US3813676A - Non-sequential symbol generation system for fluid jet printer - Google Patents

Non-sequential symbol generation system for fluid jet printer Download PDF

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US3813676A
US3813676A US00295302A US29530272A US3813676A US 3813676 A US3813676 A US 3813676A US 00295302 A US00295302 A US 00295302A US 29530272 A US29530272 A US 29530272A US 3813676 A US3813676 A US 3813676A
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symbol
fluid
charging voltage
droplets
droplet
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US00295302A
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B Wolfe
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International Business Machines Corp
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International Business Machines Corp
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Application filed by International Business Machines Corp filed Critical International Business Machines Corp
Priority to US00295302A priority Critical patent/US3813676A/en
Priority to IT27093/73A priority patent/IT992694B/en
Priority to CH1228073A priority patent/CH557241A/en
Priority to NLAANVRAGE7311909,A priority patent/NL170468C/en
Priority to GB4170273A priority patent/GB1432646A/en
Priority to FR7332550A priority patent/FR2202472A5/fr
Priority to SE7312349A priority patent/SE392535B/en
Priority to BE135590A priority patent/BE804778A/en
Priority to JP48105117A priority patent/JPS5237937B2/ja
Priority to AU60510/73A priority patent/AU476257B2/en
Priority to DE2347594A priority patent/DE2347594C3/en
Priority to CA182,371A priority patent/CA1001209A/en
Priority to ES419207A priority patent/ES419207A1/en
Priority to BR7721/73A priority patent/BR7307721D0/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3813676A publication Critical patent/US3813676A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B41PRINTING; LINING MACHINES; TYPEWRITERS; STAMPS
    • B41JTYPEWRITERS; SELECTIVE PRINTING MECHANISMS, i.e. MECHANISMS PRINTING OTHERWISE THAN FROM A FORME; CORRECTION OF TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS
    • B41J2/00Typewriters or selective printing mechanisms characterised by the printing or marking process for which they are designed
    • B41J2/005Typewriters or selective printing mechanisms characterised by the printing or marking process for which they are designed characterised by bringing liquid or particles selectively into contact with a printing material
    • B41J2/01Ink jet
    • B41J2/07Ink jet characterised by jet control
    • B41J2/075Ink jet characterised by jet control for many-valued deflection
    • B41J2/08Ink jet characterised by jet control for many-valued deflection charge-control type
    • B41J2/09Deflection means

Definitions

  • a fluid jet printing system includes a vibrating nozzle for emitting a stream of fluid which is broken into a series of uniform drops. The drops are charged by a voltage which is generated from a symbol code input by a symbol generator which produces a charging voltage representation for each drop of each symbol to be printed.
  • the symbol generator includes a symbol storage means having stored in each location a representation of the charging voltage to be applied to each fluid drop. Deflection electrodes which supply an electric field for the purpose of deflecting charged fluid drops are positioned at an angle with respect to a base line fora row of symbols to provide greater flexibility and more accurate placement of fluid drops on a record media surface.
  • symbol generators for fluid jet printers have included symbol matrices which were scanned sequentially to produce a video signal used to control the charging of fluid drops in the printing apparatus.
  • the information stored in the sequentially scanned matrix was a binary value which indicated whether a particular spot in the symbol matrix was to be printed (un-' blanked) or not (blanked).
  • the sequential binary video signal produced from the prior art symbol generators was combined with a ramp voltage signal in such a manner that a charging voltage was produced for each video print signal with a charging voltage magnitude determined by the instantaneous value of the ramp voltage signal.
  • a still further object of the present invention is to increase the number of possible fluid drop positions on a record medium in a fluid jet printer having a nonsequential matrix symbol generator and having a pair of deflection electrodes precisely positioned.
  • a fluid jet printing system includes a fluid drop emitting subsystem includ' ing fluid supply, pump, nozzle, and means for vibrating the nozzle to form uniform fluid drops; a nonsequential symbol generation means for converting a symbol code input into a series of voltage signals to be applied to an electrode to charge individual fluid drops to a potential representative of the print position in a given symbol; and a deflection means positioned at an angle so as to provide a greatly increased number of possible print positions for a given symbol.
  • Another advantage of the present invention over the prior art is that the record medium may be transported at a speed twice as fast as the prior art.
  • a still further advantage of the presentinvention is that greater precision can be obtained in printed symbols since separation between available print positions is decreased.
  • Yet another advantage of the present invention over the prior art is the elimination of guard drops used to compensate for drop interaction.
  • FIG. 1 is an isometric diagram of a fluid jet printing apparatus with deflection electrodes positioned accordingto the present invention.
  • FIG. 2A is a block diagram of apparatus for converting an input symbol code to a charging electrode potential.
  • FIG. 2B is a block diagram showing the logic elements of a non-sequential symbol generator according to the present invention.
  • FIG. 2C is a chart showing the magnitude in decimal and'binary notation for the charging voltage to be applied to each fluid drop necessary to form the symbol .8,
  • FIG. 3A is a representation of a claims 8 showing the placement of each fluid drop.
  • FIG. 3B is a diagram showing the relative displacement of each drop necessary to form the symbol 8as a function of the binary coded voltage representation.
  • FIG. 3C is a schematic representation showing the positioning of a symbol 8 on a record medium relative to the angle of the deflection electrodes.
  • fluid jet printing system I00 fluid from reservoir and pump 114 is transmitted under pressure through tube 112 to nozzle 110.
  • a nozzle actuator transducer which is driven by a transducer driver I22 vibrates nozzle I10 causing the fluid stream I02 to be broken into a uniform series of droplets 104.
  • a charging electrode surrounds the fluid stream at about the point of droplet separation. The charging electrode charges each droplet to a potential determined by data source 132 which drives the charging electrode 130.
  • the charged droplets pass through an electric field which is created be tween deflection electrodes I40.
  • the deflection electrodes generate a constant electric field due to an applied potential.
  • the fluid droplets are deflected while moving through the electric field formed by deflection electrodes an amount dependant upon the applied charge for each droplet. For those droplets which are not to be printed, a charge is applied which will cause them to strike gutter which returns the fluid to reservoir I14.
  • deflection electrodes 140 are mounted at an angle to the direction of record medium motion as shown by the arrow in FIG. I.
  • the selected angle I (FIG. 3C) is adjusted to allow the maximum usage of fluid droplets for printing and avoid the need for guard drops or other means of compensation.
  • the angle I may be in the range of 20 to 30 depending primarily on paper speed, drop separation and drop size.
  • a symbol code input representing a symbol to be printed is presented to symbol code buffer 310.
  • Symbol code buffer 310 provides temporary storage for the symbol code to enable synchronization of the input symbol code data with a drop formation clock (not shown).
  • symbol code data is presented to symbol generator 320 which is shown in greater detail in FIG. 2B.
  • the symbol code contains n parallel bits, which for example, in a symbol font having less than 64 symbols might be a six bit parallel data path.
  • the symbol code is decoded by symbol decode means 322 which has as a first output an address of a location in symbol storage means ,326 in which is stored the binary representation of the charging voltage'to be applied to the first fluid drop to be printed for the symbol decoded. This address is loaded into address counter 324 which controls the addressing of symbol storage means 326 via lines 323.
  • a second output of symbol decode means 322 is connected tosymbol drop count decode means 327 to set the symbol drop count to the number of fluid drops to be printed for the particular symbol decoded.
  • symbol storage means 326 is a three-dimensional matrix having K symbol locations where K is the number of symbols in a particular font, each of which contain L fluid drops to be printed where L is variable depending upon the symbol to be printed, with m bits for each storage location representing the charging potential to be applied to a particular drop in a symbol.
  • symbol storage means 326 which is m bits in parallel is applied to symbol video code buffer 328 which provides a temporary storage of the charging voltage representation for a particular drop to be printed.
  • the output of symbol generator 320 which is also the output of symbol video code buffer 328 is connected to video decoder 330 which converts the binary digital charging voltage representation into an analog voltage signal which is amplified by video amplifier 340 which in turn is connected to charging electrode 130 (see FIG. 1).
  • symbol storage means 326 contains information regarding,
  • FIGS. 2C, 3A. 3B and 3C the printing of a representative symbol 8 will be described.
  • F IG. 2C shows the decimal and binary code representations of the charging voltage to be applied to each of the 14 drops to be printed for the symbol 8.
  • drop L1 has a decimal code voltage representation of 2 and a binary code voltage representation of 010.
  • FIG. 38 it can be seen that drop L1 is positioned 2 voltage units above a base line.
  • the other drops required to form the symbol 8 are similarly positioned a number of voltage units above a base line determined by the binary code representation as shown 4 in FIG. 2C.
  • FIGS. 3A and 3C the purpose and function of positioning deflection electrodes 140 at angle I will be explained.
  • Deflection electrodes 140 are positioned at an angle of approximately 26.5 relative to the motion of the record medium.
  • each fluid drop follows a path which is along a line of D) from a base line.
  • Each fluid drop may be positioned at any location along the dotted line indicated in FIG. 3A as determined by the binary voltage representation.
  • that fluid drop could be positioned at any one of 7 positions along that dotted line as determined by the binary code which was contained in the appropriate location of symbol storage means 326. This is in contrast to the prior art symbol generation techniques in which the only information stored in a symbol storage matrix was the presence or absence of a drop to be printed in a line scan sequential manner.
  • the present invention enables a greater flexibility in the printing of symbols than does the prior art. Further, no drop interaction compensation is required since the effects of drop interaction can be considered in assigning the binary representation for the charging voltage to be applied to each fluid droplet to be printed. Therefore, guard drops can be eliminated and every drop emanating from nozzle (see FIG. 1) can be utilized for printing.
  • the net result of the improvements due to the present invention are that although the storage requirement is increased by a factor of slightly more than 2.0, the number of possible drop locations on the printing surface has increased by greater than 10 times and the paper speed may be increased by a factor of two.
  • a fluid jet printer having fluid reservoir means, fluid jet means, transducer means for vibrating said fluid jet to produce a stream of fluid droplets, means for applying a charging voltage to individual ones of said droplets, and record means for receiving the droplets thereon, in combination therewith;
  • means for generating a charging voltage signal representative of the print position for each fluid droplet of each symbol comprising:
  • decode means connected to said storage means and responsive to a symbol code input signal for addressing said storage means to read out in sequence said stored digital values for each droplet of one of said pluralities for said symbol code;
  • converting means connected to the output of said storage means for converting each said digital value in said sequence into an analog charging voltage signal for an ink droplet, with each charging voltage signal being independent of charging voltmeans for counting the number of drops to be printed for each symbol to achieve maximum utilization of said storage means.
  • Apparatus according to claim 1 further comprising oscillator means, connected to said means for generating a charging voltage signal, for synchronizing generation of said charging voltage signals with emission of fluid droplets from said fluid jet to insure that the correct charge is applied to each fluid droplet.

Abstract

A fluid jet printing system includes a vibrating nozzle for emitting a stream of fluid which is broken into a series of uniform drops. The drops are charged by a voltage which is generated from a symbol code input by a symbol generator which produces a charging voltage representation for each drop of each symbol to be printed. The symbol generator includes a symbol storage means having stored in each location a representation of the charging voltage to be applied to each fluid drop. Deflection electrodes which supply an electric field for the purpose of deflecting charged fluid drops are positioned at an angle with respect to a base line for a row of symbols to provide greater flexibility and more accurate placement of fluid drops on a record media surface.

Description

Wolfe May 28, 1974 NON-SEQUENTIAL SYMBOL GENE SYSTEM FOR FLUID .TET PRINTER [75] Inventor: Bruce A. Wolfe, Endicott, NY.
[73] Assignee: International Business Machines Corporation, Armonk, NY.
22 Filed: Oct. 5, 11972 21 Appl.No.:295,302
TION
OTHER PUBLICATIONS Gamblin et al.; Orthogonalization of Electrostatic Printing; IBM Tech. Disc. Bulletin, Vol. 11, No. 10, March, 1969, pp. l,292-1,293.
SOURCE CONSTANT INK UNDER PRESSURE DEFLECTION I40 VOLTAGE MOTION Primary Examiner-Joseph W. Hartary Attorney, Agent, or Firm-Kenneth P..lohnson [57] ABSTRACT A fluid jet printing system includes a vibrating nozzle for emitting a stream of fluid which is broken into a series of uniform drops. The drops are charged by a voltage which is generated from a symbol code input by a symbol generator which produces a charging voltage representation for each drop of each symbol to be printed. The symbol generator includes a symbol storage means having stored in each location a representation of the charging voltage to be applied to each fluid drop. Deflection electrodes which supply an electric field for the purpose of deflecting charged fluid drops are positioned at an angle with respect to a base line fora row of symbols to provide greater flexibility and more accurate placement of fluid drops on a record media surface. I
3 Claims, 7 Drawing Figures T00 NOZZLE ACTUATOR TRANSDUCER 122 TRANSDUCER DRIVER RGINC DEFLECTION ELECTRODE P rEmiumzalsn' I 3.813.676
SHEET 1 DE 4 INK UNDER PRESSURE NOZZLE ACTUATOR T TRANSDUCER 122 TRANSDUCER DRIVER SOURCE l DEFLECTIDN DEFLECTION 140 VOLTAGE A age 1331s I PATENIEIlmaa m4 SHEET 2 OF 4 CHARGING ELECTRODES v- \IIDEO AMP VIDEO DECODER SYMBOL GENERATOR C 'FIGQZA SYMBOL BUFFER SYMBOL CODE INPUT DROP FORMATION -DROP FORMATION r OSCILLATOR FIG. 2B
L2 L5 L4 L5 L6 LT L8 L9 'LIO LII L12 LI3 L14 OECIMAL CODE 2 SHEEI30F4 FIG. 3A.
FIG. 3B
mEmfnme'alm 7 3.813.676
' saw u or 4 DEFLECTION -4- -DEFLECTION 5 ELECTRODE MOTION FIG. 3C
l, NON-SEQUENTIAL SYMBOL GENERATION SYSTEM F OR FLUID JET PRINTER jet printer.
In the prior art, symbol generators for fluid jet printers have included symbol matrices which were scanned sequentially to produce a video signal used to control the charging of fluid drops in the printing apparatus. The information stored in the sequentially scanned matrix was a binary value which indicated whether a particular spot in the symbol matrix was to be printed (un-' blanked) or not (blanked). The sequential binary video signal produced from the prior art symbol generators was combined with a ramp voltage signal in such a manner that a charging voltage was produced for each video print signal with a charging voltage magnitude determined by the instantaneous value of the ramp voltage signal. I
The sequential scanning of the symbol matrix of prior art systems limits the flexibility of print drop placement to a small, fixed number of locations in a normally rectangular matrix. This limitation results in unsatisfactory printing of symbols employing diagonal lines or graph- ICS.
SUMMARY OF E N ENT QN.
Therefore, it is an object of the present invention to efficiently control the printing of symbols.
It is another object of the present invention to increase printing speed in a fluid jet printer including a non-sequential symbol generator.
It is yet another object of the present invention to increase fluid drop utilization in a fluid jet printer.
A still further object of the present invention is to increase the number of possible fluid drop positions on a record medium in a fluid jet printer having a nonsequential matrix symbol generator and having a pair of deflection electrodes precisely positioned.
To achieve the foregoing objects, a fluid jet printing system includes a fluid drop emitting subsystem includ' ing fluid supply, pump, nozzle, and means for vibrating the nozzle to form uniform fluid drops; a nonsequential symbol generation means for converting a symbol code input into a series of voltage signals to be applied to an electrode to charge individual fluid drops to a potential representative of the print position in a given symbol; and a deflection means positioned at an angle so as to provide a greatly increased number of possible print positions for a given symbol.
It is an advantage of the present invention that possible drop locations are increased by a factor of 10 to I over prior art fluid jet printers.
Another advantage of the present invention over the prior art is that the record medium may be transported at a speed twice as fast as the prior art.
A still further advantage of the presentinvention is that greater precision can be obtained in printed symbols since separation between available print positions is decreased.
Yet another advantage of the present invention over the prior art is the elimination of guard drops used to compensate for drop interaction.
tilleaaifisira yeaiasaqfth.Present.iarsatiealstae 2 capability of printing a wide variety of symbols, character sets and limited graphics.
The foregoing and other objects, features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following more particular description of a preferred embodiof the invention fllsstretsiialbsessential;
fi issraaas BRIEF DESCRIPTIQNQF DRAWINGW FIG. 1 is an isometric diagram of a fluid jet printing apparatus with deflection electrodes positioned accordingto the present invention.
FIG. 2A is a block diagram of apparatus for converting an input symbol code to a charging electrode potential.
FIG. 2B is a block diagram showing the logic elements of a non-sequential symbol generator according to the present invention.
FIG. 2C is a chart showing the magnitude in decimal and'binary notation for the charging voltage to be applied to each fluid drop necessary to form the symbol .8,
FIG. 3A is a representation of a simbol 8 showing the placement of each fluid drop.
FIG. 3B is a diagram showing the relative displacement of each drop necessary to form the symbol 8as a function of the binary coded voltage representation.
FIG. 3C is a schematic representation showing the positioning of a symbol 8 on a record medium relative to the angle of the deflection electrodes.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION Referring now to FIG. I, a fluid jet printing system is shown including the present invention. In fluid jet printing system I00, fluid from reservoir and pump 114 is transmitted under pressure through tube 112 to nozzle 110. A nozzle actuator transducer which is driven by a transducer driver I22 vibrates nozzle I10 causing the fluid stream I02 to be broken into a uniform series of droplets 104. A charging electrode surrounds the fluid stream at about the point of droplet separation. The charging electrode charges each droplet to a potential determined by data source 132 which drives the charging electrode 130. The charged droplets pass through an electric field which is created be tween deflection electrodes I40. The deflection electrodes generate a constant electric field due to an applied potential. The fluid droplets are deflected while moving through the electric field formed by deflection electrodes an amount dependant upon the applied charge for each droplet. For those droplets which are not to be printed, a charge is applied which will cause them to strike gutter which returns the fluid to reservoir I14.
Referring also to FIG. 3C, it should be especially noted that deflection electrodes 140 are mounted at an angle to the direction of record medium motion as shown by the arrow in FIG. I. The selected angle I (FIG. 3C) is adjusted to allow the maximum usage of fluid droplets for printing and avoid the need for guard drops or other means of compensation. In a preferred embodiment, the angle I may be in the range of 20 to 30 depending primarily on paper speed, drop separation and drop size.
Referring now to FIGS. 2A and 2B, the data source and symbol generation means will be described. A symbol code input representing a symbol to be printed is presented to symbol code buffer 310. Symbol code buffer 310 provides temporary storage for the symbol code to enable synchronization of the input symbol code data with a drop formation clock (not shown).
The symbol code data is presented to symbol generator 320 which is shown in greater detail in FIG. 2B.
The symbol code contains n parallel bits, which for example, in a symbol font having less than 64 symbols might be a six bit parallel data path. The symbol code is decoded by symbol decode means 322 which has as a first output an address of a location in symbol storage means ,326 in which is stored the binary representation of the charging voltage'to be applied to the first fluid drop to be printed for the symbol decoded. This address is loaded into address counter 324 which controls the addressing of symbol storage means 326 via lines 323.
A second output of symbol decode means 322 is connected tosymbol drop count decode means 327 to set the symbol drop count to the number of fluid drops to be printed for the particular symbol decoded.
It should be noted that different symbols of the same symbol font will be formed of a different number of fluid drops. For example, referring to FIG. 2C it can be seen that the symbol 8 is formed of 14 drops. Some symbols may require less than 14 drops and some symbols may require many more than 14 drops.- Therefore, for most efficient use of the symbol storage matrix 326 the drop count is used to control the resetting of address counter 324 to eliminate unnecessary storage access cycles.
It should be noted, referring to FIG. 28 that symbol storage means 326 is a three-dimensional matrix having K symbol locations where K is the number of symbols in a particular font, each of which contain L fluid drops to be printed where L is variable depending upon the symbol to be printed, with m bits for each storage location representing the charging potential to be applied to a particular drop in a symbol.
The output of symbol storage means 326 which is m bits in parallel is applied to symbol video code buffer 328 which provides a temporary storage of the charging voltage representation for a particular drop to be printed.
Referring again to FIG. 2A, the output of symbol generator 320 which is also the output of symbol video code buffer 328 is connected to video decoder 330 which converts the binary digital charging voltage representation into an analog voltage signal which is amplified by video amplifier 340 which in turn is connected to charging electrode 130 (see FIG. 1).
It should be especially noted that the symbol storage means 326 (FIGS. 2B) contains information regarding,
the exact charging potential for each of the L drops for each of K symbols.
Referring now to FIGS. 2C, 3A. 3B and 3C, the printing of a representative symbol 8 will be described.
F IG. 2C shows the decimal and binary code representations of the charging voltage to be applied to each of the 14 drops to be printed for the symbol 8. For example. drop L1 has a decimal code voltage representation of 2 and a binary code voltage representation of 010. Referring now to FIG. 38, it can be seen that drop L1 is positioned 2 voltage units above a base line. The other drops required to form the symbol 8 are similarly positioned a number of voltage units above a base line determined by the binary code representation as shown 4 in FIG. 2C. Referring now to FIGS. 3A and 3C, the purpose and function of positioning deflection electrodes 140 at angle I will be explained.
Deflection electrodes 140 are positioned at an angle of approximately 26.5 relative to the motion of the record medium. In FIG. 3A, it can be seen that each fluid drop follows a path which is along a line of D) from a base line. Each fluid drop may be positioned at any location along the dotted line indicated in FIG. 3A as determined by the binary voltage representation. Thus, taking drop L8 as an example, that fluid drop could be positioned at any one of 7 positions along that dotted line as determined by the binary code which was contained in the appropriate location of symbol storage means 326. This is in contrast to the prior art symbol generation techniques in which the only information stored in a symbol storage matrix was the presence or absence of a drop to be printed in a line scan sequential manner.
It can be seen, therefore, that the present invention enables a greater flexibility in the printing of symbols than does the prior art. Further, no drop interaction compensation is required since the effects of drop interaction can be considered in assigning the binary representation for the charging voltage to be applied to each fluid droplet to be printed. Therefore, guard drops can be eliminated and every drop emanating from nozzle (see FIG. 1) can be utilized for printing.
The net result of the improvements due to the present invention are that although the storage requirement is increased by a factor of slightly more than 2.0, the number of possible drop locations on the printing surface has increased by greater than 10 times and the paper speed may be increased by a factor of two.
While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to the preferred embodiment thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and detail may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
What is claimed is:
1. In a fluid jet printer having fluid reservoir means, fluid jet means, transducer means for vibrating said fluid jet to produce a stream of fluid droplets, means for applying a charging voltage to individual ones of said droplets, and record means for receiving the droplets thereon, in combination therewith;
means for generating a charging voltage signal representative of the print position for each fluid droplet of each symbol, said means comprising:
storage means having prestored therein individual droplet charging voltages represented as digital values, the magnitude of said digital values being timeindependent values with respect to each of a plurality of droplets for each symbol in a set of symbols;
decode means connected to said storage means and responsive to a symbol code input signal for addressing said storage means to read out in sequence said stored digital values for each droplet of one of said pluralities for said symbol code; and
converting means connected to the output of said storage means for converting each said digital value in said sequence into an analog charging voltage signal for an ink droplet, with each charging voltage signal being independent of charging voltmeans for counting the number of drops to be printed for each symbol to achieve maximum utilization of said storage means.
3. Apparatus according to claim 1 further comprising oscillator means, connected to said means for generating a charging voltage signal, for synchronizing generation of said charging voltage signals with emission of fluid droplets from said fluid jet to insure that the correct charge is applied to each fluid droplet.

Claims (3)

1. In a fluid jet printer having fluid reservoir means, fluid jet means, transducer means for vibrating said fluid jet to produce a stream of fluid droplets, means for applying a charging voltage to individual ones of said droplets, and record means for receiving the droplets thereon, in combination therewith; means for generating a charging voltage signal representative of the print position for each fluid droplet of each symbol, said means comprising: storage means having prestored therein individual droplet charging voltages represented as digital values, the magnitude of said digital values being time-independent values with respect to each of a plurality of droplets for each symbol in a set of symbols; decode means connected to said storage means and responsive to a symbol code input signal for addressing said storage means to read out in sequence said stored digital values for each droplet of one of said pluralities for said symbol code; and converting means connected to the output of said storage means for converting each said digital value in said sequence into an analog charging voltage signal for an ink droplet, with each charging voltage signal being independent of charging voltage signals applied to a preceding or succeeding droplet in said stream of fluid droplets; and means for deflecting each said droplet according to the charge thereon, said deflection means being arranged so that said droplets are deflected along a path angularly disposed with respect to the relative motion of said record means and fluid jet means an amount determined in part by the maximum number of drops used in a symbol of said set.
2. Apparatus according to claim 1 further comprising means for counting the number of drops to be printed for each symbol to achieve maximum utilization of said storage means.
3. Apparatus according to claim 1 further comprising oscillator means, connected to said means for generating a charging voltage signal, for synchronizing generation of said charging voltage signals with emission of fluid droplets from said fluid jet to insure that the correct charge is applied to each fluid droplet.
US00295302A 1972-10-05 1972-10-05 Non-sequential symbol generation system for fluid jet printer Expired - Lifetime US3813676A (en)

Priority Applications (14)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US00295302A US3813676A (en) 1972-10-05 1972-10-05 Non-sequential symbol generation system for fluid jet printer
IT27093/73A IT992694B (en) 1972-10-05 1973-07-26 PERFECTED CONTROL SYSTEM FOR AN INKJET PRINTER
CH1228073A CH557241A (en) 1972-10-05 1973-08-28 LIQUID JET PRINTER.
NLAANVRAGE7311909,A NL170468C (en) 1972-10-05 1973-08-30 INK JET PRINTING DEVICE.
GB4170273A GB1432646A (en) 1972-10-05 1973-09-05 Liquid droplet recording apparatus
FR7332550A FR2202472A5 (en) 1972-10-05 1973-09-06
SE7312349A SE392535B (en) 1972-10-05 1973-09-11 SYSTEM FOR GETTING VISIBLE BOLES ON A LIQUID RADIATION PRESSURE EQUIPMENT
BE135590A BE804778A (en) 1972-10-05 1973-09-12 INKJET PRINTER
JP48105117A JPS5237937B2 (en) 1972-10-05 1973-09-19
AU60510/73A AU476257B2 (en) 1972-10-05 1973-09-20 inkjet PRINTER
DE2347594A DE2347594C3 (en) 1972-10-05 1973-09-21 Liquid jet printer
CA182,371A CA1001209A (en) 1972-10-05 1973-09-28 Non-sequential symbol generation system for fluid jet printer
ES419207A ES419207A1 (en) 1972-10-05 1973-09-29 Non-sequential symbol generation system for fluid jet printer
BR7721/73A BR7307721D0 (en) 1972-10-05 1973-10-04 FLUID JET PRINTER

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US3813676A true US3813676A (en) 1974-05-28

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US (1) US3813676A (en)
JP (1) JPS5237937B2 (en)
AU (1) AU476257B2 (en)
BE (1) BE804778A (en)
BR (1) BR7307721D0 (en)
CA (1) CA1001209A (en)
CH (1) CH557241A (en)
DE (1) DE2347594C3 (en)
ES (1) ES419207A1 (en)
FR (1) FR2202472A5 (en)
GB (1) GB1432646A (en)
IT (1) IT992694B (en)
NL (1) NL170468C (en)
SE (1) SE392535B (en)

Cited By (22)

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US3943529A (en) * 1975-02-06 1976-03-09 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Control of scanning laser beam
US3964591A (en) * 1975-06-10 1976-06-22 International Business Machines Corporation Font selection system
US4010477A (en) * 1976-01-29 1977-03-01 The Mead Corporation Head assembly for a jet drop recorder
US4029006A (en) * 1975-06-26 1977-06-14 The Boeing Company Method and apparatus for printing indicia on a continuous, elongate, flexible three-dimensional member
US4054882A (en) * 1973-01-22 1977-10-18 International Business Machines Corporation Non-sequential ink jet printing
US4059183A (en) * 1976-12-30 1977-11-22 International Business Machines Corporation Dot matrix printer with slanted print head and modular skewing of dot pattern information
US4085409A (en) * 1976-06-01 1978-04-18 The Mead Corporation Method and apparatus for ink jet printing
US4091390A (en) * 1976-12-20 1978-05-23 International Business Machines Corporation Arrangement for multi-orifice ink jet print head
DE2749669A1 (en) * 1976-12-16 1978-06-22 Ibm INKJET MATRIX PRINTER
US4115787A (en) * 1974-08-16 1978-09-19 Nippon Telegraph And Telephone Public Corporation Interpolation in an ink jet system printer
US4283731A (en) * 1980-04-22 1981-08-11 The Mead Corporation Ink jet printing apparatus
US4290073A (en) * 1978-09-25 1981-09-15 Ricoh Co., Ltd. Ink-jet recording apparatus
US4303925A (en) * 1979-06-27 1981-12-01 International Business Machines Corporation Method and apparatus for controlling the position of printed ink droplets
US4322732A (en) * 1978-08-12 1982-03-30 Ricoh Co., Ltd. Ink jet recording method
EP0051448A2 (en) * 1980-11-03 1982-05-12 Xerox Corporation Liquid drop printing apparatus and method
US4366490A (en) * 1980-09-11 1982-12-28 Exxon Research And Engineering Co. Method and apparatus for tuning ink jets
USRE31271E (en) * 1980-04-22 1983-06-07 The Mead Corporation Ink jet printing apparatus
US4472722A (en) * 1980-02-18 1984-09-18 Ricoh Company, Ltd. Ink jet printing method
US4596990A (en) * 1982-01-27 1986-06-24 Tmc Company Multi-jet single head ink jet printer
US5455614A (en) * 1991-09-06 1995-10-03 Linx Printing Technologies Limited Printing method and print head having angled ink jet
US6257690B1 (en) * 1998-10-31 2001-07-10 Hewlett-Packard Company Ink ejection element firing order to minimize horizontal banding and the jaggedness of vertical lines
EP3981601A1 (en) * 2020-10-09 2022-04-13 Dover Europe Sàrl Method for optimizing a printing speed of a cij printer, in particular for printing 2d or graphical codes and cij printer thereof

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CA1129932A (en) * 1978-04-10 1982-08-17 Stephen F. Pond Electrostatic scanning ink jet system
DE2901798A1 (en) * 1979-01-18 1980-07-24 Bosch Gmbh Robert METHOD FOR RECORDING INFORMATION CONTAINING A VARIETY OF ALPHANUMERIC CHARACTERS
US4319251A (en) * 1980-08-15 1982-03-09 A. B. Dick Company Ink jet printing employing reverse charge coupling

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Cited By (26)

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4054882A (en) * 1973-01-22 1977-10-18 International Business Machines Corporation Non-sequential ink jet printing
US4115787A (en) * 1974-08-16 1978-09-19 Nippon Telegraph And Telephone Public Corporation Interpolation in an ink jet system printer
US3943529A (en) * 1975-02-06 1976-03-09 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Control of scanning laser beam
US3964591A (en) * 1975-06-10 1976-06-22 International Business Machines Corporation Font selection system
US4029006A (en) * 1975-06-26 1977-06-14 The Boeing Company Method and apparatus for printing indicia on a continuous, elongate, flexible three-dimensional member
DE2657638A1 (en) * 1975-06-26 1978-06-22 Boeing Co Printing unit for long irregular object e.g. cable - has ink jet printing head whose ink droplets are deflected electrically
US4010477A (en) * 1976-01-29 1977-03-01 The Mead Corporation Head assembly for a jet drop recorder
US4085409A (en) * 1976-06-01 1978-04-18 The Mead Corporation Method and apparatus for ink jet printing
DE2749669A1 (en) * 1976-12-16 1978-06-22 Ibm INKJET MATRIX PRINTER
US4091390A (en) * 1976-12-20 1978-05-23 International Business Machines Corporation Arrangement for multi-orifice ink jet print head
US4059183A (en) * 1976-12-30 1977-11-22 International Business Machines Corporation Dot matrix printer with slanted print head and modular skewing of dot pattern information
US4322732A (en) * 1978-08-12 1982-03-30 Ricoh Co., Ltd. Ink jet recording method
US4290073A (en) * 1978-09-25 1981-09-15 Ricoh Co., Ltd. Ink-jet recording apparatus
US4303925A (en) * 1979-06-27 1981-12-01 International Business Machines Corporation Method and apparatus for controlling the position of printed ink droplets
US4472722A (en) * 1980-02-18 1984-09-18 Ricoh Company, Ltd. Ink jet printing method
USRE31271E (en) * 1980-04-22 1983-06-07 The Mead Corporation Ink jet printing apparatus
US4283731A (en) * 1980-04-22 1981-08-11 The Mead Corporation Ink jet printing apparatus
US4366490A (en) * 1980-09-11 1982-12-28 Exxon Research And Engineering Co. Method and apparatus for tuning ink jets
EP0051448A3 (en) * 1980-11-03 1983-08-17 Xerox Corporation Liquid drop printing apparatus and method
US4347521A (en) * 1980-11-03 1982-08-31 Xerox Corporation Tilted deflection electrode method and apparatus for liquid drop printing systems
EP0051448A2 (en) * 1980-11-03 1982-05-12 Xerox Corporation Liquid drop printing apparatus and method
US4596990A (en) * 1982-01-27 1986-06-24 Tmc Company Multi-jet single head ink jet printer
US5455614A (en) * 1991-09-06 1995-10-03 Linx Printing Technologies Limited Printing method and print head having angled ink jet
US6257690B1 (en) * 1998-10-31 2001-07-10 Hewlett-Packard Company Ink ejection element firing order to minimize horizontal banding and the jaggedness of vertical lines
EP3981601A1 (en) * 2020-10-09 2022-04-13 Dover Europe Sàrl Method for optimizing a printing speed of a cij printer, in particular for printing 2d or graphical codes and cij printer thereof
US11669700B2 (en) 2020-10-09 2023-06-06 Dover Europe Sàrl Method for optimizing a printing speed of a CIJ printer, in particular for printing 2D or graphical codes

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BE804778A (en) 1974-01-02
AU476257B2 (en) 1976-09-16
JPS5237937B2 (en) 1977-09-26
BR7307721D0 (en) 1974-09-05
ES419207A1 (en) 1976-03-16
AU6051073A (en) 1975-03-20
NL170468B (en) 1982-06-01
DE2347594C3 (en) 1979-05-23
CH557241A (en) 1974-12-31
IT992694B (en) 1975-09-30
DE2347594B2 (en) 1978-10-05
SE392535B (en) 1977-03-28
GB1432646A (en) 1976-04-22
NL170468C (en) 1982-11-01
FR2202472A5 (en) 1974-05-03
CA1001209A (en) 1976-12-07
NL7311909A (en) 1974-04-09
JPS49101467A (en) 1974-09-25
DE2347594A1 (en) 1974-04-11

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