US20190263146A1 - Printing apparatus - Google Patents

Printing apparatus Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20190263146A1
US20190263146A1 US16/345,376 US201716345376A US2019263146A1 US 20190263146 A1 US20190263146 A1 US 20190263146A1 US 201716345376 A US201716345376 A US 201716345376A US 2019263146 A1 US2019263146 A1 US 2019263146A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
station
printing
track
carrying
processing
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.)
Abandoned
Application number
US16/345,376
Other languages
English (en)
Inventor
John Lawton Sharp
Ian Philip Butler Ingham
Jeffrey Mark Woods
Simon John Edwards
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.)
Tonejet Ltd
Original Assignee
Tonejet Ltd
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
Application filed by Tonejet Ltd filed Critical Tonejet Ltd
Assigned to TONEJET LIMITED reassignment TONEJET LIMITED ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: EDWARDS, SIMON JOHN, INGHAM, IAN PHILIP BUTLER, WOODS, Jeffrey Mark, SHARP, JOHN LAWTON
Publication of US20190263146A1 publication Critical patent/US20190263146A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B41PRINTING; LINING MACHINES; TYPEWRITERS; STAMPS
    • B41FPRINTING MACHINES OR PRESSES
    • B41F17/00Printing apparatus or machines of special types or for particular purposes, not otherwise provided for
    • B41F17/002Supports of workpieces in machines for printing on hollow articles
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B41PRINTING; LINING MACHINES; TYPEWRITERS; STAMPS
    • B41FPRINTING MACHINES OR PRESSES
    • B41F17/00Printing apparatus or machines of special types or for particular purposes, not otherwise provided for
    • B41F17/08Printing apparatus or machines of special types or for particular purposes, not otherwise provided for for printing on filamentary or elongated articles, or on articles with cylindrical surfaces
    • B41F17/14Printing apparatus or machines of special types or for particular purposes, not otherwise provided for for printing on filamentary or elongated articles, or on articles with cylindrical surfaces on articles of finite length
    • B41F17/18Printing apparatus or machines of special types or for particular purposes, not otherwise provided for for printing on filamentary or elongated articles, or on articles with cylindrical surfaces on articles of finite length on curved surfaces of articles of varying cross-section, e.g. bottles, lamp glasses
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B41PRINTING; LINING MACHINES; TYPEWRITERS; STAMPS
    • B41FPRINTING MACHINES OR PRESSES
    • B41F17/00Printing apparatus or machines of special types or for particular purposes, not otherwise provided for
    • B41F17/08Printing apparatus or machines of special types or for particular purposes, not otherwise provided for for printing on filamentary or elongated articles, or on articles with cylindrical surfaces
    • B41F17/14Printing apparatus or machines of special types or for particular purposes, not otherwise provided for for printing on filamentary or elongated articles, or on articles with cylindrical surfaces on articles of finite length
    • B41F17/20Printing apparatus or machines of special types or for particular purposes, not otherwise provided for for printing on filamentary or elongated articles, or on articles with cylindrical surfaces on articles of finite length on articles of uniform cross-section, e.g. pencils, rulers, resistors
    • 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
    • B41J11/00Devices or arrangements  of selective printing mechanisms, e.g. ink-jet printers or thermal printers, for supporting or handling copy material in sheet or web form
    • B41J11/0015Devices or arrangements  of selective printing mechanisms, e.g. ink-jet printers or thermal printers, for supporting or handling copy material in sheet or web form for treating before, during or after printing or for uniform coating or laminating the copy material before or after printing
    • B41J11/002Curing or drying the ink on the copy materials, e.g. by heating or irradiating
    • 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
    • B41J3/00Typewriters or selective printing or marking mechanisms characterised by the purpose for which they are constructed
    • B41J3/407Typewriters or selective printing or marking mechanisms characterised by the purpose for which they are constructed for marking on special material
    • B41J3/4073Printing on three-dimensional objects not being in sheet or web form, e.g. spherical or cubic objects
    • 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
    • B41J3/00Typewriters or selective printing or marking mechanisms characterised by the purpose for which they are constructed
    • B41J3/407Typewriters or selective printing or marking mechanisms characterised by the purpose for which they are constructed for marking on special material
    • B41J3/4073Printing on three-dimensional objects not being in sheet or web form, e.g. spherical or cubic objects
    • B41J3/40733Printing on cylindrical or rotationally symmetrical objects, e. g. on bottles
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F16ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16DCOUPLINGS FOR TRANSMITTING ROTATION; CLUTCHES; BRAKES
    • F16D27/00Magnetically- or electrically- actuated clutches; Control or electric circuits therefor
    • F16D27/01Magnetically- or electrically- actuated clutches; Control or electric circuits therefor with permanent magnets

Definitions

  • the present disclosure relates to a printing apparatus in which objects are carried between processing stations including at least one printing station for printing an image onto the surface of an object.
  • a known problem in the field of high volume complex printing processes is how to arrange processing stations and carrying devices for the objects in such a way as to maximize the rate at which objects are printed (throughput) while minimizing the physical space required for the apparatus.
  • industrial printing processes typically involve performing different operations on a number of objects simultaneously.
  • the objects are carried through a succession of processing stations in a staggered progression, with each object undergoing a different process to the other objects at any one time.
  • Processes typically include the loading and unloading of objects, inspection, the application of one or more ink depositions, drying and the application of an over print varnish.
  • a known apparatus for carrying objects between printing stations is a mandrel wheel system (also known as a spindle disc).
  • mandrel wheel systems a plurality of mandrels are fixed at an equal spacing around a rotating or indexing wheel. The wheel indexes through a sequence of incremental rotations, during which objects are carried by mandrels from station to station. In each incremental rotation of the wheel, each mandrel is moved into the position previously occupied by a neighbouring mandrel. At any one time, an object at a given mandrel wheel is undergoing a process that was performed on an object at the neighbouring mandrel wheel during the previous step.
  • a problem with mandrel wheel systems is that the duration of each indexing step is limited by the slowest process in the sequence. Objects that are undergoing a relatively quick process must therefore be held inactive for some time while the slowest process is being completed. If, for example, the slowest process takes twice as long as a faster process, objects will be required to remain inactive at the faster processing station for twice the duration that the process takes to perform. This inactive time is a source of inefficiency in the printing process.
  • Mandrel wheel systems are also limited by the requirement that the minimum distance between neighbouring mandrels be at least as large as the length of the longest processing station. Hence the overall circumferential length is at least the length of the longest processing station multiplied by the number of processing stations. Where several processing stations have a smaller length than the longest station, it is necessary to provide redundant space between the smaller processing stations in order for the indexing to function. The additional size of the apparatus due to the redundant space is a further source of inefficiency in mandrel wheel printing systems.
  • a printing apparatus for printing onto objects, the apparatus comprising: a plurality of carrying devices for carrying objects to be printed on, the carrying devices each comprising a rotatable handling device configured to hold and rotate an object; a track defining a path along which each of the plurality of carrying devices can be moved; a plurality of processing stations comprising locations at which carrying devices are stationary or moving while the carried objects undergo a process, arranged along the track and comprising at least one printing station; and a controller configured to independently control the position and speed of each of the carrying devices with respect to each other along the track.
  • This invention therefore allows objects to be moved for example between processing stations while other objects remain stationary.
  • an apparatus in which a plurality of carrying devices can be moved around a track independently of each other is advantageous over known printing systems as it enables printing systems in which processes requiring object movement can occur simultaneously with processes requiring a stationary object, printing systems in which the distance between neighbouring processing stations is not limited by the footprint of the largest processing stations, and printing systems in which parallel printing operations allow a throughput to be achieved that is not limited by the throughput of the slowest processing station, thereby enabling the most optimally compact machine design.
  • the controller is configured to allow at least one of the plurality of carrying devices to be moved with a first speed, which may be zero speed, on the track while at least one other of the plurality of carrying devices is moved with a second speed on the track, wherein the second speed is not equal to the first speed.
  • a first speed which may be zero speed
  • the controller is configured to allow at least one of the plurality of carrying devices to be moved with a first speed, which may be zero speed, on the track while at least one other of the plurality of carrying devices is moved with a second speed on the track, wherein the second speed is not equal to the first speed.
  • the plurality of processing stations further comprises one or more of: at least one drying station, at least one loading station, and at least one unloading station.
  • the controller is configured to control the position and speed of each carrying device such that each carrying device is stationary or moved at a first speed while an object is printed on at the at least one printing station, and each carrying device is moved at a second speed through the at least one drying station, wherein the second speed is not equal to the first speed.
  • the controller is configured to allow one of the plurality of carrying devices to be stationary or move at a first speed at a printing station while another of the plurality of carrying devices is moved at a second speed through a drying station.
  • the handling device is arranged to rotate an object at at least one of the plurality of processing stations by coupling to a driving device at the at least one processing station such that torque is transmitted from the driving device to the handling device.
  • the printing apparatus comprises a rail or pad mounted adjacent to the track and wherein the handling device comprises a wheel configured to contact the rail or pad as it moves along the track, thereby causing the handling device to rotate as it is moved along the track.
  • the track forms a closed path on which the carrying devices can be moved.
  • At least one of the processing stations is repeated on the track, thereby allowing multiple objects at different positions on the track to undergo the same process simultaneously.
  • the controller is configured to move at least one carrying device such that it passes through, without processing, a first of a repeated processing station at which the carried object would normally be processed, and instead be processed at a second of the repeated processing station of the same type, thereby allowing the first processing station to be inoperative without interrupting operation of the apparatus.
  • the plurality of processing stations comprises at least two printing stations that are disposed parallel to each other but positioned to be offset along their axis of printing.
  • a method of using the printing apparatus of the first aspect comprising moving a first carrying device along the track at a first processing station while a second carrying device remains stationary at a second processing station, wherein both carrying devices are disposed on the same track. In this way it is possible for the first processing station to process multiple objects while the second processing station is processing a single object.
  • a method of printing on objects comprising: moving a first carrying device configured to carry a first object into the vicinity of a first processing station configured to perform a first process; moving the first carrying device into an idle position, while moving a second carrying device configured to carry a second object into the vicinity of the first processing station; moving the first carrying device to a second processing station configured to perform a second process, while at the same time moving the second carrying device to a third processing station configured to perform the second process.
  • the above steps provide a method of printing on objects that allows parallel processes to take place in series with individual processes on a closed track, thus allowing for an increased throughput over known methods.
  • the duration of the second process is greater than the duration of the first process.
  • the method comprises moving a third carrying device configured to carry a third object from the vicinity of the first processing station into the idle position, while the first and second carrying devices remain at the second and third processing stations respectively.
  • the first process comprises at least one of: loading, inspecting, unloading, cleaning, surface energy modifying, printing, coating, drying, curing or fixing an object carried by a carrying device, and, preferably, wherein the second and third processing stations are printing stations and the second process comprises printing a single colour onto the surface of the object.
  • the method comprises keeping the first and second carrying devices at the second and third processing stations while first and second objects held by the respective carrying devices are printed on.
  • the method comprises moving the first and second carrying devices together into fourth and fifth processing stations each configured to perform a printing operation with the same single colour as each other, wherein the colour is not the same as the colour printed in the second and third processing stations; and printing onto the first and second objects held by the first and second carrying devices.
  • the track is a closed track.
  • a printing apparatus comprising: a plurality of carrying devices for carrying objects to be printed on, the carrying devices each comprising a rotatable handling device configured to hold and rotate an object; a track defining a path along which each of the plurality of carrying devices can be moved; a controller configured to independently control the position and speed of each of the carrying devices with respect to the track; and a plurality of processing stations arranged along the track and comprising at least one printing station, wherein at least one of the processing stations is repeated on the track, the method comprising: moving at least one carrying device such that it passes through, without processing, a first of a repeated processing station at which the carried object would normally be processed, and instead be processed at a second of the repeated processing station of the same type, thereby allowing the first processing station to be inoperative without interrupting operation of the apparatus.
  • the apparatus and method of the present invention are applicable to a wide range of printing processes, including but not limited to conventional contact means (e.g. offset lithography and flexography), digital contact means (e.g. electrophotographic printing, digital offset printing and belt transfer printing) and digital non-contact means (e.g. inkjet printing, electrostatic inkjet printing and piezoelectric inkjet printing).
  • conventional contact means e.g. offset lithography and flexography
  • digital contact means e.g. electrophotographic printing, digital offset printing and belt transfer printing
  • digital non-contact means e.g. inkjet printing, electrostatic inkjet printing and piezoelectric inkjet printing.
  • Printing typically takes place at one or more printing stations that are arranged along the track.
  • the printing stations typically form a subset of a greater number of processing stations arranged along the track, which may also include loading/unloading stations, drying stations, curing stations and other treatment stations.
  • a first printing station may use offset printing to apply a first printed layer to the object, such as a white base layer, while subsequent printing stations may use digital printing, such as inkjet, to print a process colour image on the surface of the object.
  • a first printing station may use offset printing to apply a first printed layer to the object, such as a white base layer
  • subsequent printing stations may use digital printing, such as inkjet, to print a process colour image on the surface of the object.
  • the apparatus and method of the present invention are applicable to print processes using one or more of a variety of inks, including but not limited to water based inks, hydrocarbon solvent based inks and UV curable inks.
  • Colour printing may be performed according to a process colour model (e.g. CMYK and extended gamut models: Hexachrome, CMYKOGV, and CMYKRGB).
  • Spot colour inks may be used, including white, metallic inks, fluorescent inks, clear coatings and functional inks (e.g. magnetic).
  • the following disclosure also provides examples of specific indexing schemes using the apparatus of the present invention which provide an increased throughput and/or a reduced total size in comparison with equivalent systems using mandrel wheels.
  • the present disclosure describes printing processes with reference to printing on the body of necked or un-necked cylindrical monobloc containers, but the apparatus and method of the present invention is applicable to printing “direct to shape” on a wide range of objects including such as cans, bottles, tubes, pots, cups or other containers or caps (e.g. wine bottle screw caps).
  • Materials that the object is made of may include metal, coated metal, pre-printed material, plastic, paper, card.
  • the objects to be printed are preferably cylindrical but may be of other geometries.
  • FIG. 1 is a schematic block diagram of printing apparatus according to one embodiment of the invention.
  • FIG. 2 is a schematic block diagram of printing apparatus according to second embodiment of the invention.
  • FIG. 3 is a schematic block diagram of printing apparatus according to third embodiment of the invention.
  • FIGS. 4A-E illustrate an example of steps in a sequence performed during operation of the apparatus shown in FIG. 3 .
  • FIG. 5 is a schematic block diagram of printing apparatus according to a fourth embodiment of the invention.
  • FIGS. 6 a and 6 b are perspective views of a magnetic rotation coupling used to drive the rotation of object handling devices in some embodiments of the invention.
  • the present invention provides a printing apparatus and method of printing in which carrying devices are provided along a track and are independently moveable with respect to each other along the track.
  • carrying devices are provided along a track and are independently moveable with respect to each other along the track.
  • independently moveable carrying devices provides the possibility for far more flexible indexing schemes than are possible in known devices.
  • FIGS. 1 and 2 show examples of printing apparatuses 100 according to embodiments of the present invention.
  • the apparatus comprises a track 102 on which a plurality of carrying devices 104 (hereafter “carriages”) are disposed and along which the carriages 104 can move.
  • carrying devices 104 hereafter “carriages”
  • a plurality of processing stations 106 are arranged along the track 102 , and each of the plurality of carriages 104 is configured to carry a container 108 successively into the vicinities of each of the processing stations 106 .
  • the processing stations 106 comprise a loading station 106 A, an inspection station 106 B, four printing stations 106 C which each print a different colour separation (cyan, magenta, yellow and black), a drying station 106 D, a coating station 106 E and an unloading station 106 F.
  • a loading station 106 A an inspection station 106 B
  • four printing stations 106 C which each print a different colour separation (cyan, magenta, yellow and black)
  • a drying station 106 D a coating station 106 E
  • an unloading station 106 F unloading station
  • the processing stations 106 comprise a loading station 106 A, an inspection station 106 B, eight printing stations 106 C which each print a different colour separation (white, cyan, magenta, yellow, orange, green, violet and black), a drying station 106 D, a coating station 106 E and an unloading station 106 F.
  • Each processing station is configured to perform a process on one container 108 at a time, other than the drying station 106 D which may process up to five containers 108 simultaneously.
  • the series of processing stations 106 of FIGS. 1 and 2 are chosen to provide a printing apparatus in which objects 108 are loaded, inspected, printed upon using a four or eight separation printing process, dried, coated and unloaded.
  • the skilled person will understand, however, that the number, type and order of processing stations described with reference to this figure and the following figures can be varied within the scope of the present invention for use in other applications.
  • Examples of further types of processing stations that may be used within the scope of the present invention are cleaning (contact or non-contact), pre-coating, pre-treatment for modifying surface energy such as plasma or flame treatment, curing of a coating or print, and fixing of print.
  • the apparatuses of FIGS. 1 and 2 comprise a cleaning station (not shown) before the printing stations 106 C for removing dust or other dirt from objects before printing.
  • the cleaning station may be positioned before the inspection station 106 B, after the inspection station 106 B or may be combined with the inspection station 106 B.
  • the cleaning station may comprise an air-knife cleaner for removing dust particles from the surface of the object.
  • the apparatuses of FIGS. 1 and 2 comprise a print quality inspection station (not shown) positioned after the printing stations 106 C.
  • the print quality inspection station comprises one or more cameras arranged to inspect the quality of the print applied at the printing stations 106 C.
  • a control device 110 communicates with each of the carriages 104 , either directly or via the track 102 , in order to control the position and speed of each of the carriages 104 independently with respect to the track 102 .
  • Each carriage 104 is coupled to the track 102 firstly by means of a constraining force and secondly by means of a motive force.
  • the constraining force requires the carriage to move only along the path of the track 102 and allows the carriage 104 to be guided along the track with high precision.
  • carriage 104 comprises linear bearings that engage with the track. The engagement between the linear bearings 104 and the track 102 constrains the motion of the carriage 104 to one degree of freedom.
  • the motive force between the carriage 104 and the track 102 is provided by a magnetic linear motor system.
  • the carriages 104 comprise permanent magnet elements that couple electromagnetically to a system of electromagnets spaced around the track 102 .
  • a position sensing system measures the position of each carriage 104 on the track 102 and a control device 110 is used to control the position, speed and acceleration of each carriage 104 on the track 102 by controlling the magnetization of the electromagnets spaced along the track 102 .
  • the control device 110 will typically be programmed to move the carriages 104 between processing stations 106 according to a predetermined sequence, with the amount of time that each carriage 104 spends at each station 106 being determined in advance.
  • the motive coupling between the carriages 104 and the track 102 may not be via a magnetic linear motor system and may instead be via another system that allows each carriage to move independently with respect to the track 104 .
  • individually controllable rotational wheels are mounted on each carriage 104 and are in contact with the track 102 .
  • the carriages 104 are mechanically coupled to a track 102 using a clutch system that allows each carriage speed to be variably controlled.
  • the controller may communicate directly with the carriages 104 via a wireless interface or may communicate via active or passive transponders embedded in the track.
  • Suitable track systems for use in the present invention are Precision Track Systems from HepcoMotion and the iTRAK Intelligent Track System produced by Rockwell Automation.
  • the track 102 forms a closed path, which allows carriages 104 to make repeated loops of the path without a delay at the end of a cycle while the carriage 104 returns to its start position.
  • the track 102 is substantially disco-rectangular in shape, having two horizontal linear sections, 102 A and 102 B, that are vertically offset from each other.
  • a first end of the upper linear section 102 A is connected to a first end of the lower linear section 102 B by a semi-circular arc 102 C that lies in a substantially vertical plane.
  • a second end of the upper section 102 A is connected to a second end of the lower section 102 B by another such arc 102 D.
  • closed track 102 Other shapes of closed track 102 are possible and may be beneficial depending on the requirements of the processes being used (e.g. as a result of preferred orientations of operations of processing apparatuses).
  • the track may have vertical linear sections along which processing stations are arranged, and which are connected to each other at their top and bottom by semi-circular arc sections.
  • linear sections may not be parallel nor lie in the same plane.
  • the carriages 104 comprise handling devices which in this embodiment are rotating mandrels adapted to carry containers.
  • Each mandrel is mounted to its respective carriage 104 via bearings that allow the mandrel to rotate around its central axis, and thereby rotate an attached container about its central axis, which is coaxial with the mandrel.
  • the handling devices may be adapted to carry objects using a holding device such as internal or external retaining clips or neck holding chucks.
  • the holding devices may be adapted for holding other objects to be printed on.
  • Handling devices are capable of rotating about their axes when driven.
  • the drive for rotating a handling device may be achieved in a variety of ways, including a servo motor mounted on the carriage, powered and controlled via connections to the carriage via a power track, data track or wireless means.
  • the carriages 104 may be passive, whereby drive to the handling device is achieved by coupling rotational motion to the handling device from a drive device not located on the carriage.
  • the carriages 104 are passive requiring no external services in the form of electrical supply, control wiring, pneumatic or other connections to retain the object.
  • Coupling of rotational motion to the mandrels (or other handling devices) is provided at processing stations 106 where the process requires the object to be rotated.
  • the drive (the source of the rotational motion) may be an individual servo motor, a geared or belt drive from a common motor that serves a number of adjacent stations, a stator coil that generates a rotating magnetic field, etc.
  • the coupling may be provided by a mechanical or by a magnetic force, or a combination of these. This feature is discussed in more detail with reference to FIG. 6 .
  • the drying station 106 D may comprise an air pump or fan for forcing air over the surface of a printed object in order to evaporate liquid in the deposited ink and extracting evaporated vapour.
  • a pinning or curing station may be provided instead of or in addition to the drying station 106 D.
  • the pinning or curing station includes a means for providing one or more of infrared radiation, ultraviolet radiation and induction heating to the surface of a printed object.
  • the drying station 106 D may extend along a section of the track 102 wherein objects are controlled to move continuously through the drier, rather than indexed between discrete positions. Drying 106 D or pinning or curing stations may be placed between printing stations 106 C if the printing process requires that ink is dried, pinned or cured between the printing of different colour separations.
  • the coating station 106 E applies a layer of over print varnish (OPV) over the surface of the printed and dried object.
  • the varnish may be applied by means of a roller or a spray coater.
  • the OPV itself imparts beneficial properties to the printed object such as gloss, abrasion resistance, etc, and may be chosen for compatibility with the object surface material and inks.
  • the varnish may be thermally curing, UV curing, etc., and curing may be performed partially or completely as part of the apparatus or by a separate curing oven downstream of the apparatus.
  • a carriage 104 visits selected processing stations 106 sequentially.
  • the steps set out below describe an example of a series of processes that are undergone in relation to one carriage during a single loop of the track 102 in the embodiments shown in FIGS. 1 and 2 .
  • the carriage 104 After unloading a printed container at the end of a previous cycle, the carriage 104 is brought into the vicinity of a loading station 106 A and stopped while an unprinted container 108 is brought to the loading station 106 A by a conveyor (not shown).
  • the container 108 is presented in coaxial alignment with the mandrel of the carriage 104 and transferred onto the mandrel of the carriage 104 .
  • the carriage 104 carries the container to an inspection station 106 B comprising a defect inspection device.
  • the carriage 104 stops again at the inspection station 106 B where the container 108 is then rotated through at least one complete revolution of the mandrel.
  • the defect inspection device checks for any deformities or contaminants on the surface of the container 108 that could be detrimental to the printing process.
  • Rotation of the container 108 is achieved by a magnetic coupling between the rotating motion of a drive device located at the inspection station 106 B and the mandrel/handling device, which is engaged when the carriage 104 is stopped at the inspection station 106 B.
  • the inspection device may be an optical camera system, an electrically conducting bar with an electrical current detection system, or any other suitable surface inspection device.
  • the container 108 is ejected from the mandrel at the inspection station 106 B. Before moving on, the mandrel may be checked to ensure the object has been unloaded successfully, whereafter the empty mandrel continues through the apparatus in the normal way except that the processing steps at each process station are disabled for the empty mandrel.
  • the carriage 104 and the container 108 are moved to a first printing station 106 C.
  • the container 108 is rotated on the mandrel with a speed and number of revolutions appropriate to the printing process employed while the printing process takes place.
  • the printing process is not constrained to any one method, but may include any suitable printing process that is adapted for, or capable of, printing onto containers. These may be a conventional contact printing method such as offset lithography, flexography or rotary screen printing, or a digital method such as electrophotography or non-contact ink jet printing.
  • the container 108 is rotated over multiple complete revolutions while the carriage is at the printing station. During each revolution of the container 108 , as the printhead is ejecting ink in accordance with the image to be printed, the printhead is moved in a direction parallel to the axis of the container for a distance of one pixel spacing. This continues over the multiple revolutions of the container 108 , resulting in full image coverage on the container 108 surface from multiple interleaved passes of the container surface beneath the printhead. During other processes, a different number of revolutions may be required.
  • rotation of the container 108 at a printing station 106 C is performed by coupling the rotating motion or torque of a drive located at the printing station 106 C to the handling device when the carriage is at the printing station 106 C.
  • Registration of the print with the container 108 surface position is performed at a printing station 106 C by controlling the synchronisation of the printhead or print device in accordance with position signals obtained by a non-contact read-head 611 reading the angular position of a rotary incremental encoder ring 612 mounted on the handling device.
  • the encoder ring 612 has encoded thereon information that can be used to infer the angular position of the handling device and, hence, the angular position of a container 108 thereon.
  • a stationary read-head 611 is mounted separately at a fixed position with respect to the track 102 at a printing station 106 C, where the handling device is rotated by coupling to a drive device.
  • the read-head 611 is configured to read the angular position data encoded in the encoder ring 612 , when the carriage 104 is in a position on the track 102 whereby the encoder ring 602 aligns with the read head 611 , and provide information to the control device 110 .
  • Suitable encoder devices are the TONiCTM optical read-head and RESM rotary encoder ring manufactured by Renishaw plc.
  • the carriage 104 and container 108 are then moved to subsequent printing stations 106 C at which subsequent print operations are carried out sequentially on the container 108 .
  • the subsequent print operations may use the same or different print method to the initial print operation in order to add further process colour separations or spot colours.
  • the subsequent printing stations 106 C may act to increase the width of the print beyond the width of a single print station by having a second print station of the same colour ink as the first but displaced with respect to the first in a direction along the axis of printing (the axis of printing being defined here as the direction of the line of an array of ejectors or nozzles of a printhead or contact line with the container of a print roller, etc.)
  • the sequence of printing stations 106 C that operate on a container may comprise a variety of printing methods to achieve a desired effect. Control of the rotation and registration of the print to the container 108 surface are performed at each printing station 106 C in the same manner as in the first printing station 106 C.
  • the object may be rotated at a lower rotational velocity at the print quality inspection station than at the printing stations 106 C (for example, 3 rps compared with 5 rps) in order to account for a camera data acquisition speed that is lower than the print speed.
  • the carriage 104 and container 108 pass through a drying station 106 D.
  • the dryer 106 D may be implemented such that the carriages 104 carrying the printed containers 108 move continuously through the dryer 106 D rather than halting in one or more stations. Drying in this example is by airflow, but other examples may use heated air, infra-red radiation, induction heating of the container body, ultraviolet radiation, etc. Because the carriages 104 of the present invention are independently moveable, it is possible for one carriage 104 to pass continuously through a drying station 106 D while other carriages 104 are stopped at other processing stations 106 .
  • containers 108 are rotated as the carriages 104 move through the dryer by the rolling contact of a wheel mounted on each handling device with a rail mounted parallel with the track.
  • the wheel is turned by its rolling contact with the rail as the carriage moves along the track, thereby causing the container 108 to rotate.
  • a rail may be mounted at any position on the track at which it is desirable to rotate the container 108 as the carriage moves along the track.
  • a short rail or pad may also be usefully positioned prior to a station 106 at which a handling device is rotated by a driving device 610 , in order to provide some initial angular momentum in the direction of rotation to provide a faster synchronisation of the coupling at the station 106 .
  • the carriage 104 and printed container 108 are brought to a coating station 106 E where an over-print varnish (OPV) is applied.
  • the varnish is applied by a roller that transfers a controlled layer of OPV from an anilox roller to the container 108 surface.
  • the container 108 is rotated at least one complete revolution via the magnetic coupling in the same manner as at the inspection station.
  • the OPV is typically a thermally curable formulation, which, when dried and cured, gives the print a high degree of protection from handling and abrasion.
  • the carriage 104 and the container 108 are then moved to the unloading station 106 , at which the printed container 108 is removed from the mandrel.
  • the printed container is transferred onto a vacuum type belt (not shown) that conveys the printed and varnished containers 108 to a curing oven, which is separate to the apparatus for curing of the OPV.
  • the mandrel may be checked to ensure that the container has been properly unloaded, after which the empty carriage 104 returns to the loading station 106 to begin a subsequent cycle.
  • each container 108 visits each processing station 106 in sequence.
  • Each processing station 106 is also visited by each container 108 in the order that the containers 108 are added to the system. In order to maximise efficiency of the processes, each processing station 106 should be active for as great a proportion of the time as possible.
  • the above described apparatus and method are advantageous over the mandrel wheel device described in the background section.
  • the above device allows one container 108 to be moved continuously through a drying station while other containers are held at printing stations 106 . This provides greater flexibility in terms of possible simultaneous processes than in previously known devices.
  • the above apparatus and process also allow for a system in which the distance between neighbouring processing stations 106 is not limited by the footprint of the largest processing station 106 . This is possible because the distance between the individually controlled carriages 104 can be varied around the track.
  • FIG. 3 shows another embodiment of the present invention in which processing stations 106 that have a slower processing cycle (i.e. which require a longer time over which to perform a process on a container) are repeated along a path, while processing stations 106 with a faster processing cycle are not repeated.
  • a carriage 104 stops at every non-repeated processing station 106 , but passes through some repeated processing stations 106 without stopping. This provides a system in which more than one container 108 may undergo the same process simultaneously at repeated processing stations 106 , which allows slower processes to be performed in parallel on a track 102 .
  • By performing slower processes in parallel, while performing faster processes serially, the throughput of the print process is increased in comparison to printing apparatuses in which each container 108 visits every processing station 106 .
  • the printing apparatus of FIG. 3 comprises a loading station 106 A, an inspection station 106 B, eight printing stations 106 C, a drying station 106 D, a coating station 106 E and an unloading station 106 F provided along a track 102 .
  • the printing process performed by each printing station 6 C has a greater duration than the loading process, the inspection process, the coating process and the unloading process.
  • the drying process of a single container 108 may be slower than the printing process; but, because the drying station 106 D is able to process up to five containers 108 simultaneously, it has a greater throughput than each of the printing stations 106 C.
  • the eight printing stations 106 C comprise four pairs 112 of identical stations 106 C provided along the track 102 .
  • the first pair 112 C comprises a first cyan printing station 112 Ci and a second cyan printing station 112 Cii.
  • the second pair 112 M comprises a first magenta printing station 112 Mi and a second magenta printing station 112 Mii.
  • the third pair 112 Y comprises a first yellow printing station 112 Yi and a second yellow printing station 112 Yii.
  • the fourth pair 112 K comprises a first black printing station 112 Ki and a second black printing station 112 Kii. (The order C-M-Y-K of the process colours may be chosen differently to suit the printing process used).
  • each carriage 104 sequentially stops at the loading station 106 A, the inspection station 106 B, the coating station 106 E and the unloading station 106 E. Rather than stopping at each printing station 106 C, a given carriage 104 stops at only the first or second printing station 106 C of each pair 112 of printing stations. Consecutive carriages 104 stop at alternating printing stations 106 C, such that if a leading carriage 104 stops at the first printing station 106 C of each pair 112 , the following carriage 104 will stop at the second printing station 106 C of each pair 112 , and the next carriage 104 will again stop at the first printing station 106 C of each pair 112 , and so on.
  • the above arrangement of printing stations 106 C has a greater throughput than an equivalent apparatus in which each container 108 passes through every printing station 106 C of the apparatus.
  • Such a system is made possible by using a printing apparatus in which carriages 104 can be individually controlled.
  • the provision of individually controllable carriages 104 allows a first set of containers 108 to be sequentially carried through a series of faster stations (or carried into an idle waiting area), while other containers 108 are held stationary (with respect to the track) in a slower processing station 106 .
  • FIGS. 4A-E show the steps in which a plurality of carriages, A, B, C, D, E and F, carry a plurality of containers through the inspection station 6 B and printing stations of the printing apparatus of FIG. 3 .
  • the positions of carriages and containers shown in FIGS. 4A-E are shown in the sequence that they occur in a method according to an embodiment of the invention.
  • a first carriage, A is stationary at the inspection station 106 B where a first container that it is holding is inspected.
  • a second carriage, B is stationary at the loading station 106 A where it is loaded with a second container.
  • carriage A is moved into idle position 402 and stopped, while the second container held by carriage B is inspected at the inspection station 106 B. At this time, a third container is loaded onto a third carriage, C.
  • carriages A and B are moved together to the pair of cyan printing stations 112 C, with carriage A at the second cyan printing station 112 Cii and carriage B at the first cyan printing station 112 Ci.
  • the cyan printing stations 112 C begin printing on the first and second containers held by carriage A and carriage B respectively.
  • carriage C is moved to the inspection station 106 B, where the third container inspected, and a fourth container is loaded onto a fourth carriage, D, positioned at the loading station 106 A.
  • carriage C is moved into the idle position 402 , while carriage D is moved to the inspection station where the fourth container is inspected.
  • a fifth carriage E is moved to the loading station 106 A where it is loaded with a fifth container. Because the printing process at the printing stations 112 Ci and 112 Cii has a longer duration than the loading and inspection processes, carriages A and B remain at, and continue printing, in the cyan printing stations 112 Ci and 112 Cii respectively.
  • Figure E the cyan printing process has been completed and carriages A and B are moved together to the pair of magenta printing stations 112 M.
  • the inspection of the fourth container is completed, and carriages C and D are moved together to the cyan printing stations, 112 Ci and 112 Ci, with carriage C moving from the idle position 402 to the second cyan printing station 112 Cii and carriage D moving from the inspection station 106 B to the first cyan printing station 112 Ci without stopping in the idle position 402 .
  • carriage E is moved to the inspection station 106 B and a fifth carriage, F, is loaded with a fifth container at the loading station 106 A.
  • the total throughput of the apparatus is limited by the throughput of the slowest element.
  • the slowest process step is printing, having a stationary printing duration of 0.8 seconds and a time to index between printing stations of 0.2 seconds
  • the maximum throughput through the printing station, and therefore the entire apparatus is 1 container per second (60 containers per minute).
  • Table A shows a detailed example of a process sequence using the printing apparatus of FIG. 3 to perform slow processes in parallel. It can be seen that while the printing stations 106 have a stationary printing duration of 0.8 seconds and a time to index between printing stations of 0.4 seconds, the apparatus is capable of providing a throughput of 2 containers per 1.2 seconds, equivalent to 100 containers per minute.
  • pairs of objects to be printed could be loaded in parallel, inspected in series and then printed three at a time.
  • parallel processing can be made most efficient when the ratio of the durations of each operation most closely matches the ratio of the number of parallel stations provided for each operation.
  • a system as described above having independent control of the movement of objects and having replicated processing stations, provides redundancy that allows selected processing stations to be passed through without processing, during, for example, maintenance, servicing or replacement of a processing station, without interrupting operation of the apparatus.
  • FIG. 5 shows an apparatus in which the same set of eight printing stations 106 C used in the apparatus of FIG. 3 may be configured in an alternative way to increase the width of the print area rather than the throughput of the machine.
  • the first and second printheads are offset to each other in a direction parallel to the axes of the objects to be printed by a distance of less than or equal to the print width from a single printhead 106 C.
  • An object is indexed through all eight printing stations, receiving a colour print process. The resulting print on the object is up to twice the width of a single printhead 106 C.
  • FIGS. 6A and 6B show an example of a magnetic rotation coupling system 600 of a type that can be used at a processing station to drive the object handling devices 104 of the above described embodiments.
  • the coupling system comprises a driving device 610 (shown in FIG. 6A ) having a drive disc 601 that is rotated by a motor (not shown).
  • the driving device 610 is located at a processing station to drive a passive coupling disc 603 that forms part of the movable carrying device 104 .
  • the coupling comprises two non-magnetic discs, a drive disc 601 at the processing station and a driven disc 603 on the carriage 104 .
  • the two non-magnetic discs, 601 and 603 carry permanent magnets, 604 , inset into the facing surfaces of the discs, 601 and 603 , in complementary patterns.
  • the driven disc 603 angle self-aligns to the drive disc 601 angle thereby synchronising its rotation to the rotation of the drive disc 601 .
  • the handling devices are passive devices in which controlled rotation of the container is achieved via a coupling from a drive device located at a processing station where rotation of the object to be printed is required.
  • the absence of electrical connections in the carriages substantially reduces the difficulty of designing a suitable apparatus in which the carriages can independently move around a track.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Manufacturing & Machinery (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Ink Jet (AREA)
  • Dynamo-Electric Clutches, Dynamo-Electric Brakes (AREA)
  • Coating Apparatus (AREA)
  • Specific Conveyance Elements (AREA)
  • Printing Methods (AREA)
  • Dot-Matrix Printers And Others (AREA)
  • Gripping On Spindles (AREA)
  • Grinding Of Cylindrical And Plane Surfaces (AREA)
  • Constituent Portions Of Griding Lathes, Driving, Sensing And Control (AREA)
  • Transmission Devices (AREA)
  • Packages (AREA)
  • Transmission And Conversion Of Sensor Element Output (AREA)
  • Paper (AREA)
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging Apparatus (AREA)
  • Electrical Discharge Machining, Electrochemical Machining, And Combined Machining (AREA)
  • Mutual Connection Of Rods And Tubes (AREA)
  • Application Of Or Painting With Fluid Materials (AREA)
  • Screen Printers (AREA)
US16/345,376 2016-11-02 2017-11-02 Printing apparatus Abandoned US20190263146A1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (9)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
EP16196962.1 2016-11-02
EP16196961 2016-11-02
EP16196963 2016-11-02
EP16196962 2016-11-02
EP16196965.4 2016-11-02
EP16196963.9 2016-11-02
EP16196961.3 2016-11-02
EP16196965 2016-11-02
PCT/EP2017/078036 WO2018083164A1 (en) 2016-11-02 2017-11-02 Printing apparatus

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20190263146A1 true US20190263146A1 (en) 2019-08-29

Family

ID=60186314

Family Applications (4)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US16/346,214 Active 2038-08-02 US11305523B2 (en) 2016-11-02 2017-11-02 Holding device for holding a necked tubular object in a printing system and method of loading and unloading object
US16/345,435 Active 2038-10-25 US11358383B2 (en) 2016-11-02 2017-11-02 Passive object handling device
US16/345,376 Abandoned US20190263146A1 (en) 2016-11-02 2017-11-02 Printing apparatus
US16/346,199 Active 2039-01-02 US11298933B2 (en) 2016-11-02 2017-11-02 Printing system and method including magnetic coupling device

Family Applications Before (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US16/346,214 Active 2038-08-02 US11305523B2 (en) 2016-11-02 2017-11-02 Holding device for holding a necked tubular object in a printing system and method of loading and unloading object
US16/345,435 Active 2038-10-25 US11358383B2 (en) 2016-11-02 2017-11-02 Passive object handling device

Family Applications After (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US16/346,199 Active 2039-01-02 US11298933B2 (en) 2016-11-02 2017-11-02 Printing system and method including magnetic coupling device

Country Status (10)

Country Link
US (4) US11305523B2 (pt)
EP (5) EP3535128B1 (pt)
JP (4) JP6971310B2 (pt)
CN (4) CN109890616B (pt)
CA (4) CA3039352A1 (pt)
ES (4) ES2905308T3 (pt)
IL (4) IL265781B2 (pt)
PL (3) PL3535128T3 (pt)
PT (4) PT3535126T (pt)
WO (4) WO2018083167A1 (pt)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20190066288A1 (en) * 2017-08-25 2019-02-28 Baxter International Inc. Automated visual inspection for visible particulate matter in empty flexible containers
US11660878B2 (en) 2018-12-18 2023-05-30 Altemira Co., Ltd. Print system

Families Citing this family (15)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US10155375B2 (en) * 2016-12-16 2018-12-18 Stolle Machinery Company, Llc Mandrel for printing necked cans
CN110546007B (zh) 2017-04-24 2022-01-04 佛蒙特移印机械公司 独立印刷数据检测
JP7270805B2 (ja) * 2017-12-27 2023-05-10 アルテミラ株式会社 印刷装置
WO2020072061A1 (en) * 2018-10-04 2020-04-09 Vinventions Usa, Llc Mandrel and mounting device for receiving a hollow cylindrical object
US11241795B2 (en) * 2018-09-21 2022-02-08 Beijing Jingdong Shangke Information Technology Co., Ltd. Soft package, robot system for processing the same, and method thereof
JP7300261B2 (ja) * 2018-11-12 2023-06-29 アルテミラ株式会社 印刷システムおよび缶体の製造方法
JP2020152086A (ja) * 2019-03-22 2020-09-24 昭和アルミニウム缶株式会社 印刷システム
JP2022529593A (ja) * 2019-04-26 2022-06-23 トーンジェット リミテッド 円筒形物体であって、その上に装飾するための円筒形物体を製造するための装置及び方法
DE102019119500A1 (de) * 2019-07-18 2021-01-21 Leica Biosystems Nussloch Gmbh Drucker zum Bedrucken von Histologielabor-Verbrauchsartikeln
CN112746928B (zh) * 2019-10-30 2022-06-07 中国石油化工股份有限公司 轴间连接机构及其连接控制方法
JP7424045B2 (ja) * 2019-12-25 2024-01-30 ブラザー工業株式会社 搬送制御装置、搬送制御方法、及びコンピュータプログラム
WO2022269456A1 (en) * 2021-06-22 2022-12-29 Sacmi Imola S.C. Apparatus for printing closure bodies of containers
EP4173998A1 (en) 2021-10-29 2023-05-03 Tonejet Limited Device and apparatus for conveying objects
TWI796076B (zh) * 2022-01-04 2023-03-11 峻亦股份有限公司 隨選列印杯子的列印方法及系統
EP4289631A1 (de) * 2022-06-09 2023-12-13 Angelo Schiestl Druckanlage und verfahren zum bedrucken von druckgut

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4773326A (en) * 1986-12-04 1988-09-27 Adolph Coors Company Printing machine with mandrel wheel skip-print verification and response
US6164199A (en) * 1998-08-13 2000-12-26 Societe D'exploitation Des Machines Dubuit Printing machine with rotatably mounted object-carrier supports
US6769357B1 (en) * 2003-06-05 2004-08-03 Sequa Can Machinery, Inc. Digital can decorating apparatus
WO2012131478A2 (en) * 2011-03-31 2012-10-04 Martinenghi S.R.L. Device and method for printing cylindrical bodies
US20170050446A1 (en) * 2014-04-28 2017-02-23 Tonejet Limited Printing on Cylindrical Objects

Family Cites Families (54)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE1075903B (de) * 1958-02-04 1960-02-18 Siemens Ag Sicherheitskupplung mit Dauermagneten
CH408964A (de) * 1962-03-09 1966-03-15 Polytype Ag Zangen-Spanndorn zum Halten von Hohlkörpern
US3075800A (en) * 1962-03-29 1963-01-29 Lodge & Shipley Co Internally gripping article transferring apparatus
US4340249A (en) * 1980-09-12 1982-07-20 General Foods Corporation Jar stabilizer for pick-up assembly
JPS57100071A (en) 1980-12-16 1982-06-22 Nippon Glass Kk Multicolor printing device for receptacle
FR2528016B1 (fr) 1982-06-02 1987-02-13 Dubuit Mach Support porte-objet, notamment pour machine a imprimer
JPS6094355A (ja) 1983-10-28 1985-05-27 Tokan Kogyo Co Ltd 容器の印刷方法およびその装置
JPH0470163U (pt) * 1990-09-17 1992-06-22
DE4131327A1 (de) * 1991-09-20 1993-03-25 Alfill Getraenketechnik Vorrichtung zum halten von gefaessen
JP3463700B2 (ja) 1994-05-11 2003-11-05 株式会社安川電機 磁気カップリング装置
JPH09267466A (ja) * 1996-03-29 1997-10-14 Mitsubishi Materials Corp 缶印刷装置
JP3900398B2 (ja) * 1999-08-12 2007-04-04 大和製罐株式会社 缶胴の印刷デザイン位置合わせ方法および装置
JP2001074013A (ja) 1999-09-03 2001-03-23 Higashio Mech Co Ltd 樹脂パイプ用継手
CN2563354Y (zh) 2002-06-26 2003-07-30 西安理工大学 非接触式磁性耦合联轴器
DE202004019382U1 (de) 2004-12-15 2005-02-24 Isimat Gmbh Siebdruckmaschinen Spreizdorn
JP2006231459A (ja) 2005-02-24 2006-09-07 Yuyama Manufacturing Co Ltd バイアル瓶搬送装置およびそのアーム
CN2801474Y (zh) 2005-07-14 2006-08-02 刘洪滨 自动玻璃印花机
ATE380658T1 (de) 2005-11-03 2007-12-15 Ball Packaging Europ Holding G Spanndorn für den digitaldruck
AU2007200128B8 (en) * 2006-01-17 2013-02-07 Viavi Solutions Inc. Apparatus for orienting magnetic flakes
ITBS20060071A1 (it) * 2006-03-27 2007-09-28 Gimatic Spa Dito di presa spandibile
CN2929434Y (zh) 2006-05-16 2007-08-01 花仙子企业股份有限公司 改进的连接杆体结构
KR101153104B1 (ko) * 2007-08-03 2012-06-04 케이에이치에스 게엠베하 용기에 인쇄를 하기 위한 장치 및 방법
JP2009056789A (ja) * 2007-08-30 2009-03-19 Aun:Kk プリンター
EP2100734B1 (de) 2008-03-11 2012-08-22 Polytype S.A. Dornlagerzentrierung
JP4775424B2 (ja) * 2008-09-26 2011-09-21 東洋製罐株式会社 缶胴の加工方法
JP2012511429A (ja) 2008-12-09 2012-05-24 ノードソン コーポレーション 低静電容量の容器を塗装するシステム及び方法
DE102009033810A1 (de) * 2009-07-18 2011-01-27 Till, Volker, Dipl.-Ing. Anlage zum Bedrucken von Behältern
JP2012066441A (ja) * 2010-09-22 2012-04-05 Seiko Epson Corp インクジェット記録装置
DE102011007979A1 (de) * 2011-01-05 2012-07-05 Till Gmbh Maschine zum Bedrucken von Behältern
JP5775733B2 (ja) * 2011-04-25 2015-09-09 昭和アルミニウム缶株式会社 画像形成装置、および、画像が形成された缶体の製造方法
CN202260967U (zh) 2011-09-28 2012-05-30 兰州海兰德泵业有限公司 一种平面磁力传动耦合器
FR2985683B1 (fr) * 2012-01-16 2014-02-28 Jean Luc Perret Machine d'impression sur articles en trois dimensions et procede d'impression
AR092300A1 (es) * 2012-02-16 2015-04-15 Qwtip Llc Sistema y metodo de transmision y/o acoplamiento magnetico
JP6058331B2 (ja) 2012-09-19 2017-01-11 昭和アルミニウム缶株式会社 印刷用マンドレル
HUE054881T2 (hu) 2012-11-15 2021-10-28 Velox Puredigital Ltd Nyomtatási rendszer és eljárás
KR101308044B1 (ko) * 2013-02-18 2013-10-22 주식회사 월드자석카플링 자석식 커플링장치
CN203221723U (zh) 2013-02-28 2013-10-02 昆山市曙光照明器材有限公司 一种旋转烫金机
US9717191B2 (en) 2013-07-01 2017-08-01 Skydrop Holdings, Llc Compensating for municipal restrictions within irrigation protocols
EP2842747B1 (de) * 2013-09-02 2019-12-04 Teca-Print AG Rotationstampondruckmaschine und Verfahren zum Bedrucken einer im Wesentlichen Zylinderförmigen Aussenseite eines zu Bedruckenden Objekts
DE102013217659A1 (de) 2013-09-04 2015-03-05 Krones Ag Behälterbehandlungsmaschine zur Bedruckung von Behältern
CN203557814U (zh) 2013-09-24 2014-04-23 桐乡市河山工艺玻璃器皿厂 瓶体定位夹具
CN203727005U (zh) * 2014-02-24 2014-07-23 绍兴原色数码科技有限公司 滚筒式打印印花装置
CN103935115B (zh) 2014-03-24 2016-04-06 日照海大自动化科技有限公司 异形玻璃瓶双面商标胶印装置
JP2015229377A (ja) 2014-06-03 2015-12-21 日本精工株式会社 電動パワーステアリング装置およびこれを備える車両
WO2016014958A1 (en) 2014-07-24 2016-01-28 Jeter James M Digital printing system for cylindrical containers
CN104401114B (zh) 2014-09-28 2017-03-22 东莞美驰图实业有限公司 移印机
CN204249539U (zh) 2014-11-19 2015-04-08 浙江师范大学 一种可调直径瓶体印刷夹具
DE102015204215A1 (de) 2015-03-10 2016-09-15 Heidelberger Druckmaschinen Ag Druckmaschine mit Transportsystem
CN204961629U (zh) 2015-09-01 2016-01-13 钜嵩机电科技(上海)有限公司 一种减速机用液力耦合和通电式电磁离合双驱动系统
DE102016101256A1 (de) * 2016-01-25 2017-07-27 Khs Gmbh Greiferelement für Behälterträger, Behälterträger sowie Behältertransportstrecke
CN205631665U (zh) 2016-04-11 2016-10-12 盐城市美豪印务有限公司 一种小型丝印机印刷的高效运料装置
JP6877160B2 (ja) 2016-04-28 2021-05-26 昭和アルミニウム缶株式会社 印刷装置
CN105958791B (zh) 2016-06-28 2018-08-21 江苏大学 一种磁体径向移动式可调速磁力耦合器
JP7075212B2 (ja) * 2017-12-27 2022-05-25 昭和アルミニウム缶株式会社 印刷装置

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4773326A (en) * 1986-12-04 1988-09-27 Adolph Coors Company Printing machine with mandrel wheel skip-print verification and response
US6164199A (en) * 1998-08-13 2000-12-26 Societe D'exploitation Des Machines Dubuit Printing machine with rotatably mounted object-carrier supports
US6769357B1 (en) * 2003-06-05 2004-08-03 Sequa Can Machinery, Inc. Digital can decorating apparatus
WO2012131478A2 (en) * 2011-03-31 2012-10-04 Martinenghi S.R.L. Device and method for printing cylindrical bodies
US20170050446A1 (en) * 2014-04-28 2017-02-23 Tonejet Limited Printing on Cylindrical Objects

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20190066288A1 (en) * 2017-08-25 2019-02-28 Baxter International Inc. Automated visual inspection for visible particulate matter in empty flexible containers
US10922810B2 (en) * 2017-08-25 2021-02-16 Baxter International Inc. Automated visual inspection for visible particulate matter in empty flexible containers
US11660878B2 (en) 2018-12-18 2023-05-30 Altemira Co., Ltd. Print system

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP3535127A1 (en) 2019-09-11
JP2020513508A (ja) 2020-05-14
IL265780A (en) 2019-06-30
US20190248128A1 (en) 2019-08-15
JP7038114B2 (ja) 2022-03-17
ES2902716T3 (es) 2022-03-29
PL3535129T3 (pl) 2022-02-28
US20190291406A1 (en) 2019-09-26
IL265783A (en) 2019-06-30
CA3039351A1 (en) 2018-05-11
US11298933B2 (en) 2022-04-12
US11358383B2 (en) 2022-06-14
CN109890617A (zh) 2019-06-14
PT3535126T (pt) 2022-08-04
EP3535126B1 (en) 2022-07-06
EP3535127B1 (en) 2022-03-09
ES2905308T3 (es) 2022-04-07
WO2018083164A1 (en) 2018-05-11
EP3535126A1 (en) 2019-09-11
WO2018083162A1 (en) 2018-05-11
JP2020513341A (ja) 2020-05-14
CN109890617B (zh) 2021-09-21
WO2018083167A1 (en) 2018-05-11
PT3535128T (pt) 2022-01-05
CN109963717B (zh) 2021-03-09
WO2018083163A1 (en) 2018-05-11
US11305523B2 (en) 2022-04-19
IL265781A (en) 2019-06-30
CN109906151B (zh) 2021-07-02
CA3039354A1 (en) 2018-05-11
IL265784A (en) 2019-06-30
JP7190428B2 (ja) 2022-12-15
JP6971310B2 (ja) 2021-11-24
EP3922463A1 (en) 2021-12-15
JP7072565B2 (ja) 2022-05-20
ES2910090T3 (es) 2022-05-11
EP3535128B1 (en) 2021-12-08
IL265780B (en) 2022-10-01
IL265781B (en) 2022-12-01
IL265781B2 (en) 2023-04-01
JP2019535547A (ja) 2019-12-12
CN109890616B (zh) 2021-11-23
CA3039350A1 (en) 2018-05-11
IL265780B2 (en) 2023-02-01
CN109906151A (zh) 2019-06-18
EP3535129B1 (en) 2021-12-22
JP2019534176A (ja) 2019-11-28
ES2924435T3 (es) 2022-10-06
PL3535127T3 (pl) 2022-05-30
EP3535129A1 (en) 2019-09-11
PT3535127T (pt) 2022-03-30
CN109963717A (zh) 2019-07-02
PL3535128T3 (pl) 2022-02-14
PT3535129T (pt) 2022-01-24
US20190263110A1 (en) 2019-08-29
CN109890616A (zh) 2019-06-14
EP3535128A1 (en) 2019-09-11
CA3039352A1 (en) 2018-05-11

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
EP3535129B1 (en) Printing apparatus
CN103415396B (zh) 用于对容器进行印刷的旋转式系统和方法
US10828886B2 (en) Printing system and method
US20070269249A1 (en) Apparatus And Method For Decorating Objects
US20180264845A1 (en) Direct printing machine and method for printing containers using direct printing
JP7166312B2 (ja) 缶体製造システム
US9156281B2 (en) Inkjet printing machine
JP7231189B2 (ja) 回転テーブルデジタル印刷機及び印刷ユニット
CN103963485A (zh) 用于对容器进行印刷的装置及其方法
JP2011125861A (ja) プラスチック容器上にデジタル画像を印刷する方法と装置
WO2016014958A1 (en) Digital printing system for cylindrical containers
WO2013099817A1 (ja) 画像形成システム、画像形成装置、および缶体の製造方法
EP2691241A2 (en) Device and method for printing cylindrical bodies
US10343418B2 (en) Method and device for printing on hollow bodies
WO2019178597A1 (en) Printing system for printing on cylindrical objects
US9145004B2 (en) Inkjet printing machine with calibration bezel
JP2004230589A (ja) 板状記録媒体の印刷装置及びその印刷方法

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: TONEJET LIMITED, UNITED KINGDOM

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:SHARP, JOHN LAWTON;INGHAM, IAN PHILIP BUTLER;WOODS, JEFFREY MARK;AND OTHERS;SIGNING DATES FROM 20190410 TO 20190417;REEL/FRAME:049014/0297

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: APPLICATION DISPATCHED FROM PREEXAM, NOT YET DOCKETED

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: DOCKETED NEW CASE - READY FOR EXAMINATION

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: NON FINAL ACTION MAILED

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: RESPONSE TO NON-FINAL OFFICE ACTION ENTERED AND FORWARDED TO EXAMINER

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: FINAL REJECTION MAILED

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: DOCKETED NEW CASE - READY FOR EXAMINATION

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: NON FINAL ACTION MAILED

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: RESPONSE TO NON-FINAL OFFICE ACTION ENTERED AND FORWARDED TO EXAMINER

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: FINAL REJECTION MAILED

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: NON FINAL ACTION MAILED

STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION