.S.
Patents 4,166,614 and 4,229,101 and OLS 2,828,669.
That is, all the even document page sides may be copied on one circulation and placed in the duplex tray, then all the odd sides copied in the next circulation onto the opposite sides of that buffer set fed from the duplex tray, etc. The duplex documents are inverted during all but the last circulation. On the last duplex document copying pass the documen~s are all copied but are not inverted.
1 1 6'1~4 Therefore, they are automatically re-collated in the docu-ment handler tray during this last copying circulation.
The disclosed document handling unit is parti-cularly suitable for alternatively or additionally providing a non-pre-collation copying mode in which multiple copies are made from the documents and they are not recirculated.
The documents can be placed in the same manner (face-down) in a stack, or manually fed one at a time face-down like a semi-automatic document handler. That is, the same, logical, document placement is provided for all copyiny modes.
As can be seen from the description above, there is disclosed herein a plurality of spaced apart document transporting and aligning belts which extend across only a portion of the platen to and beyond the registration edge. That is, documents which have been fed onto the platen are subsequently engaged by the belts and driven towards and registered against the registration edge with the belts being shorter than the platen and shorter than the smallest document being copied on the platen so as to be fully underlaid by the document being copied to avoid show-around exposure of the belts. It should be understood that a single short belt could replace the multiple document belts if desired.
With either a single or multiple belt registra-tion system, the prior art and obvious approach would be to run the belt or belts completely across the platen to positively feed the document. In contrast, the present registration and document aligning system requires feedlng the documents from one side of the platen with a separate feeder and releasing their edge areas and subsequently recapturing the lead edges of the documents with short belts 9.
Further disclosed herein is at least one compress-ible foam document aligning belt adjacent to and above the registration edge that is adapted to extend a short distance over and conform to the registration edge so that documents that are driven by the belt towards the registra-tion edge are transported with a minimum of friction and engage the registration edge before imaging with no appreci-able impact.
In addition to the method and apparatus disclosed above, other modifications and/or additions will readily appear to those skilled in the art upon reading this dis-closure and these are intended to be encompassed within the invention disclosed and claimed herein.
Claims (14)
1. In a copier having a platen for exposing documents thereon and a document registration system including registration edge at one end of the platen, the improvement in said document registration system comprising:
at least one document transporting and aligning belt extending from an intermediary position on the platen to a position over the registration edge so that said belt receives the leading edge of the document at the intermediary position and advances the document across the platen until the leading edge of the document engages the registration edge, said belt being shorter than the smallest document being copied on the platen in the document transporting direction so as to be fully underlaid by the document being copied to avoid show-around exposure of said belt.
at least one document transporting and aligning belt extending from an intermediary position on the platen to a position over the registration edge so that said belt receives the leading edge of the document at the intermediary position and advances the document across the platen until the leading edge of the document engages the registration edge, said belt being shorter than the smallest document being copied on the platen in the document transporting direction so as to be fully underlaid by the document being copied to avoid show-around exposure of said belt.
2. The copier of Claim 1 wherein said belt is exposed to said copier over said platen over only approxi-mately one-half of the dimension of said platen in the direction of document movement towards said registration edge.
3. The copier of Claim 1 further including a platen cover plate stationarily overlaying said platen during the transport of a document and cooperating with said belt to hold a document being copied within a preset spacing from said platen, said platen cover plate extending in the area between said belt and the end of the platen opposite from said registration edge, to guide documents toward said belt.
4. The copier of Claim 3 wherein said platen cover is pivotably removable from its position overlaying said platen for document jam clearance.
5. The copier of Claim 3 wherein said platen cover plate member has an optically uniform, continuous, reflective surface overlaying substantially the entire area of said platen from the end of said document belt to the end of said platen opposite from said registration edge.
6. The copier of Claims 3, 4 or 5, wherein said platen cover plate member overlies between approximately one-third and two-thirds of the total area of said platen.
7. The copier of Claims 1, 2 or 3 wherein said document belt and said registration edge are effectively interdigitated by said document belt extending below the uppermost portions of said registration edge closely adjacent said registration edge at edge positions of said belt along said registration edge to provide a more positive registra-tion of said documents to said registration edge.
8. The copier of Claims 4 or 5 wherein said document belt and said registration edge are effectively interdigitated by said document belt extending below the uppermost portions of said registration edge closely adjacent said registration edge at edge positions of said belt along said registration edge to provide a more positive registration of said documents to said registration edge.
9. The copier of Claim 3 including document feed means for feeding documents onto said platen from the end of said platen opposite from said registration edge.
10. In a copier having a platen for exposing documents thereon, a document registration apparatus including document registration means at one end of the platen and at least one document transporting and aligning belt, which extends across only a portion of said platen adjacent to said registration means so that documents which have been fed onto said platen are subsequently engaged by said belt and driven towards and registered against said registration means, said belt being shorter than said platen and the extent of the belt from the registration means being less than that of the smallest document to be copied on said platen so that the belt is fully underlaid by the document being copied to avoid show-around exposure of said belt.
11. A copier according to Claim 10 wherein said belt extends over said platen from the registration means over only approximately one-half of the dimension of said platen in the direction of document movement towards said registration means.
12. A copier according to Claim 10 further including a platen cover plate stationarily overlaying said platen during the transport of a document and cooperating with said belt to hold a document being copied within a preset spacing from said platen said platen cover plate extending in the area between said belt and the end of the platen opposite from said registration means, to guide documents toward said belt.
13. A copier according to Claim 12 wherein said platen cover plate is pivotably removable from its position over-laying said platen for document jam clearance.
14. A copier according to Claim 12 or 13 wherein said platen cover plate member has an optically uniform, continuous, reflective surface overlaying substantially the entire area of said platen from the end of said document belt to the end of said platen opposite from said registration means.
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US7133079A | 1979-08-30 | 1979-08-30 | |
| US071,330 | 1979-08-30 |
Publications (1)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| CA1164484A true CA1164484A (en) | 1984-03-27 |
Family
ID=22100644
Family Applications (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| CA000354903A Expired CA1164484A (en) | 1979-08-30 | 1980-06-26 | Document show-around diminisher |
Country Status (4)
| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| JP (1) | JPS5636664A (en) |
| CA (1) | CA1164484A (en) |
| DE (1) | DE3028150A1 (en) |
| GB (1) | GB2057403B (en) |
Families Citing this family (2)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| JPS60110482A (en) * | 1983-11-22 | 1985-06-15 | Toshiba Corp | Image forming apparatus |
| DE102011018873A1 (en) | 2011-04-28 | 2012-10-31 | Hydac Electronic Gmbh | Pneumatic valve and its use for a connected consumer |
Family Cites Families (5)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US3888581A (en) * | 1974-03-08 | 1975-06-10 | Xerox Corp | Semi-automatic document handler |
| US4023791A (en) * | 1975-10-23 | 1977-05-17 | Savin Business Machines Corporation | Semi-automatic document feeder |
| GB1549281A (en) * | 1976-06-25 | 1979-08-01 | Xerox Corp | Sheet handling apparatus |
| US4194837A (en) * | 1977-12-02 | 1980-03-25 | Ricoh Company, Ltd. | Original feed apparatus for electrophotographic copying machine |
| US4185815A (en) * | 1978-03-17 | 1980-01-29 | International Business Machines Corporation | Sheet feed |
-
1980
- 1980-06-26 CA CA000354903A patent/CA1164484A/en not_active Expired
- 1980-07-24 DE DE19803028150 patent/DE3028150A1/en not_active Ceased
- 1980-08-22 JP JP11575880A patent/JPS5636664A/en active Pending
- 1980-08-22 GB GB8027421A patent/GB2057403B/en not_active Expired
Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| DE3028150A1 (en) | 1981-03-19 |
| JPS5636664A (en) | 1981-04-09 |
| GB2057403A (en) | 1981-04-01 |
| GB2057403B (en) | 1983-08-10 |
Similar Documents
| Publication | Publication Date | Title |
|---|---|---|
| CA1140171A (en) | Recirculating document handler configuration | |
| EP0029646B1 (en) | Recirculating document handler | |
| CA1147360A (en) | Recirculating duplex documents copier | |
| US4330197A (en) | Recirculating documents duplex copier | |
| US4731637A (en) | Automatic "two-up" document registration and feeding for copiers | |
| US4782363A (en) | Copying system for on-line finishing | |
| US4229101A (en) | Duplex/simplex precollation copying system | |
| CA1289612C (en) | Automatic copier signature set production | |
| US4384782A (en) | 1 to N Order document copying | |
| US4834360A (en) | Job batching system for high capacity copier with RDH | |
| US4166614A (en) | Jogging and normal force for sheet feeding | |
| CA1115301A (en) | Duplex/simplex precollation copying system | |
| US4884794A (en) | Duplex document handler | |
| US4355880A (en) | Forward order document copying method | |
| US4508447A (en) | Alternative feeding document recirculation | |
| US4881729A (en) | Recirculating document handler with integral SADH | |
| EP0022680B1 (en) | Document handling apparatus and method | |
| CA1148182A (en) | Conforming document aligner | |
| CA1208689A (en) | Higher productivity recirculative document copying | |
| CA1164484A (en) | Document show-around diminisher | |
| EP0024936B1 (en) | Methods of pre-collation copying | |
| CA1128970A (en) | Duplex/simplex precollation copying system | |
| CA1117154A (en) | Duplex/simplex precollation copying system | |
| EP0103661B1 (en) | Higher productivity recirculative document copying |
Legal Events
| Date | Code | Title | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| MKEX | Expiry |