US3895133A - Method of forming liquid reservoirs - Google Patents

Method of forming liquid reservoirs Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3895133A
US3895133A US352913A US35291373A US3895133A US 3895133 A US3895133 A US 3895133A US 352913 A US352913 A US 352913A US 35291373 A US35291373 A US 35291373A US 3895133 A US3895133 A US 3895133A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
liquid
foam material
ink
foam
saturating
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US352913A
Inventor
David H Fleisig
James D Anderson
Rune E Goop
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.)
Fibreboard Corp
Original Assignee
Fibreboard Corp
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 Fibreboard Corp filed Critical Fibreboard Corp
Priority to US352913A priority Critical patent/US3895133A/en
Priority to BE153736A priority patent/BE825979A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3895133A publication Critical patent/US3895133A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B43WRITING OR DRAWING IMPLEMENTS; BUREAU ACCESSORIES
    • B43KIMPLEMENTS FOR WRITING OR DRAWING
    • B43K8/00Pens with writing-points other than nibs or balls
    • B43K8/02Pens with writing-points other than nibs or balls with writing-points comprising fibres, felt, or similar porous or capillary material
    • B43K8/03Ink reservoirs; Ink cartridges
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08JWORKING-UP; GENERAL PROCESSES OF COMPOUNDING; AFTER-TREATMENT NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES C08B, C08C, C08F, C08G or C08H
    • C08J9/00Working-up of macromolecular substances to porous or cellular articles or materials; After-treatment thereof
    • C08J9/36After-treatment
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08JWORKING-UP; GENERAL PROCESSES OF COMPOUNDING; AFTER-TREATMENT NOT COVERED BY SUBCLASSES C08B, C08C, C08F, C08G or C08H
    • C08J9/00Working-up of macromolecular substances to porous or cellular articles or materials; After-treatment thereof
    • C08J9/36After-treatment
    • C08J9/40Impregnation
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T83/00Cutting
    • Y10T83/04Processes
    • Y10T83/0405With preparatory or simultaneous ancillary treatment of work
    • Y10T83/0443By fluid application

Definitions

  • the typical price marker uses a roll of paper tape with adhesive on one side, a set of indicia wheels and an ink reservoir, conventionally in the form of a roller. In operation, the indicia wheels are set for the proper marking, usually the item price. Upon triggering the marker, these indicia pass over the roller to pick up a film of ink and then print it on the paper tape which is then ejected, cut off and pressed into adherence with the article to be marked.
  • rollers The primary problem with these markers is in the ink reservoirs, or rollers. These rollers must be accurately dimensioned so that good contact is made with the indicia, should contain sufficient ink for several thousand impressions before replacement is required, but most hold the ink so that it will pass to the surface in quantities suitable for inking the indicia but not in quantities which will exude from the roller. Further, such rollers must not deform during continued use, and since replacement is required, must be reasonable in price. Rollers available on the market at the time of this invention were deficient in one or more of these criteria, while such rollers or other liquid reservoirs made by the methods described herein overcome these deficiencies.
  • a second prior art method involves foaming and curing an open cell resin in molds approximately the size of the required roller or reservoir, removing the roller from the mold, milling the roller to the prescribed size and then saturating it with ink. As can be seen, this method is slow and laborious. A further problem arises in that saturation of such foams with liquids may cause expansion of the foam, and thus the rollers must be originally milled undersize to compensate for this expansion, creating problems in accuracy of the final dimensions of the rollers.
  • the invention comprises selection of a suitable open-celled foam material, saturating pieces of the foam with a liquid and, thereafter, cutting individual liquid reservoirs from the foam.
  • the liquid may be a combination of a volatile solvent with a relatively non-volatile liquid and, after saturation, suitable means may be used to remove the volatile solvent leaving a reservoir containing a controlled amount of the relatively non-volatile liquid.
  • ink rollers for use in price markers, postage meters, computer printout devices and the like.
  • These rollers are normally cylindrical in shape with a hollow passageway through the center.
  • the rollers are rotatably mounted within the marking device upon a shaft so that marking indicia may contact the outer surface of the roller to pick up a film of ink which is thereafter deposited on a paper tape which, in turn, is ejected from the device and attached to the article to be marked.
  • rollers must be accurately dimensioned. If rollers are too large or too small the marking indicia will pick up either too much or too little ink, resulting in blurred or indistinct printing.
  • the foam used to form the rollers must be opencelled; that is, it must be such that passages exist throughout the foam so that the ink may flow to the roller surface from the interior, from cell to cell. Further, the cell size must be large enough to permit uninter rupted flow yet small enough so that the ink will be retained without exudation. In practice, it has been discovered that a wide range of cell sizes may be used, depending in part on the viscosity of the ink involved and whether or not the ink is pigmented. With pigmented inks, the cell size must be large enough so that individual pigment particles will not plug the cells and block passage of ink. For highly viscous or pigmented inks, cell size may be as large as 0.4 mm. in diameter, or about 4,000 cells per square inch of surface area of the roller. For relatively thin, unpigmented inks, cell sizes may be as small as 0.09 mm. in diameter, or about 80,000 cells per square inch.
  • a preferred foam for use in forming ink rollers by this method is a compressed, open-celled polyurethane foam manufactured by Scott Paper Company and sold under the tradename SCOTT FELT.
  • This material has a density in the range 30 to 40 pounds per cubic foot, a hardness of about 30 when measured on the Shore B Durometer, and has about 8,100 cells per square inch of surface area.
  • the material is normally available in large sheets of 52 inches by 72 inches and of varying thicknesses.
  • the preferred inks for use in this method are those based on high f iling oils, plasticizers, high boiling glycols, glycol offers or similar materials, although more conventional inks may be used if they are suitable for the end use desired.
  • the foam must first be saturated with the liquid involved.
  • a preferred way to saturate the foam is by exposing the foam to the liquidin a vacuum.
  • a quantity of ink substantially in excess of that required to saturate the foam is placed in a vacuum chamber.
  • a sheet of Scott Felt is placed within the chamber in contact with the ink.
  • the chamber is then closed and a vacuum of about 28 inches of mercury is applied.
  • the vacuum is released and the foam, now saturated with ink is removed from the chamber.
  • this material will have absorbed an amount of ink equal to about 300% of its original weight.
  • the foam may expand substantially. Although such expansion is not uniform from sheet to sheet of foam, it may amount to as much as a increase in volume. It is believed that saturation with certain liquid relieves stresses originally created when the foam is formed to cause this expansion.
  • the saturated sheets are ready to be cut into individual ink rollers.
  • Cutting of the rollers may be accomplished by any suitable means but the preferred method is by use of conventional cylindrical cutters, well known in the art.
  • Such cutters comprise an inner cylindrical knife blade and an exterior cylindrical knife blade.
  • the interior blade forms the passageway through the interior of the roller while the exterior blade forms the outer surface of the roller.
  • the cutter is mounted in a drill press or the like with the saturated sheet of foam beneath it. The cutter is then set into rotation and lowered to and through the foam, cutting out the precisely dimensioned cylindrical roller which is then ready for use in a suitable marking device.
  • a roller fully saturated with ink is overloaded and it is preferred to have a smaller, controlled amount of ink prescut therein.
  • the ink is mixed with a calculated amount of volatile solvent.
  • the volatile solvent may be removed by any suitable means. If a highly volatile solvent is used, removal may be accomplished by exposure to the air and consequent evaporation. In instances where less volatile solvents are used, a heat source may be required.
  • a mixture is made of 70% ink and 30% volatile solvent, the foam is saturated with this mixture and the solvent is then removed as noted above. Rollers formed from this foam will contain the requisite amount of ink.
  • the solvent may be removed either before or after cutting of the individual rollers, as desired.
  • this method may be applied to form accurately dimensioned liquid reservoirs of other shapes than cylindrical rollers and for other liquids than ink. Virtually any desired shape is possible.
  • Other liquids which might be used are lubricants, perfumes, unguents and the like. In each instance the reservoir will deliver thousands of impressions of the liquid on a contacting surface without substantial change in the volume of the reservoir.
  • a method for making an accurately dimensioned liquid reservoir comprising the steps of selecting a piece of open celled, porous foam mate rial having from about 4,000 to about 80,000 cells per square inch of surface area thereof, saturating said foam material with a liquid so that substantially all of the open cells thereof are filled with liquid, cutting from said saturated foam material a cylindrical liquid reservoir of predetermined size and shape, said liquid providing lubrication during said cutting to inhibit tearing and fusing of the foam material, thereby forming an accurately dimensioned liquid reservoir having within itself a self-contained supply of liquid and suitable for depositing thin films of said liquid on surfaces brought into contact therewith. 2.
  • the method of claim 1 further comprising the steps of prior to saturating said foam material, selecting, as a liquid for saturating, a relatively non-volatile liquid, mixing said relatively non-volatile liquid with a predetermined amount of a volatile solvent so that in said saturating step the foam material is saturated with a mixture of relatively non-volatile liquid and volatile solvent, and subsequent to the saturating step, removing the volatile solvent so that the liquid reservoir formed contains a predetermined amount of relatively nonvolatile liquid.
  • g 3 The method of claim 1 wherein said foam material is saturated with ink.
  • porous foam material is a compressed polyurethane foam.
  • cutting step comprises cutting from said saturated foam material a cylindrical ink roller having a longitudinal passage therethrough and suitable for mounting and use in an ink marking device.

Landscapes

  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • Medicinal Chemistry (AREA)
  • Polymers & Plastics (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Impression-Transfer Materials And Handling Thereof (AREA)

Abstract

A precisely dimensioned liquid reservoir is formed by selecting an open-celled, porous form material, saturating the foam with a suitable liquid and thereafter cutting or shaping the foam into the particular form required.

Description

United States Patent Fleisig et al.
METHOD OF FORMING LIQUID RESERVOIRS Inventors: David H. Fleisig, Walnut Creek; James D. Anderson, Kensington; Rune E. Goop, Moraga, all of Calif.
Fibreboard Corporation, San Francisco, Calif.
Filed: Apr. 20, 1973 Appl. No.: 352,913
Assignee:
US. Cl. 427/244; 83/22; 427/289;
401/196; 141/205 Int. Cl B44d 1/06 Field of Search 117/4, 98, 119, 138.8 D;
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 5/1966 McDonough 101/327 [451 July 15, 1975 FOREIGN PATENTS OR APPLICATIONS 46-6603 2/1971 Japan 117/119 1,803,730 5/1969 Germany 117/119 Primary Examiner-Daniel J. Fritsch Attorney, Agent, or FirmRobert A. Beck [5 7 ABSTRACT A precisely dimensioned liquid reservoir is formed by selecting an open-celled, porous form material, saturating the foam with a suitable liquid and thereafter cutting or shaping the foam into the particular form required.
5 Claims, No Drawings METHOD OF FORMING LIQUID RESERVOIRS BACKGROUND The advent of individual item price marking in supermarkets has created a need for devices to mark such items quickly and economically. This need has been filled by the development of price markers which are now marketed by several companies. The typical price marker uses a roll of paper tape with adhesive on one side, a set of indicia wheels and an ink reservoir, conventionally in the form of a roller. In operation, the indicia wheels are set for the proper marking, usually the item price. Upon triggering the marker, these indicia pass over the roller to pick up a film of ink and then print it on the paper tape which is then ejected, cut off and pressed into adherence with the article to be marked.
The primary problem with these markers is in the ink reservoirs, or rollers. These rollers must be accurately dimensioned so that good contact is made with the indicia, should contain sufficient ink for several thousand impressions before replacement is required, but most hold the ink so that it will pass to the surface in quantities suitable for inking the indicia but not in quantities which will exude from the roller. Further, such rollers must not deform during continued use, and since replacement is required, must be reasonable in price. Rollers available on the market at the time of this invention were deficient in one or more of these criteria, while such rollers or other liquid reservoirs made by the methods described herein overcome these deficiencies.
PRIOR ART A typical prior art method applicable to forming ink reservoirs of this type is disclosed in US. Pat. No. 2,777,824 in which such reservoirs may be formed by foaming a resin in a mold with ink or marking fluid added thereto prior to foaming and incorporated into the reservoir during the formation process. This process requires individual molds to form the reservoirs and since the resin must be foamed and cured in the mold, a large number of molds are required to mass produce such reservoirs. Further, it has been found that when this type of reservoir is in the form of an ink roller, it shrinks as the ink within it is used. Thus, as the ink supply is used up, contact between the marking indicia and the roller is gradually lost, the marks become indistinct and the roller must be replaced.
A second prior art method involves foaming and curing an open cell resin in molds approximately the size of the required roller or reservoir, removing the roller from the mold, milling the roller to the prescribed size and then saturating it with ink. As can be seen, this method is slow and laborious. A further problem arises in that saturation of such foams with liquids may cause expansion of the foam, and thus the rollers must be originally milled undersize to compensate for this expansion, creating problems in accuracy of the final dimensions of the rollers.
In addition, efforts to cut individual rollers or other shapes of reservoirs from dry foam and thereafter saturate such rollers with ink or the like have failed for several reasons. First, such dry foams are extremely difficult to cut by conventional means since friction with the cutting blades tends to rip and tear the foam apart. Further, in those instances where the cutting is successfully completed, heat created by thecutting friction fuses many of the cell openings and destroys the ability of the foam to permit migration of the ink or other liquid therethrough. Another serious problem arises with respect to those few rollers which can be successfully formed from the dry foam. When such rollers are saturated they may expand in volume up to as much as 20%, and this expansion is not always uniform. Thus, formation of accurately dimensioned saturated rollers by this method is virtually impossible.
It is therefore an object of the invention to provide a method for forming an accurately dimensioned reservoir made of opencelled foam containing a substantial amount of liquid which may be removed from the reservoir in thin films on objects brought into contact with the reservoir, and which will remain dimensionally stable during removal of the liquid.
It is a further object to provide a method for forming an ink roller for use in printing or marking devices or the like, said roller formed by saturating an open-celled piece of foam with ink and thereafter cutting rollers out of the saturated foam, such rollers being accurately dimensioned and capable of giving thousands of printing impressions throughout the course of which the roller remains dimensionally stable.
It is a further object to provide a method for accurately controlling the amount of ink or other liquid in such open-celled reservoir or roller.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION In its broadest aspect, the invention comprises selection of a suitable open-celled foam material, saturating pieces of the foam with a liquid and, thereafter, cutting individual liquid reservoirs from the foam. In one adaptation, the liquid may be a combination of a volatile solvent with a relatively non-volatile liquid and, after saturation, suitable means may be used to remove the volatile solvent leaving a reservoir containing a controlled amount of the relatively non-volatile liquid.
PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS Although it may be used to make numerous types of liquid reservoirs, this invention is particularly suited to the manufacture of ink rollers for use in price markers, postage meters, computer printout devices and the like. These rollers are normally cylindrical in shape with a hollow passageway through the center. In use, the rollers are rotatably mounted within the marking device upon a shaft so that marking indicia may contact the outer surface of the roller to pick up a film of ink which is thereafter deposited on a paper tape which, in turn, is ejected from the device and attached to the article to be marked.
As hereinbefore noted, these rollers must be accurately dimensioned. If rollers are too large or too small the marking indicia will pick up either too much or too little ink, resulting in blurred or indistinct printing.
The foam used to form the rollers must be opencelled; that is, it must be such that passages exist throughout the foam so that the ink may flow to the roller surface from the interior, from cell to cell. Further, the cell size must be large enough to permit uninter rupted flow yet small enough so that the ink will be retained without exudation. In practice, it has been discovered that a wide range of cell sizes may be used, depending in part on the viscosity of the ink involved and whether or not the ink is pigmented. With pigmented inks, the cell size must be large enough so that individual pigment particles will not plug the cells and block passage of ink. For highly viscous or pigmented inks, cell size may be as large as 0.4 mm. in diameter, or about 4,000 cells per square inch of surface area of the roller. For relatively thin, unpigmented inks, cell sizes may be as small as 0.09 mm. in diameter, or about 80,000 cells per square inch.
A preferred foam for use in forming ink rollers by this method is a compressed, open-celled polyurethane foam manufactured by Scott Paper Company and sold under the tradename SCOTT FELT. This material has a density in the range 30 to 40 pounds per cubic foot, a hardness of about 30 when measured on the Shore B Durometer, and has about 8,100 cells per square inch of surface area. The material is normally available in large sheets of 52 inches by 72 inches and of varying thicknesses.
The preferred inks for use in this method are those based on high f iling oils, plasticizers, high boiling glycols, glycol offers or similar materials, although more conventional inks may be used if they are suitable for the end use desired.
To practice the method, the foam must first be saturated with the liquid involved. A preferred way to saturate the foam is by exposing the foam to the liquidin a vacuum. A quantity of ink substantially in excess of that required to saturate the foam is placed in a vacuum chamber. A sheet of Scott Felt is placed within the chamber in contact with the ink. The chamber is then closed and a vacuum of about 28 inches of mercury is applied. After about 30 minutes, the vacuum is released and the foam, now saturated with ink is removed from the chamber. At saturation this material will have absorbed an amount of ink equal to about 300% of its original weight. Further, during saturation, the foam may expand substantially. Although such expansion is not uniform from sheet to sheet of foam, it may amount to as much as a increase in volume. It is believed that saturation with certain liquid relieves stresses originally created when the foam is formed to cause this expansion.
When removed from the vacuum chamber, the saturated sheets are ready to be cut into individual ink rollers. Cutting of the rollers may be accomplished by any suitable means but the preferred method is by use of conventional cylindrical cutters, well known in the art. Such cutters comprise an inner cylindrical knife blade and an exterior cylindrical knife blade. The interior blade forms the passageway through the interior of the roller while the exterior blade forms the outer surface of the roller. In operation, the cutter is mounted in a drill press or the like with the saturated sheet of foam beneath it. The cutter is then set into rotation and lowered to and through the foam, cutting out the precisely dimensioned cylindrical roller which is then ready for use in a suitable marking device.
It is apparent that the liquid retained in the foam tends to lubricate the cutting blades and thus prevents tearing of the foam, so that individual rollers may be cut out in this fashion without substantial los ses from defective cutting. lnk rollers made by the above method have furnished over 50,000 impressions in price markers without exhaustion of the ink supply or substantial change in dimension of the rollers.
in certain applications it has been found that a roller fully saturated with ink is overloaded and it is preferred to have a smaller, controlled amount of ink prescut therein. This can be accomplished by a second embodiment of the method wherein prior to saturation of the foam, the ink is mixed with a calculated amount of volatile solvent. After saturation the volatile solvent may be removed by any suitable means. If a highly volatile solvent is used, removal may be accomplished by exposure to the air and consequent evaporation. In instances where less volatile solvents are used, a heat source may be required. As an example, to form a reservoir or roller which contains of its saturated capacity of ink or the like, a mixture is made of 70% ink and 30% volatile solvent, the foam is saturated with this mixture and the solvent is then removed as noted above. Rollers formed from this foam will contain the requisite amount of ink. The solvent may be removed either before or after cutting of the individual rollers, as desired.
As can be readily comprehended from the above, this method may be applied to form accurately dimensioned liquid reservoirs of other shapes than cylindrical rollers and for other liquids than ink. Virtually any desired shape is possible. Other liquids which might be used are lubricants, perfumes, unguents and the like. In each instance the reservoir will deliver thousands of impressions of the liquid on a contacting surface without substantial change in the volume of the reservoir.
What is claimed is: i 1. A method for making an accurately dimensioned liquid reservoir comprising the steps of selecting a piece of open celled, porous foam mate rial having from about 4,000 to about 80,000 cells per square inch of surface area thereof, saturating said foam material with a liquid so that substantially all of the open cells thereof are filled with liquid, cutting from said saturated foam material a cylindrical liquid reservoir of predetermined size and shape, said liquid providing lubrication during said cutting to inhibit tearing and fusing of the foam material, thereby forming an accurately dimensioned liquid reservoir having within itself a self-contained supply of liquid and suitable for depositing thin films of said liquid on surfaces brought into contact therewith. 2. The method of claim 1 further comprising the steps of prior to saturating said foam material, selecting, as a liquid for saturating, a relatively non-volatile liquid, mixing said relatively non-volatile liquid with a predetermined amount of a volatile solvent so that in said saturating step the foam material is saturated with a mixture of relatively non-volatile liquid and volatile solvent, and subsequent to the saturating step, removing the volatile solvent so that the liquid reservoir formed contains a predetermined amount of relatively nonvolatile liquid. g 3. The method of claim 1 wherein said foam material is saturated with ink.
4. The method of claim 3 whereinsaid open celled,
porous foam material is a compressed polyurethane foam.
5. The method of claim 3 wherein said cutting step comprises cutting from said saturated foam material a cylindrical ink roller having a longitudinal passage therethrough and suitable for mounting and use in an ink marking device.

Claims (5)

1. A METHOD FOR MAKING AN ACCURATELY DIMENSIONED LIQUID RESERVOIR COMPRISING THE STEPS OF SELECTING A PIECE OF OPEN CELLED, POROUS FOAM MATERIAL HAVING FROM ABOUT 4,000 TO ABOUT 80,000 CELLS PER SQUARE INCH OF SURFACE AREA THEREOF, SATURATING SAID FOAM MATERIAL WITH A LIQUID SO THAT SUBSTANTIALLY ALL OF THE OPEN CELLS THEREOF ARE FILLED WITH LIQUID, CUTTING FROM SAID SATURATED FOAM MATERIAL A CYLINDRICAL LIQUID RESERVOIR OF PREDETERMINED SIZE AND SHAPE, SAID LIQUID PROVIDING LUBRICATION DURING SAID CUTTING TO INHIBIT TEARING AND FUSING OF THE FOAM MATERIAL, THEREBY FORMING A ACCURATELY DIMENSIONED LIQUID RESERVOIR HAVING WITHIN ITSELF A SELF-CONTAINED SUPPLY OF LIQUID AND SUITABLE FOR DEPOSITING THIN FILMS OF SAID LIQUIDS ON SURFACES BROUGHT INTO CONTACT THEREWITH.
2. The method of claim 1 further comprising the steps of prior to saturating said foam material, selecting, as a liquid for saturating, a relatively non-volatile liquid, mixing said relatively non-volatile liquid with a predetermined amount of a volatile solvent so that in said saturating step the foam material is saturated with a mixture of relatively non-volatile liquid and volatile solvent, and subsequent to the saturating step, removing the volatile solvent so that the liquid reservoir formed contains a predetermined amount of relatively non-volatile liquid.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein said foam material is saturated with ink.
4. The method of claim 3 wherein said open celled, porous foam material is a compressed polyurethane foam.
5. The method of claim 3 wherein said cutting step comprises cutting from said saturated foam material a cylindrical ink roller having a longitudinal passage therethrough and suitable for mounting and use in an ink marking device.
US352913A 1973-04-20 1973-04-20 Method of forming liquid reservoirs Expired - Lifetime US3895133A (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US352913A US3895133A (en) 1973-04-20 1973-04-20 Method of forming liquid reservoirs
BE153736A BE825979A (en) 1973-04-20 1975-02-26 PROCESS FOR THE PRODUCTION OF A LIQUID TANK

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US352913A US3895133A (en) 1973-04-20 1973-04-20 Method of forming liquid reservoirs

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3895133A true US3895133A (en) 1975-07-15

Family

ID=23386991

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US352913A Expired - Lifetime US3895133A (en) 1973-04-20 1973-04-20 Method of forming liquid reservoirs

Country Status (2)

Country Link
US (1) US3895133A (en)
BE (1) BE825979A (en)

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3998982A (en) * 1975-06-02 1976-12-21 The Gillette Company Method of cutting and grinding porous pen tips
US6123469A (en) * 1983-10-13 2000-09-26 Seiko Epson Corporation Ink-supply wire dot matrix printer head
US6143368A (en) * 1998-02-10 2000-11-07 Gunn; Robert T. Low coefficient of friction fibers
US20040091714A1 (en) * 1999-11-15 2004-05-13 Gunn Robert T. Compositions with low coefficients of friction and methods for their preparation
US20050191474A1 (en) * 2003-10-09 2005-09-01 Gunn Robert T. Compositions with low coefficients of friction and methods for their preparation
US9926166B2 (en) * 2012-07-26 2018-03-27 Intertape Polymer Corp. Tape dispenser with improved wetting system

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3253940A (en) * 1962-09-10 1966-05-31 Gen Mills Inc Polyamides of improved melting point and increased solubility for ink binders
US3253542A (en) * 1964-08-17 1966-05-31 Pitney Bowes Inc Ink applicator
US3284229A (en) * 1962-10-23 1966-11-08 Du Pont Manufacture of colored cellulose sponge
US3475803A (en) * 1965-08-27 1969-11-04 Edward D Hill Roller for applying paint,ink and the like
US3512839A (en) * 1967-09-07 1970-05-19 Suzanne Jouffroy Process for manufacturing sponges containing a charge of material

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3253940A (en) * 1962-09-10 1966-05-31 Gen Mills Inc Polyamides of improved melting point and increased solubility for ink binders
US3284229A (en) * 1962-10-23 1966-11-08 Du Pont Manufacture of colored cellulose sponge
US3253542A (en) * 1964-08-17 1966-05-31 Pitney Bowes Inc Ink applicator
US3475803A (en) * 1965-08-27 1969-11-04 Edward D Hill Roller for applying paint,ink and the like
US3512839A (en) * 1967-09-07 1970-05-19 Suzanne Jouffroy Process for manufacturing sponges containing a charge of material

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3998982A (en) * 1975-06-02 1976-12-21 The Gillette Company Method of cutting and grinding porous pen tips
US6123469A (en) * 1983-10-13 2000-09-26 Seiko Epson Corporation Ink-supply wire dot matrix printer head
US6176629B1 (en) 1983-10-13 2001-01-23 Seiko Epson Corporation Ink supply tank for a printer
US6224275B1 (en) 1983-10-13 2001-05-01 Seiko Epson Corporation Ink-supply tank for a printer
US6231248B1 (en) 1983-10-13 2001-05-15 Seiko Epson Corporation Ink supply tank for a printer
US6143368A (en) * 1998-02-10 2000-11-07 Gunn; Robert T. Low coefficient of friction fibers
US6596207B1 (en) 1998-02-10 2003-07-22 Friction Free Technologies, Inc. Process of making a fiber
US20040091714A1 (en) * 1999-11-15 2004-05-13 Gunn Robert T. Compositions with low coefficients of friction and methods for their preparation
US20050191474A1 (en) * 2003-10-09 2005-09-01 Gunn Robert T. Compositions with low coefficients of friction and methods for their preparation
US9926166B2 (en) * 2012-07-26 2018-03-27 Intertape Polymer Corp. Tape dispenser with improved wetting system

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
BE825979A (en) 1975-08-26

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2349613A (en) Porous resilient printing plate
US2825282A (en) Letterpress printing makeready
US3738269A (en) Printing inking members
EP0262292B1 (en) ink delivery system
US3895133A (en) Method of forming liquid reservoirs
US3413184A (en) Transfer medium and method for making same
US2363817A (en) Printing process and mechanism
US4484827A (en) Ink cartridge
ES440179A1 (en) Macroporous microporous marking structure
US2374198A (en) Inking pad
US2199265A (en) Porous metallic type
US2620730A (en) Printing apparatus
US3253542A (en) Ink applicator
CA2119048A1 (en) Method of Controlling the Quantity of Printing Ink Available for Transfer from an Anilox Roller, Reconditioning of Used Anilox Rollers, and Reconditioned Anilox Roller Structure
US3019201A (en) Methods of making porous applicator structures
US2332514A (en) Inking-in roller
GB1218219A (en) Ink cartridge for a printing machine
US4246842A (en) Printing roller
US4024816A (en) Inking roller and apparatus and method for printing using such roller
US4325179A (en) Process for fabricating a self-contained ink applicator for continuous imprinting on non-absorbent surfaces
US4092922A (en) Lithographic ink supply
US3468252A (en) Printing device
US2056928A (en) Method of making resistance units
JP2616901B2 (en) Rotary printing press for multicolor printing
US4463042A (en) Cartridge