US3920331A - Photocopying machine - Google Patents

Photocopying machine Download PDF

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Publication number
US3920331A
US3920331A US453024A US45302474A US3920331A US 3920331 A US3920331 A US 3920331A US 453024 A US453024 A US 453024A US 45302474 A US45302474 A US 45302474A US 3920331 A US3920331 A US 3920331A
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United States
Prior art keywords
photosensitive member
image
copy paper
drum
belt
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
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US453024A
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English (en)
Inventor
Takaji Kurita
Takao Fujiwara
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Minolta Co Ltd
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Minolta Co Ltd
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Publication date
Application filed by Minolta Co Ltd filed Critical Minolta Co Ltd
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Publication of US3920331A publication Critical patent/US3920331A/en
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03GELECTROGRAPHY; ELECTROPHOTOGRAPHY; MAGNETOGRAPHY
    • G03G15/00Apparatus for electrographic processes using a charge pattern
    • G03G15/65Apparatus which relate to the handling of copy material
    • G03G15/6532Removing a copy sheet form a xerographic drum, band or plate
    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03GELECTROGRAPHY; ELECTROPHOTOGRAPHY; MAGNETOGRAPHY
    • G03G15/00Apparatus for electrographic processes using a charge pattern
    • G03G15/22Apparatus for electrographic processes using a charge pattern involving the combination of more than one step according to groups G03G13/02 - G03G13/20
    • G03G15/26Apparatus for electrographic processes using a charge pattern involving the combination of more than one step according to groups G03G13/02 - G03G13/20 in which the charge pattern is obtained by projection of the entire image, i.e. whole-frame projection
    • G03G15/263Apparatus for electrographic processes using a charge pattern involving the combination of more than one step according to groups G03G13/02 - G03G13/20 in which the charge pattern is obtained by projection of the entire image, i.e. whole-frame projection using a reusable recording medium in form of a band

Definitions

  • PHOTOCOPYING MACHINE Inventors: Takaii Kurita, Kawachinagano; Takao Fujiwara, Sakai, both of Japan Minolta Camera Kabushiki Kaisha, Osaka, Japan Filed: Mar. 20, 1974 Appl. No.: 453,024
  • ABSTRACT A dry transfer process photocopying machine comprising a generally horizontal, transparent rest for support of original documents to be copied, and a continuous belt having a photoconductive outer surface which is transported repeatedly over a vertical path and exposed on the vertically aligned portion thereof to images of the documents to be copied, said images being developed and transferred to copy paper to be supplied from a copy paper reserver and subsequently fixed thereon by a heating means.
  • the present invention relates to a dry transfer type photocopying machine, and more particularly to an improved photocopying machine comprising a generally horizontal, transparent rest for support of original documents to be copies, copy paper reserve, sensitization, image development transfer, and cleaning means, past which a continuous belt having a photoconductive outer surface is transported repeatedly, the belt being transferred to copy paper and subsequently fixed thereon by a heating means.
  • Instantaneous exposure photocopying machines make it possible to effect exposures comparatively rapidly, at various magnifications, and have the advantage that considerably fewer moving parts are required, which simplifies problems of construction.
  • a problem conventionally associated with instantaneous exposure photocopying machines is that it has not been possible to provide a compact machine requiring little floor space, and convenient for operators.
  • constructional elements exployed in this type of photocopying machine are a document rest, two fixedmirrors, lens, and a moveable copying material on which the latent image of a document may be formed, for subsequent transfer to copy paper, and arrangement of these elements to provide a compact machine presents certain problems.
  • a particular problem is that of the disposition of the moveable photocopying material, which may be horizontal or vertical, as opposed to the document which is conveniently always horizontal. Disposing the photocopying material horizontally results in a very long machine, requiring an excessive amount of floor space. On the other hand, in conventional maichines in which copying material is disposed vertically, construction is rendered more complex, and in particular there is the disadvantage that the path over which copy paper must travel is long, and it is generally necessary to wait a long time to obtain a first copy of a document.
  • an instantaneous exposure photocopying machine wherein a photosensitive material is disposed on a path which comprises a vertical section and a sloping section, and adjacent to which necessary sensitization or other means are provided. Exposure to an image of a document to be copied is effected on a vertically aligned portion of the photosensitive material, which portion is then transported upwards to the sloping section, where it is brought into contact with copy paper, and is subsequently'moved around a small diameter pulley, and downwards.
  • the copy paper to which a required image has been transferred, peels of the photosensitive material at the vicinity of the small diameter pulley, due to the stiffness of the copy paper, and is attracted and temporarily attached to a rotatory drum comprising a plurality of holes through which air is drawn to provide a suction force, which holds thecopy paper on the drum. From the drum, the copy paper is transferred to a fixing section provided in the upper portion of the photocopying machine, and thence to an outlet tray.
  • FIG. 1 is a schematic cross-sectional view of a photocopying machine according to one embodiment of the .present invention
  • FIG. 2 is a front view showing optical paths in the machine of FIG. 1, and
  • FIG. 3 is a cross-sectional view, on an enlarged scale, of a drum employed in the machine of FIG. 1.
  • FIG. 1 the general function of the photocopying machine T shown is that a document to be copied is placed on a horizontal document support 1, which is provided in an upper forward portion of the photocopying machine T.
  • An image of the document is directed through a lens 4 and fixed mirrors 5, 6 onto a vertical portion 7a of a photosensitive belt 7 which is provided in rear portion of the machine T, to form an electrostatic image on the belt portion 7a.
  • the document support 1 is made of glass or other suitable transparent and is positioned horizontally at a suitable height at the upper front por- 3 tion of the photocopying machine T.
  • a lamp 2 for momentary illumination of the whole of a document D on the rest 1.
  • the lamp 2 may be, for example, a xenon flash lamp, and is partially enclosed in a reflector 3 which ensures that light emitted by the lamp 2 is directed efficiently onto the document D. Wl-len the document D is illuminated, an image thereof is directedby fixed mirrors 5, 6 and a fixed lens 4 onto a portion of the photosensitive belt 7.
  • the mirror 5 is located in a generally central portion of the machine T, below the document support 1, and, as indicated most clearly in FIG. 2, is inclined at an angle of 45 to the support 1.
  • Light reflected from a document D on the support 1 is directed by the mirror 5 through the lens 4 onto the mirror 6 (FIG. 2).
  • the mirror 6 is in a generally vertical alignment and is suitably inclined with respect to the mirror 5 and lens 4, for instance, at an angle of 45 to direct image rays therefrom in a horizontal plane, towards the rear of the machine T, and onto the surface of the abovementioned belt 7.
  • the belt 7 is a continuous belt having a photosensitive outer coating, is provided in a rear portion of the photocopying machine T, and is driven by pulleys 5, 9 and 10, which are rotated by suitable means (not shown).
  • the pulleys 8, 9 are generally equal in diameter, the pulley 9 is rotatably mounted in a lower rear portion of the machine T.
  • the pulley 8 is rotatably mounted in an upper rear portion of the machine T, directly above the pulley 9, the most forward points of the outer peripheries of the pulleys 8, 9 lying on the same vertical line, whereby that portion of the belt 7 between the pulleys 8, 9 is vertical.
  • the pulley 10 is considerably smaller in diameter than the pulleys 8, 9, and is provided above and rearwards of the pulley 8, whereby that portion of the belt 7 between the pulleys 8, 10 slopes upwards and rearwards. From the pulley 10, the belt 7 is led to the pulley 9. The belt 7 is driven upwards from the pulley 9 to the pulley 8, to the pulley l0, and downwards to the pulley 9.
  • a particular portion 7a of the belt 7 is carried on to the vertical stretch between the pulleys 8, 9, and is there exposed to an image of a document D, directed from the document support 1 by the mirrors 5, 6, and lens 4, whereby an electrostatic image is formed on the belt portion 7a.
  • the belt portion 7a and the copy paper 14 receive'a charge applied by a corona discharge unit 15, which is located adjacent to and facing the upper portion of the belt sloping section between the pulleys 8, 10, whereby an image of the document D is transferred onto the copy paper 14.
  • the voltage applied by the discharge unit 15 preferably has an AC component, and may be, for example, AC, or half-wave rectified AC.
  • the belt portion is next brought into contact with a rotatable cleaning brush 25, which is provided in a housing below the pulley 9, and which removes remnant toner particles from the belt portion 7a.
  • Toner particles removed by the brush 25 are drawn into a suitable reception means by a fan 26, which is provided with a filter, and is located in a housing which is forward of the brush 25 housing and connected thereto by suitably ducts 27.
  • the belt portion 7a is again brought to the location of the corona discharged unit 1 1, where it may be sensitized again, and repeat the abovedescribed circuit, which circuit is, of course, followed by other portions also of the belt 7.
  • the leading end of the paper 14 peels away from the belt 7, due to the stiffness of the paper 14 and to the existense of a belt-bending portion of small radius on the pulley 10.
  • the paper continues to peel away from the belt 7, and to be advanced in a generally straight line upwards and rear wards (due to contact of the rear portion of the paper 14 with the belt 7).
  • the paper 14 is thus advanced it is moved past a gmide block 19, and, then, is brought into contact with the abovementioned drum 16, thereby to cause the paper to peel perfectly away from the belt 7.
  • the drum 16 is rotatably supported and partially enclosed .in a frame 17 provided in a top rear portion of the photocopying machine T, above the discharge unit 15 and the small diameter pulley 10.
  • the shortest distance between the outer periphery of the drum 16 and that of the pulley 10 is less than the length of the sheet of paper 14, whereby the front end of the paper 14 may come into contact with the outer periphery of the drum 16 before the rear endthereof moves out of contact with the belt 7.
  • the drum 16 comprises a hollow inner portion into which air, moved by means of a known compressor or the like (not shown), may pass by flowing through a plurality of openings 16', formed in the outer periphery of the drum 16 at equal intervals so as to suck and hold the paper on the outer periphery of the drum 16.
  • the drum 16' is a rotated counter to the belt 7 by a conventional known means such as a motor, and at a speed such that the peripheral speed thereof is equal to the speed of the belt 7. As indicated by the arrows in FIG.
  • the board 18 and block-19 beingnon-conductive, there is no risk of the paper 14 being attracted thereto or smudged thereby.
  • the paper 14 is held against the drum 16, and as the drum l6 and belt 7 continue to rotate counter to one another, the paper is peeled of the belt 7, curves onto and is held to the outer periphery of the drum 16, the image-carrying portion of the paper 14 being outwards with respect to the drum 16.
  • the openings of the drum 16 through which air is drawn may be formed evenly over the periphery of the drum 16, or, if less suction force is required, may be spaced so as to provide suction force at opposite ends only of a sheet of copy paper. Rotation of the drum 16 is synchronized with that of the belt 7, to ensure that sheets of copy paper always come into contact with the same portions of the drum 16.
  • the paper 14 is carried upwards and then forwards by the drum 16, and the leading edge thereof is brought into contact with a wedge portion 17a, which is provided at the upper edge of the frame 17, projects towards the drum l6, and separates the paper 14 from the drum 16. With rear end of the paper 14 still adhering to the outer periphery of the drum 16, the paper 14 is pushed forwards in a generally straight line, away from the drum l6, and is brought into contact with a pair of rolls 20, which are provided forward of and generally level with the top of the druni 16. The paper 14 is drawn forwards by the rolls 20, and guided into the 'abovementioned infra-red heating compartment 21, which heats the paper 14 to fix the toner particles constituting the image thereon. After the image has been fixed, the paper 14 is withdrawn from the compartment 21 by rolls 22, and supplied thereby onto the output tray 23, which is provided at an uppermost forward position of the photocopying machine T, above the level of the document rest 1.
  • a dry transfer process photocopying machine comprising a generally horizintal, transparent rest 1 for support of original documents D to be copied, a continuous belt 7 having a photocon-' ductive outer surface which is transported repeatedly over a path consisting of a vertical portion, along which said belt is transported upwards and exposed to images of the documents to be copied, said images exposed on the belt being developed and transferred to copy paper to be supplied from a copy paper reserve 14a provided below the rest, a sloping portion above and continuous to said vertical portion, and a curved portion having a small radius of curvature and being continuous to said sloping portion, a large diameter rotatable drum 16 lo-' cated above and adjacent to said belt path curved portion, and forming a plurality of portions through which air may be drawn upon rotation of said drum, whereby the copy paper, to whieh an image has been transferred from said belt may be attracted to and temporarily held on,the
  • a major advantage of a photocopying machine of the present invention is that the distance over which a sheet of copy paper travels from an image transfer section to an output tray is extremely short, and the time it is necessary to wait for a completed photo copy of an original document is correspondingly shortened.
  • Other advantages of the invention are that clean disposal of excess toner particles is ensured since the toner removal brush and associated means are provided in a lowermost part of the machine, and also that, since heating means for fixing images on copy paper is provided at the uppermost portion of the machine, dissipation of heat is optimum.
  • a dry transfer process photocopying machine including generally horizontal, transparent support means for support of original documents to be copied, copy paper reserve means for storing a supply of copy sheets, charging means, full frame instantaneous exposure means, image developing means, image transfer means, cleaning means and a photosensitive member in the form of a belt, said photosensitive member being exposed to an image of an original document by said exposure means subsequent to uniform application of charges by said charging means and developed by said developing means prior to transfer of said image onto a sheet of copy paper fed from said reserve means, and said copy paper being subsequently fixed by a fixing means, the improvements which comprise:
  • said means for supporting and rotating said photosensitive member including a plurality of rollers, said photosensitive member being supported vertically with respect to said transparent support means and one of said rollers having a small radius of curvature defining an uppermost portion of said vertically supported photosensitive member;
  • said developing means being located below said roller of small radius but adjacent another of said rollers supporting the photosensitive member;
  • said image transfer means being located adjacent said small radius roller for transferring a ,developed image onto a sheet of copy paper fed from said reserve means and through a feeding means located adjacent but between said developing and transfer means;
  • a first guide means of dielectric material located imwhereby Said Sheet of PPY Paper to which F image mediately above said small radi ll has been transferred is separated from said photoa rotatable drum of conductive material located Sensitive member y Said Small radlus roller with the aid by said first guide means and guided by said drum to said fixing means.
  • said ex osure means includes a lam for instantathrough which be w and rotated neously flashing a document supported on said transchronously with said photosensitive member; and parent Support means, a first mirror provided at a a Second guide means Separate from said first guide 10 angle with respect to said support means, a lens and a means and located generally Parallel to p of second mirror for projecting an image of said docuthe outer periphery of said drum and made of dim; o t aid h t itiv mb r, electric material; v

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  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Combination Of More Than One Step In Electrophotography (AREA)
  • Exposure Or Original Feeding In Electrophotography (AREA)
US453024A 1973-03-30 1974-03-20 Photocopying machine Expired - Lifetime US3920331A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP48037293A JPS49123630A (enrdf_load_stackoverflow) 1973-03-30 1973-03-30

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US3920331A true US3920331A (en) 1975-11-18

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US (1) US3920331A (enrdf_load_stackoverflow)
JP (1) JPS49123630A (enrdf_load_stackoverflow)
DE (1) DE2415485A1 (enrdf_load_stackoverflow)
FR (1) FR2223733B3 (enrdf_load_stackoverflow)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4168830A (en) * 1975-04-07 1979-09-25 Savin Corporation Air jet paper pick-off for liquid developer electrostatic copier
EP0340969A1 (en) * 1988-04-30 1989-11-08 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha A printing apparatus
US20040151519A1 (en) * 2003-01-27 2004-08-05 Fumihiro Nakashige Image reader apparatus and cylinder shaped lamp used for the same

Families Citing this family (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS59126571A (ja) * 1983-01-10 1984-07-21 Canon Inc 画像形成装置

Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2986442A (en) * 1956-07-19 1961-05-30 Century Geophysical Corp Electrophotographic oscillograph for observing slow recurrent signals
US3432231A (en) * 1965-07-30 1969-03-11 Xerox Corp Exposure control device
US3600082A (en) * 1969-04-30 1971-08-17 Singer Co Copying apparatus
US3630615A (en) * 1969-07-24 1971-12-28 Xerox Corp Method and apparatus for transporting support material
US3687539A (en) * 1970-06-30 1972-08-29 Katsuragawa Denki Kk Electrophotographic apparatus
US3697160A (en) * 1969-04-30 1972-10-10 Xerox Corp Continuous imaging apparatus
US3700323A (en) * 1971-12-28 1972-10-24 Eastman Kodak Co Control circuitry for assisting electrostatographic compensation

Patent Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2986442A (en) * 1956-07-19 1961-05-30 Century Geophysical Corp Electrophotographic oscillograph for observing slow recurrent signals
US3432231A (en) * 1965-07-30 1969-03-11 Xerox Corp Exposure control device
US3600082A (en) * 1969-04-30 1971-08-17 Singer Co Copying apparatus
US3697160A (en) * 1969-04-30 1972-10-10 Xerox Corp Continuous imaging apparatus
US3630615A (en) * 1969-07-24 1971-12-28 Xerox Corp Method and apparatus for transporting support material
US3687539A (en) * 1970-06-30 1972-08-29 Katsuragawa Denki Kk Electrophotographic apparatus
US3700323A (en) * 1971-12-28 1972-10-24 Eastman Kodak Co Control circuitry for assisting electrostatographic compensation

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4168830A (en) * 1975-04-07 1979-09-25 Savin Corporation Air jet paper pick-off for liquid developer electrostatic copier
EP0340969A1 (en) * 1988-04-30 1989-11-08 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha A printing apparatus
US20040151519A1 (en) * 2003-01-27 2004-08-05 Fumihiro Nakashige Image reader apparatus and cylinder shaped lamp used for the same
US7054580B2 (en) * 2003-01-27 2006-05-30 Ricoh Company, Ltd. Image reader apparatus and cylinder shaped lamp used for the same
US20060171742A1 (en) * 2003-01-27 2006-08-03 Fumihiro Nakashige Image reader apparatus and cylinder shaped lamp used for the same
US7158738B2 (en) 2003-01-27 2007-01-02 Ricoh Company, Ltd. Image reader apparatus and cylinder shaped lamp used for the same

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
FR2223733A1 (enrdf_load_stackoverflow) 1974-10-25
DE2415485A1 (de) 1974-10-10
JPS49123630A (enrdf_load_stackoverflow) 1974-11-26
FR2223733B3 (enrdf_load_stackoverflow) 1977-01-21

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