GB2380473A - Feeding and scanning sheets of a differing size - Google Patents

Feeding and scanning sheets of a differing size Download PDF

Info

Publication number
GB2380473A
GB2380473A GB0228078A GB0228078A GB2380473A GB 2380473 A GB2380473 A GB 2380473A GB 0228078 A GB0228078 A GB 0228078A GB 0228078 A GB0228078 A GB 0228078A GB 2380473 A GB2380473 A GB 2380473A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
sheet
media
sized
scanner
over
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.)
Granted
Application number
GB0228078A
Other versions
GB2380473B (en
GB0228078D0 (en
Inventor
Stephen W Emmenegger
Gregory T Hulan
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
HP Inc
Original Assignee
Hewlett Packard Co
Priority date (The priority date 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 date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from US09/246,602 external-priority patent/US6542263B2/en
Application filed by Hewlett Packard Co filed Critical Hewlett Packard Co
Publication of GB0228078D0 publication Critical patent/GB0228078D0/en
Publication of GB2380473A publication Critical patent/GB2380473A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2380473B publication Critical patent/GB2380473B/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N1/00Scanning, transmission or reproduction of documents or the like, e.g. facsimile transmission; Details thereof
    • H04N1/04Scanning arrangements, i.e. arrangements for the displacement of active reading or reproducing elements relative to the original or reproducing medium, or vice versa
    • H04N1/0402Scanning different formats; Scanning with different densities of dots per unit length, e.g. different numbers of dots per inch (dpi); Conversion of scanning standards
    • H04N1/0405Different formats, e.g. A3 and A4
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N1/00Scanning, transmission or reproduction of documents or the like, e.g. facsimile transmission; Details thereof
    • H04N1/04Scanning arrangements, i.e. arrangements for the displacement of active reading or reproducing elements relative to the original or reproducing medium, or vice versa
    • H04N1/0402Scanning different formats; Scanning with different densities of dots per unit length, e.g. different numbers of dots per inch (dpi); Conversion of scanning standards
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N1/00Scanning, transmission or reproduction of documents or the like, e.g. facsimile transmission; Details thereof
    • H04N1/04Scanning arrangements, i.e. arrangements for the displacement of active reading or reproducing elements relative to the original or reproducing medium, or vice versa
    • H04N1/0402Scanning different formats; Scanning with different densities of dots per unit length, e.g. different numbers of dots per inch (dpi); Conversion of scanning standards
    • H04N1/042Details of the method used
    • H04N1/0455Details of the method used using a single set of scanning elements, e.g. the whole of and a part of an array respectively for different formats
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N1/00Scanning, transmission or reproduction of documents or the like, e.g. facsimile transmission; Details thereof
    • H04N1/04Scanning arrangements, i.e. arrangements for the displacement of active reading or reproducing elements relative to the original or reproducing medium, or vice versa
    • H04N1/12Scanning arrangements, i.e. arrangements for the displacement of active reading or reproducing elements relative to the original or reproducing medium, or vice versa using the sheet-feed movement or the medium-advance or the drum-rotation movement as the slow scanning component, e.g. arrangements for the main-scanning
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N2201/00Indexing scheme relating to scanning, transmission or reproduction of documents or the like, and to details thereof
    • H04N2201/04Scanning arrangements
    • H04N2201/0402Arrangements not specific to a particular one of the scanning methods covered by groups H04N1/04 - H04N1/207
    • H04N2201/0426Scanning an image in a series of contiguous zones
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N2201/00Indexing scheme relating to scanning, transmission or reproduction of documents or the like, and to details thereof
    • H04N2201/32Circuits or arrangements for control or supervision between transmitter and receiver or between image input and image output device, e.g. between a still-image camera and its memory or between a still-image camera and a printer device
    • H04N2201/3285Circuits or arrangements for control or supervision between transmitter and receiver or between image input and image output device, e.g. between a still-image camera and its memory or between a still-image camera and a printer device using picture signal storage, e.g. at transmitter
    • H04N2201/3287Storage of at least one complete document page or image frame

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Multimedia (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Facsimiles In General (AREA)

Abstract

An automatic document feeder or ADF (10) has a paper path that starts with an input tray (22), leads to an operational station such as a scanner (12), and then ends with a substantially vertical output tray (24). The ADF (10) has a mechanism for picking off an individual media sheet (32) from a stack of sheets in the input tray (22) and propelling the sheet (32) to the operational station (12) where a function is performed on the sheet (32). Thereafter the ADF (10) propels the sheet (32) partially into the output tray (24), and momentarily stops or reverses the direction of travel of the media sheet (32) before finally driving the entire sheet (32) into the output tray (24). This ensures that if the topmost sheet (34) in a stack in the output tray (24) which is being lifted up by the sheet (32) being driven into the output tray (24), the topmost sheet (34) will be fall back down to a rest position in the output tray (24) and will not spill out of the output tray (24). The combination ADF (10) and scanner (12) can be operated so that it will automatically detect whether a standard-sized sheet of media is being fed into the scanner (12) in landscape orientation or an over-sized sheet of media (32) is being fed into the scanner (12) in portrait orientation. In the case of the latter, first and second portions of the over-sized sheet (32) are successively registered over the transparent platen (20) of the scanner (12) and scanned. The over-sized sheet (32) is thereafter ejected from the scanner (12) into an output tray (24). The resulting digital images of the first and second portions of the over-sized sheet (32) are rotated, stitched together by a control circuit (27) preferably using software and/or firmware algorithms and the complete image of the over-sized sheet (32) is stored in a memory, faxed or printed.

Description

<Desc/Clms Page number 1>
METHOD OF SCANNING MEDIA SHEETS The present invention relates to automatic document feeding in scanners, which can be more versatile in terms of the size of sheets it can handle and which can ensure that outputted sheets do not fall out of a partial length output tray.
This is a divisional patent application divided from British Patent Application No.
0002078.4.
Over the past several years, combination printer, scanner and fax machines have become commercially successful. They can be attached to a personal computer and function as a traditional printer for printing high quality text and/or graphics on a suitable print medium, usuaiiy paper sheets. The printing may be reliably and economically accomplished utilizing black and/or color inkjet printer cartridges. These combination machines can also scan documents fed into the same so that text and/or graphics on the documents can be digitized and inputted into the personal computer for storage and/or further manipulation. Finally, these combination machines can scan documents fed into the same so that text and/or graphics on the documents can be sent via modem and telephone systems to other parties. In some cases these combination machines can function as low volume copiers by permitting text and/or graphics on a document fed into the machine to be scanned and then to immediately thereafter be printed on a clean sheet from an input paper tray. One example of a combination printer, scanner and fax machine with the foregoing capabilities is the OfficeJet (Trademark) desktop unit manufactured and sold by HEWLETT-PACKARD COMPANY, the assignee of the present application. See for example U. S. Patent No. 5, 833, 381 granted November 10,1998 and assigned to HEWLETT-PACKARD COMPANY. In this type of combination machine individual sheets are fed in a uni-directional manner from an input side of the device, through the device, to an output side of the device.
Recently flat bed scanners have become popular peripheral devices for use with personal computers. Typically a document is placed flat on a large horizontal glass or transparent plastic platen and a scanning head reciprocates beneath the transparent platen to generate a very high
<Desc/Clms Page number 2>
resolution digital imaee of text and/or graphics on the document for subsequent computer processing or faxing. In European Patent Application No. EP-A-0, 942,582, claiming priority from U. S. Patent Application Serial No. 09/041,844 filed March 12,1998 there is disclosed an automatic document feeder (''ADF" ; for sequentially loading and unloading single sheets over a flat bed scanner. A main chassis carries the active components of the ADF including paper pick and drive mechanisms for delivering sheets to and from a flat bed scanner, motors and
n I-sms, a document backno, assembly and an transmissions for driving the pick and drive mechanisms, a document backing assembly and an electronic controller. The main chassis also includes a substantially vertical document input tray.
A lower chassis ofthe ADF includes a low-height form factor, substantially vertical, i. e inclined, output tray, using paper stiffness caused by a predetermined bending of the outputted sheets to cause the sheets to be self-supporting. Documents are individually fed downwardly and forwardly from the input tray, in a landscape orientation, onto the transparent platen of the scanner, which scans each document moving in a direction transverse to the paper feed direction. After the completion of the scanning operation, each document is fed rearwardly and upwardly into the inclined output tray. An ink jet or laser printer can be provided beneath the flat bed scanner. The aforementioned ADF does not utilize a scroll-type sheet feed mechanism. It pushes each page
instead of relying on a belt-type advance mechanism I The aforementioned ADF is advantageously configured to be hingedly mounted to a flat bed scanner to provide a multi-function product that can scan, fax, copy and print. However, problems have arisen with regard to its sheet handling capabilities. More particularly, scanning is designed around an A/A4 scan zone in a landscape orientation only, thus preventing users from scanning and copying over-sized print media, such as legal and B-size sheets Furthermore, if over-sized sheets are fed into the output tray in portrait fashion, one or more of the sheets can end up being pushed out of the tray onto the desktop or floor.
<Desc/Clms Page number 3>
The present invention seeks to provide improved scanning of documents.
According to an aspect of the present invention there is provided a method of automatically scanning standard-sized sheets of media fed from an automatic document feeder in landscape orientation and over-sized sheets of media fed from the automatic document feeder in portrait orientation utilizing a scanner designed to scan standard-sized documents in landscape fashion by moving an optical scanning head in a direction transverse to a direction of travel of sheet media fed into the scanner by the automatic document feeder, comprising the steps of: picking a sheet of media from an input tray and propelling the sheet in a forward direction; determining whether the sheet is a standard-sized sheet in a landscape orientation or an over-sized sheet in a portrait orientation; if the sheet is determined to be a standard-sized sheet, fully advancing the standardsized sheet into the scanner and scanning the entire standard-sized sheet in a single pass of an optical scanning head, generating a first digital image of the text and/or graphics on the standard-sized media sheet and storing the first digital image in a memory; alternately, if the sheet is determined to be an over-sized sheet, advancing a first portion of the over-sized sheet into the scanner, scanning the first portion of the over-sized sheet in a single pass of the optical scanning head, generating a second digital image of the text and/or graphics on the first portion of the over-sized media sheet and storing the second digital image in the memory, and therafter, advancing a second remaining portion of the over-sized sheet into the scanner, scanning the second portion of the over-sized sheet in a single pass of the optical scanning head, generating a third digital image of the text and/or graphics on the second portion of the over-sized media sheet and storing the third digital image in the memory; rotating and stitching the second and third digital images together to generate a fourth digital image representing the entire text and/or graphics on the over-sized media sheet and storing the fourth image in the memory; propelling whichever sheet of media has been scanned out of the scanner and into an output tray of the automatic document feeder.
<Desc/Clms Page number 4>
The preferred embodiment can provide a combination ADF and flat bed
scanner designed to accommodate bOTh JA4 sized documents fed in landscape orientation and over-sized documents fed in portrait orientation. ia Preferably, the system uses a method of ejecting media sheets from an ADF in a manner that reduces the tendency for the sheets to fail out of its output tray Advantageously, the system uses a method of scanning over-sized media sheets fed by an ADF in portrait orientation to a scanner that normally scans standard-sized media sheets fed thereto in landscape orientation.
In one example, an automatic document feeder (ADF) has a paper path thai starts with an input tray, leads to an operational station such as a scanner, and then ends with a substantially vertical output tray. The ADF has a mechanism for picking off an individual media sheet from a stack of sheets in the input tray and propelling the
sheet to che operational station where a function is performed on the sheet. Thereafter the ADF propels the sheet pardally into the output tray, and momentarily stops or reverses the direction of travel of the media sheet before finally driving the entire sheet into, he output tray This ensures thai if the topmost sheet in a Stack in the output tray is lifted up by the sheet being driven into the output tray, the topmost sheet will fall back down to a reST position in the output tray and
will not spill out of the output tray.
I I In an embodiment, a combination ADF and scanner is operated so that it can automatically deiec : whether a standard-sized sheet of media is being fed inio the scanner in landscape orientation or an over-sized sheet of media is being fed into the scanner in portrait orientation. In the case of the laiter, first and second portions of the over-sized
<Desc/Clms Page number 5>
sheet are successively registered over the transparent platen of the scanner and scanned. The . nc over-sized sheet is thereafter ejected from the scanner into an output tray. The resulting digital images of the first and second portions of the over-sized sheet are rotated, stitched together by a control circuit using software and/or firmware algorithms and the complete image of the over- sized sheet is stored in a memory, faxed or printed.
An embodiment of the present invention is described below, by way of exampie
only, with reference [0 the accompanying drawings, in which : p is a perspecti I I Fig. l is a perspective view of an example oi aulomatic document feeder (ADF) utilized 10 prevent over-sized media sheets fed in portrait orientation from being accidentally driven out of the output tray of the ADF onto the desktop or floor.
Figs. 2A is a vertical sectional view of the ADF of Fig. I mounted on top of the upper I-1 1 portion of a flat bed document scanner and showing a legal-sized sheet of media resting in the output tray of the ADF in portrait orientation.
Fig. 2B is a view similar to Fig. 2A showing a legal-sized sheet of media partially ejected into the output tray of the ADF
Fig. 2C is a view similar to Figs 2A and 2B showing a legal-sized sheet of media partially 1.) 1,-a i i ejected into the output tray of the ADF with its leading edge pushing up against a legal-sized ID sheet of media already resting in the output tray Fig. 3 is a functional block diagram of a combination ADF and document scanner utilized to permit over-sized media sheets to be fed and scanned in portrait orientation.
Ll Referring to Fig. 1, an automatic document feeder (ADF) 10 is configured and adapted
<Desc/Clms Page number 6>
to sit on top of a flat bed scanner 12 (Fig. 2A) which is electrically connected to a persona computer (not illustrated) Except as noied hereafter, the construction and operation of the ADF 10 are similar to that disclosed in the aforementioned European Patent Application No. EP-A-0, 942, 582.
The ADF 10 (Fig. 1) includes a main chassis 14, an upper chassis 16, and a lower chassis 18. When assembled, the three chassis 14,16 and 18 form a sheet media path that extends fbrwardly from an input tray 22 to an operational station at which is located a horizontally extending clear glass or transparent plastic platen 20 (Fig. 2A) of the scanner 12. The media path then extends rearwardly from the transparent platen 20 to an output tray 24. The input tray 22 and the output tray 24 are both curved and are substantially vertically oriented, with a slight rearward inclination The input tray 22 and the output tray 24 are generally parallel with the output tray 24 being located behind the input Lray 22. The three chassis 14, 16 and 18 and the trays 22 and 24 are preferably injection molded plastic parts The ADF 10 normally receives standard-sized media sheets, such as eight and one-half inch by eleven inch sheets or A4-size sheets, in landscape orientation, i. e. with the longer dimension running left to right in Fig. 1, perpendicular to me feed direction. A stack of sheers is
- loaded-into the input'tray 22. The input tray 22 is concave-in both vertical and horizontal planes.
This double concave shape assists in both properly aligning the sheets of a multi-sheet document (not shown) and stiffening the document to facilitate sheet feeding without jamming. Sheets are j 1=11 individually picked off the stack in the input tray 22 and fed onto the transparent platen 20 of the flatbed scanner 12 After being scanning by a transverse motion of an optical scanning head (not illustrated) in the scanner 12, a sheet is then propelled rearwardly into the output tray 24. The sheets are normally stored in the output tray 24 until all of the sheets from the input tray 22 have
been scanned and either inputted into the personal computer or sent via facsimile at which time they are manually removed from the output tray by an operator The output tray 24 also preferably has a double concave shape. This allows a stack of sheets in the output tray 24, which extend above and beyond the Tray to be self-supporting.
<Desc/Clms Page number 7>
It will be understood that the scanner 12 is an operational station, in the broadest sense,
where a funcuor., in this case, optical scanning, is performed on a media sheet fed 10 the same.
Ll-UM I ic) i The ADF 10 feeds the media sheet to the operational station where a function is performed on I Ir- L The media sheet. It will be understood that the operational station could be a printer or some other device thai acts on the media sheet. The operational function is performed on a stationary sheet in the case of a scanner and on a moving sheet in the case of a printer.
The feeding of sheets by the ADF 10 (Fig. I) is accomplished sequentially and automatically with the aid of a pick mechanism and drive rollers described in detail in European Patent Application No. EP-A-0, 942, 582 referred to above. A pair of stepper motors such as 26a and
26b (Figs. 1 and 3) mounted on either side of the maitl chassis], independenely drive I I I I I ive corresponding rollers via transmissions also described in said application. The stepper motors are separately energized by a control circuit 27 (Fig. 3) in accordance with firmware and/or software implemented algorithms to move each sheet of media in the proper limed sequence from the input tray 22, over the transparent platen 20 of the scanner 12 and then back into the output tray 24.
The aforementioned combination of the ADF 10 and the flat bed scanner 12 has the advantage of allowing multiple scans of an original document which eliminates the need for the entire document to be scanned imo memory wiLh a single pass of the optical scanning head.
. ~. - ---..,.
As best seen in Fig. 1, the ADF 10 is also equipped with an input tray extender 28 and an output tray extender 30, which are connected to, and project vertically from, the uppermost edges of the input tray 22 and output tray 24, respectively. These extenders 28 and 30 facilitate the
handling of over-sized media sheets in portrait orientation, i. e. with their long dimension aligned I ~n I with the longitudinal direction of the media feeding.
I-r When a sheet 32 (Fig. 2B) of media is ejected from a scanning position on top of the transparent platen 20 its leading portion, which used to be its trailing portion, has to bend in a curved fashion in order to conform to the radius of curvature of the output pain. This causes its leading edge, which used to be its trailing edge, and its leading portion to press against those portions of the ADF 10 defining the ouipui path, if this is the first sheer ejected, or against the previously ejected sheet of media. As the leading edge moves higher and higher up the output
<Desc/Clms Page number 8>
path there is more and more surface contact with the previously ejecied sheet. Friction between the sheets builds up, especially if the output tray 24 already contains a stack of ejected sheets having more than an insubstantial thickness so that the output path has been significantly
narrowed. In addition, in some office environments, particularly those characterized by very low -iai- ITIO.,-l In SO. -ne wro=-. nis, pai-Li L T-1 humidity, a substantial charge of static electricity will build up between the sheet being ejected and the immediately previously ejected sheet of media. This appears to be ai least partially a result of the media sheets rubbing against glass and plastic When friction, enhanced by electro-static adhesion between the two overlapping sheets, exceeds the weight of a sheet, then the sheet 3d
(Fig. 2C) immediately behind the sheet 32 being ejected will sometimes En up. Since the output tray extender 30 only extends about three-quarters of the height (length) of an over-sized sheet of paper fed in portrait orientation, the sheet 34 can be pushed completely out of the output tray 24 and onto the desktop or floor. Sheets that are driven completely out of the output tray 24 can literally float away and come to rest underneath a piece of equipment on the desktop, or even onto the floor and underneath furniture. This type of unintended ejection is very undesirable since the operator may not observe this accident and will end up retrieving an incomplete multi-page document from the output tray 24 without knowing that it is incomplete. Even if the operator does observe the accident, it is tedious to retrieve the sheet that has been improperly ejected and
insert it back imo the muki-page document ; ai rhe correct location and in the correct orientation.
D In order to prevent this type of sheet media "oven10w" we have discovered that the eject motion can be interrupted in a fashion thai unsticks the adjacent sheets, and allows partially lined sheets in the output tray 24 to fall back down to their proper positions In order to achieve this, the main drive rollers 36 and 38 (Fig. I) are driven by the stepper motors 26a and 26b so that the media sheet 32 being ejected is only partially ejected from above the transparent platen 20 and into the output path, such as seventy percent, for example. The main drive rollers 36 and 38 are then driven in a reverse direction to retract the media sheet 32 a minute amount, for example one-
quarter of an inch Thereafter the main drive rollers 36 and 38 are once again reversed to drive the media sheet 32 ail of the way into the output tray 24. This technique prevents over-sized sheets that are fed mrough the ADF 10 in ponrair fashion from spilling out of the output tray 24 over the top end of the output tray extender 30. Clearly the speed, timing and extent of each media motion driving segment can be varied while still producing the same beneficial result. In
<Desc/Clms Page number 9>
aeneral the "subsequent" media sheet 32 is Dreferably fed ben-veen about one-half and three- quarters of its way into the output tray 24 before its feeding direction is momentarily reversed.
The subsequent media sheet 32 is preferably momentarily propelled back out of me tray in rapid fashion so that less than about one-tenth of the subsequent media sheet 32 is withdrawn from the
output tray 24. This ensures that the"previous"media sheet 34, ifk has been partially lined, will I ro I-hen the DreViOLIS fall back down to its rest position using the force of gravity and its inertia. When the previous JI back dow-i to : L media sheet 34 is in its rest position its lowermost edge is engaged with the lower end surface of the output tray 24.
1 The ADF 10 can feed standard-sized print media, e. g. standard letter or A4 sheets, in landscape fashion to the scanner 12 which is designed around an A/A4 scan zone. The scanning is done by moving the optical scan head laterally, i. e. transverse to the direction of travel of the sheets. The extenders 28 and 30 permit over-sized media sheets such as legal-size and B-size documents to be fed to the scanner 12 in portrait orientation. In such a case the media orientation is perpendicular to the scan zone and scan axis. By adding an additional sensor to the combination ADF 10 and scanner 12 and providing additional software/firmware, over-sized media sheets can be scanned in portrait orientation even though the scanner 12 normally only accommodates standard-sized media sheets fed in landscape orientation.
Fig. 3 is a functional block diagram of a combination ADF 10 and document scanner 12
that permits over-sized media sheets to be fed and scanned in portrait orientation. A pair of sensors 40 and 42 in the ADF 10 normally sense the top and bottom edges of standard-sized media sheet fed by the ADF 10 to the scanner 12 in landscape orientation. The control circuit 27, which is connected to the sensors 40 and 42, can independently operate the stepper motors 26a and 26b so that if necessary the media sheet can be de-skewed by the drive rollers 36 and 38. Where an over-sized sheet of media is picked off by the ADF 10 from the input tray 22 and fed
in portrait orientation a third portrait sensor 44 is interrogated by the control circuit 27. When rhe control circuit 27 determines that there is no sheet outside at least one portrait margin, the firmware or software feed algorithms utilized by the control circuit 27 are switched to a parai -node It mode. The sheet media is then fed to the drive rollers 36 and 38 where IT is de-skewed. Next a
<Desc/Clms Page number 10>
first portion of the sheet media is fed onto the transparent platen 20 of the scanner 12 for a predetermined duration to position the sheet to a system reference edge.
The control circuit 27 next causes the optical scanner head IO reciprocate in a left-to-right direction in Fig. 3, transverse to the direction of travel of the sheet media. The first portion of the sheet media is thus scanned and a digital image of its text and/or graphics is generated, rotated and stored in a memory pan of the control circuit 27. The sheet media is then advances so that a second portion thereofis located on the transparent platen 20 and scanned, and its digital image rotated and stored in the memory In order to permit the scanning of the second portion of the media sheet, the first portion must be advanced out of the scan zone This can be mechanically
1 1. 1 1 1-m facilitated by providing a ramp in the forward portion of a scanner housing (not illustrated) simiiar in configuration to a rear escape ramp During this process, the leading portion of the over-sized sheet extends through a bezel (not illustrated} in a forward side of the scanner housing. Ribs (nor. illustrated) can be provided in the main chassis 14 to prevent the advancing media sheet from snagging on the plastic parts. The output of one of the sensors 40, 42 or 44 is then used to detect the trailing edge of the media sheet. The control circuit 27 uses this information in order to stop the advancement of the media sheet at a predetermined time so that the second remaining portion
will be registered on the transparent platen 20 to allow the text and ! or graphics on the second Wli ~n portion to be scanned.
The two stored images are stitched together by the control circuit 27 using stored software an Jor firmware algorithms The resulting complete image is then stored in the persona ! I-)-I I ll I Icomputer, printed or faxed. The media sheet is then partially ejected rearwardly from the scanner 12 into the output tray 24, momentarily reversed, and then fully ejected into the output tray 24 I L to prevent a previously ejected sheet from being pushed up out of the tray 24 over the extender ei 30.
Whereas we have described preferred embodiments of our combination ADF and scanner I and improved methods of operating the same to prevent overspill and allow the scanning of over- sized media sheet in portrait orientation, it will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art that the device may be modified in both arrangement and derail. For example. when ejecting a sheet
<Desc/Clms Page number 11>
of media into the output tray, it may be difficult and/or complex to monentarily reverse the direction of travel of the sheet. Beneficial results are achieved when the ejection motion is momentarily stopped to allow a previous sheet that is being lifted to fall back down into the the output tray under the force of gravity. It will of course be understood that where the media sheet is partially ejected into the output tray and then its direction of travel is reversed, it will momentarily stop before moving in the reverse direction. Momentary reversal during ejection is thus a species of the invention which involves momentary stopping during ejection.
The invention also extends to a method of feeding a media sheet through an automatic document feeder having a feed path starting from an input tray and leading to an operational station and ending at an inclined output tray normally holding a stack of media sheets previously fed through the automatic document feeder, comprising the steps of: picking a subsequent sheet of media from the input tray and propelling the sheet to the operational station; performing a function on the media sheet at the operational station; propelling the subsequent media sheet in a first direction from the operational station until a portion of the sheet enters the output tray and engages a previous media sheet in a rest position in the output tray and begins to drive the previous media sheet upwardly out of the output tray; momentarily stopping the subsequent media sheet to allow the previous media sheet to fall back down to the rest position; and propelling the subsequent media sheet in the first direction to completely feed the subsequent media sheet into the output tray.
Preferably, after the motion of the subsequent media sheet has been momentarily stopped, the subsequent media sheet is momentarily propelled in a second direction opposite the first direction, before once again being propelled in the first direction to completely feed the subsequent media sheet into the output tray,
<Desc/Clms Page number 12>
Advantageously, wherein the subsequent media sheet is momentarily propelled in the second direction so that less than about one-tenth of the subsequent media sheet is withdrawn from the output tray.
Preferably, the subsequent media sheet is fed between about one-half and threequarters of its way into the output tray before its feeding direction is momentarily stopped.
Advantageously, the feed path leads in a forward direction from the input tray to the operational station and then in a rearward direction to the output tray.
Preferably, the operational station is an optical scanner and the subsequent sheet s momentarily stopped in the scanner to permit text and/or graphics on the subsequent sheet to be optically scanned.
The input and output trays may be substantially vertically inclined and substantially parallel. The output tray may extend only a portion of a height of the media sheet fed into the output tray. Preferably, the media sheets are propelled by drive rollers rotated by at least one stepper motor.
The invention also extends to a combination document feeder and scanner comprising: an automatic document feeder including at least one chassis providing a paper path that starts with an input tray, leads to an operational station and then ends with a substantially vertical output tray, and mechanisms for picking off an individual media sheet from a stack of sheets in the input tray and propelling the sheet to the operational station to perform a function on the sheet; an optical scanner including a transparent platen located at the operational station of the automatic document feeder; and a control circuit for causing the automatic document feeder to propel the sheet partially into the output tray, and then momentarily to stop the travel of the media sheet before finally driving the entire sheet into the output tray in order to ensure that a topmost sheet in a stack previously ejected into the output tray which is lifted up by a subsequent sheet being driven into the output tray and will fall back down to a rest position in the output tray and will not spill out of the output tray.

Claims (10)

1. A method of automatically scanning standard-sized sheets of media fed from an automatic document feeder in landscape orientation and over-sized sheets of media fed from the automatic document feeder in portrait orientation utilizing a scanner designed to scan standard-sized documents in landscape fashion by moving an optical scanning head in a direction transverse to a direction of travel of sheet media fed into the scanner by the automatic document feeder, comprising the steps of: picking a sheet of media from an input tray and propelling the sheet in a forward direction; determining whether the sheet is a standard-sized sheet in a landscape orientation or an over-sized sheet in a portrait orientation; if the sheet is determined to be a standard-sized sheet, fully advancing the standard-sized sheet into the scanner and scanning the entire standard-sized sheet in a single pass of an optical scanning head, generating a first digital image of the text and/or graphics on the standard-sized media sheet and storing the first digital image in a memory; alternately, if the sheet is determined to be an over-sized sheet, advancing a first portion of the over-sized sheet into the scanner, scanning the first portion of the oversized sheet in a single pass of the optical scanning head, generating a second digital image of the text and/or graphics on the first portion of the over-sized media sheet and storing the second digital image in the memory, and therafter, advancing a second remaining portion of the over-sized sheet into the scanner, scanning the second portion of the over-sized sheet in a single pass of the optical scanning head, generating a third digital image of the text and/or graphics on the second portion of the over-sized media sheet and storing the third digital image in the memory; rotating and stitching the second and third digital images together to generate a fourth digital image representing the entire text and/or graphics on the over-sized media sheet and storing the fourth image in the memory;
<Desc/Clms Page number 14>
propelling whichever sheet of media has been scanned out of the scanner and into an output tray of the automatic document feeder.
2. A method according to claim 1, wherein when the output tray is substantially vertical, the method includes the steps of partially propelling the media sheet into the output tray and then momentarily stopped, and then fully propelled into the output tray in order to prevent a previously ejected media sheet in the output tray from being pushed up out of the output tray by the sheet being ejected from the scanner.
3. A method according to claim 2, wherein the over-sized media sheet is fed between about one-half and three-quarters of its way into the output tray before its feeding direction is momentarily stopped.
4. A method according to claim 3, wherein the over-sized media sheet is momentarily reversed after it has been momentarily stopped so that less than about onetenth of the over-sized media sheet is withdrawn from the output tray.
5. A method according to any one of claims 1 to 4, wherein the sheet of media is deskewed before being fed into the scanner.
6. A method according to any one of claims 1 to 5, wherein the step of determining whether the sheet is a standard-sized sheet in a landscape orientation or an over-sized sheet in a portrait orientation is performed by sensing whether a sheet picked out of the input tray of the automatic document feeder extends outside a portrait margin.
7. A method according to any one of claims 1 to 6, wherein the output of a sensor in a media path is used to detect the trailing edge of the media sheet in order to register the second remaining portion of the media sheet on a transparent platen of the scanner in the appropriate position to allow the text and/or graphics on the second portion to be scanned.
<Desc/Clms Page number 15>
8. A method according to any one of claims 1 to 7, wherein the side edges of the media sheet are sensed by a pair of sensors in the paper path of the automatic document feeder and the sheet is de-skewed before being fed into the scanner.
9. A method according to any one of claims 1 to 8, wherein the sheets are propelled along a feed path that leads in a forward direction from the input tray to the scanner and then in a rearward direction to the output tray.
10. A method of automatically scanning standard-sized sheets of media fed from an automatic document feeder substantially as hereinbefore described and as illustrated in the accompanying drawings.
GB0228078A 1999-02-08 2000-01-28 Method of scanning media sheets Expired - Fee Related GB2380473B (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US09/246,602 US6542263B2 (en) 1999-02-08 1999-02-08 Automatic document feeder with improved sheet handling capabilities and method of feeding and scanning over-sized media sheets
GB0002078A GB2349146B (en) 1999-02-08 2000-01-28 Document feeder and method of feeding media sheets

Publications (3)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB0228078D0 GB0228078D0 (en) 2003-01-08
GB2380473A true GB2380473A (en) 2003-04-09
GB2380473B GB2380473B (en) 2003-06-18

Family

ID=26243513

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB0228078A Expired - Fee Related GB2380473B (en) 1999-02-08 2000-01-28 Method of scanning media sheets

Country Status (1)

Country Link
GB (1) GB2380473B (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2470445A (en) * 2009-05-19 2010-11-24 Sindoh Co Ltd Image forming apparatus for scanning documents larger than a flat glass.
GB2470446B (en) * 2009-05-19 2014-10-08 Sindoh Co Ltd A4-size scanner having function of scanning A3 document and scanning method thereof

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0591974A2 (en) * 1992-10-08 1994-04-13 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Image processing apparatus
US5608543A (en) * 1992-11-19 1997-03-04 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Joint-portion processing device for image data for use in an image processing apparatus

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0591974A2 (en) * 1992-10-08 1994-04-13 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Image processing apparatus
US5654807A (en) * 1992-10-08 1997-08-05 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Joint-portion processing device for image data in an image-forming apparatus
US5608543A (en) * 1992-11-19 1997-03-04 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Joint-portion processing device for image data for use in an image processing apparatus

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2470445A (en) * 2009-05-19 2010-11-24 Sindoh Co Ltd Image forming apparatus for scanning documents larger than a flat glass.
GB2470446B (en) * 2009-05-19 2014-10-08 Sindoh Co Ltd A4-size scanner having function of scanning A3 document and scanning method thereof

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB2380473B (en) 2003-06-18
GB0228078D0 (en) 2003-01-08

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US6542263B2 (en) Automatic document feeder with improved sheet handling capabilities and method of feeding and scanning over-sized media sheets
US7722026B2 (en) Sheet conveyer device and image forming apparatus with error judging system
EP0650842B1 (en) Single motor actuation for automatic stack feeder system in a hardcopy device
JP3684168B2 (en) Image forming apparatus
US7584950B2 (en) Image forming apparatus and sheet feeding cassette
JP4379366B2 (en) Medium edge detection apparatus and image recording apparatus
US20070030299A1 (en) Ink-Jet Recording Apparatus
JP5131319B2 (en) Image recording device
JP2007223735A (en) Image recording device
JP2010076913A (en) Automatic sheet conveyance device, automatic document reader, and image recording device equipped with the automatic document reader
JP4345700B2 (en) Image recording device
JPH0616344A (en) Automatic document transporting device
US5788227A (en) Beltless cut sheet media feeder and method for feeding and ejecting sheets to and from a scanner apparatus
EP0974540B1 (en) Multifunction terminal
GB2380473A (en) Feeding and scanning sheets of a differing size
JP2006272695A (en) Inkjet recording apparatus
JP3457179B2 (en) Image reading method and image reading apparatus
JP4779751B2 (en) Image recording device
JP4701785B2 (en) Image recording device
US20130155434A1 (en) Sorting a media stack using a scanning apparatus
JPS6293166A (en) Automatic original copy conveying device
JPH09233264A (en) Carrier sheet for read and image read processor using the same
JP3483361B2 (en) Ink jet recording device
JP4054665B2 (en) Recording device
JP3937146B2 (en) Recording medium supply control method and recording apparatus

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
732E Amendments to the register in respect of changes of name or changes affecting rights (sect. 32/1977)

Free format text: REGISTERED BETWEEN 20120329 AND 20120404

PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 20140128