Abstract:
Techniques for providing a face down orientation of printed media at a normally face up output of a printer. One technique achieves correct order orientation in a printer having a duplexing function, and includes printing a page of the print job at a print area, passing the page through a duplexing media path to reorient the page in a page down orientation, passing the page through the print area in the page down orientation without conducting a printing operation, and passing the page from the print area to an output area in correct order orientation. Another technique includes advancing a page from an input source to a print area, conducting printing operations on the page at the print area, transporting the page away from the print area, diverting the page into an auxiliary media path portion and transporting the page, leading edge first, until a trailing edge of the page passes a diverter location, transporting the page in the reverse direction such that the trailing edge now becomes the leading edge, and diverting the present leading edge of the page along a media path leading to the normally face up output, such that the page is presented to the normally face down output in a face down orientation.

Description:
TECHNICAL FIELD OF THE INVENTION 
     This invention relates to printers, and more particularly to techniques for providing printer output in a desired order. 
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     High-end printers on the market today are typically available, either as a standard feature or more often an optional feature, with a duplexer system to enable two-sided printing. A primary purpose of a duplexer is to turn-over the print media after printing on a first or “front” side, so that an image can be placed on the second or “back” side of the print media. Typically, for the example of a laser printer, the print media starts out in the printer input tray, is picked from the input tray, and transported to a printer registration assembly. After being deskewed by the registration assembly, the media is then transported through the imaging and fusing areas to a diverter assembly. The diverter assembly typically has two moveable paper guides that determine by their position the flow of the media. The print engine firmware controls electric solenoids to determine the position of these guides. The first guide or diverter determines whether the sheet is diverted into the duplexer, or is allowed to continue on to one of the output destinations. The second diverter determines whether the sheet will be diverted to the face-down output bin or will continue straight out of the engine to the face-up output bin. 
     The face-up output bin is typically used for heavy media, envelopes, overhead transparency (OHT) stock and labels in a conventional printer. This output bin also gives the printer an essentially “straight-through” paper path if media is printed from the multi-purpose tray. 
     A problem arises when output devices are attached to the printer. The most convenient location to do this is at the face-up output bin, since this is located on the side of the printer. This presents a problem, however, in that face-up output is inherently in reverse order; i.e. page 1 is printed first and is on the bottom of the output stack (face-up). This can be addressed by sending the print job to the printer in reverse order, but this has the disadvantage of large time delays for large jobs using today&#39;s software, due to the large memory requirements. 
     To address the problem, typically the pages are received face-up in order 1-N, and each page is flipped to a face-down orientation to preserve the correct order. This flipping is done by the output device. 
     It would therefore be an advantage to provide a simple way to deliver printer output in correct order. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     Techniques are described for providing a face down orientation of printed media at a normally face up output of a printer. One technique achieves correct order orientation of a print job in a printer having a duplexing function, and includes printing a page of the print job at a print area; passing the page through a duplexing media path to reorient the page in a page down orientation; passing the page through the print area in the page down orientation without conducting a printing operation; and passing the page from the print area to an output area in correct order orientation. 
     A second technique according to another aspect of the invention achieves face down orientation of a printed page at a normally face up output area of a printer. This technique includes advancing a page from an input source to a print area; conducting printing operations on the page at the print area; transporting the page away from the print area; diverting the page into an auxiliary media path portion and transporting the page, leading edge first, until the trailing edge of the page passes a diverter location; transporting the page in the reverse direction such that the trailing edge now becomes the leading edge, and diverting the present leading edge of the page along a media path leading to the normally face up output, such that the page is presented to the normally face up output in a face down orientation. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     These and other features and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description of an exemplary embodiment thereof, as illustrated in the accompanying drawings, in which: 
     FIG. 1 is a schematic depiction of a printer with a duplexing function which can be adapted to employ this invention. 
     FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic illustration of the printer of FIG.  1  and the paper paths through which the print media is passed in the different printing modes. 
     FIG. 3 is a schematic illustration of a second embodiment of a printer embodying the invention. 
     FIG. 4A is a schematic diagram illustrating an exemplary diverter structure for diverting the page exiting the print engine area of the printer of FIG.  3 . 
     FIGS. 4B-4D illustrate three different working positions of the media diverter structure of the printer. 
     FIG. 5 is a schematic illustration of a third embodiment of a printer embodying the invention. 
     FIGS. 6 and 7 illustrate the duplexer operation of the printer of FIG. 5, for double-sided printing. 
     FIG. 8 illustrates the correct order, face down mode of operation for the printer of FIG.  5 . 
     FIG. 9 is a control block diagram illustrating exemplary control features of a printer embodying the invention. 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS 
     FIG. 1 is a schematic depiction of a printer  10  which can be adapted to employ this invention. The printer  10  has an input tray  12  which holds a stack of print media, a print engine  14 , a duplexer  16 , and two outputs  18  and  20 . The print engine can be a laser print engine, an ink-jet print engine, or in general any type of print engine. Output  18  is at a distal end of a media path through the print engine, and holds the output in a face-up orientation, i.e. the side of the print media just printed by the print engine faces up when delivered to the output  18 , when the printer is operating in a face-up print mode. The second output  20  is a face-down output, at the end of a curved path from the print engine output, and the curved path results in the printed side of the sheet being delivered in a downward orientation. 
     The duplexer  16  is an assembly which can be operated in a user-commanded duplexer mode to allow both sides of the print media to receive a printed image. When in the duplexer mode, the output from the print engine is diverted from the output path into the duplexer path, which passes the output sheet around to the input to the print engine, this time in the reverse orientation, such that the reverse side of the print medium is now facing up. The print engine is then commanded to print the next page of the print job onto the reversed side of the sheet. Once the reverse side printing is completed, the sheet is output to either the face up output  18  or the face down output  20 . 
     To the extent just described, the operation of the printer  10  is known in the art. In accordance with an aspect of the invention, the printer  10  is operated in such a way as to provide a face-down output in the output  18 . This can be useful when an output device such as a sorter is attached to the printer at the output  18 . This mode of operation uses the duplexer  16  to feed a sheet through the print engine again, after one side has been printed with an image. However, on this second pass through the print engine, no printing is done, and the sheet is passed directly through the engine to the output path and output  18 . In this manner, the print output at output  18  will be face down and in the correct print order. 
     The advantage of this technique for achieving correct print order at output  18  is that no additional devices are needed to flip the print output. The printer controller can be programmed to achieve this correct print order in response to commands from a host computer or a manual front panel command. Simply by invoking the duplexer operation while refraining from printing onto the sheet as it passed through the print engine during the duplexer pass, the sheet orientation will be reversed, and the correct (face down) print order will be achieved at the output  18 . This can provide a second face down output, i.e. in addition to output  20 , and eliminates the need for a separate flipper apparatus to be included in an output device which receives the print output at  18 . The disadvantage of this technique is that the throughput of the printer will be reduced during this face down mode of operation. 
     FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic illustration of the printer  10  and the paper paths through which the print media is passed in the different printing modes. The printer in this example includes two input media sources  12 A and  12 B, which might be 500 sheet capacity trays, for example. A pick system represented by pick rollers  22 A and  22 B is provided to pick the top sheet from a given source, and deliver the picked sheet into an input media path portion  24 A, which leads to the registration assembly  30 . After de-skewing by the assembly  30 , the print media is passed along path portion  24 B to the print engine  14 . The media path continues along path portion  24 C to exit roller assembly  32 . The media path portion exiting the roller assembly  32  divides into three path portions, including path portion  24 D,  24 E and  24 F. Path portion  24 D leads to face-up output  18 . Path portion  24 E leads to the face-down output  20 . Path portion  24 F leads to the duplexer section. 
     A diverter mechanism  26  is provided to direct the media sheet exiting the print engine into the appropriate path portion. Thus, for the typical face-up operation, the diverter will allow the print media exiting the print engine to enter the path  24 D to the face-up output  18 . For conventional face-down operation, the diverter acts to divert the sheet to the upper path portion  24 E leading to output  20 . For conventional duplexer operation, the diverter is actuated to direct the sheet exiting the print engine downwardly into path portion  24 F. 
     For the duplexer mode, the sheet is driven along path portion  24 F into the duplexer driver roller set  16 A, into a part portion  24 G until a sensor (not shown in FIG. 2) detects that the trailing edge of the sheet has passed a duplexer diverter  16 B. Now the drive direction of the roller set  16 A is reversed, such the trailing edge of the sheet now becomes the leading edge, which is driven to enter the path portion  24 H, continuing along this path portion until it joins the path portion  24 A at junction  241 . It will be apparent that passing a sheet along the duplexer path portions  24 F,  24 G and  24 H results in “flipping” the media over so that the upper surface sheet which received the print image when the sheet was passed through the print engine on the first pass is now the bottom surface when the sheet is again passed along the path portion  24 A and  24 B into the print engine  14 . 
     An auxiliary print mode can be invoked in accordance with the invention to provide correct print order at the output  18 , by passing the printed sheet into the duplexer path portions, and back into the input to the print engine, through the print engine without printing on the sheet, and then into the output  18 . 
     A second embodiment of the invention is illustrated in FIG. 3, which shows a printer  10 ′ similar to the printer  10  of FIG. 2, except that the diverter  26 ′ is adapted to not only direct the page into path portion  24 F, but subsequently after the trailing edge of the page has passed the edge of the diverter  26 ′ and upon reversal of the direction of rotation of the duplexer roller assembly  16 A, to direct the page along path portion  24 J back into the path portion  24 D and to the output  18 . This embodiment results in a substantially shorter travel distance to flip the page to achieve correct order output at  18 . 
     FIGS. 4A-4D are schematic diagrams illustrating an exemplary diverter structure for diverting the page exiting the printer engine area. In this exemplary illustration, components  70 ,  72  and  74  define stationary respective surfaces, which define portions of the paths through which the sheets of print media can be directed. The components  70 ,  72  and  74  may be separate structures, or defined by a unitary structure, e.g., fabricated of an injection molded material. Opposed curved surfaces  70 A and  74 A of components  70  and  74  are separated to define an open channel which forms part of path portion  24 H leading into the duplexer  16 . Curved surface  74 B and surface  72 A with surface  26 B′ of diverter  26 ′ define a channel forming the path portion  24 F. Surface  72 B and surface  26 B′ form a channel defining path portion  24 J. The diverter structure  26 ′ pivots about pivot point  26 D′, and is positionable at three stationary working positions (shown respectively in FIGS. 4B-4D) to direct the output print medium exiting the print engine to the appropriate path. In an exemplary embodiment, the default position for the diverter structure  26 ′ is that depicted in FIG. 4B, to position surface  26 A′ to direct the print medium upwardly into the face down output tray  20 . When the diverter structure  26 ′ is placed in the position shown in FIG. 4D, the sheet will pass directly over surface  26 C′ to the face-up output  18 . 
     To divert the sheet for achieving a face-down orientation in output  18  in accordance with this invention, or for duplexing operation, the diverter  26 ′ is positioned at the position shown in FIG. 4C, so that the leading edge  60 A of the sheet exiting the print engine contacts surface  26 B′ and is diverted into path portion  24 F such that the leading edge will enter the nip between rollers  42  and thereafter the nip between the duplexer rollers  16 A. A sensor  40  is positioned to sense passage of the leading edge ( 60 A) and trailing edge ( 60 B) of the sheet  60 . The sensor can be a mechanical vane type sensor, or other known type of sensor responsive to passage of a sheet of print media. 
     For duplexing operation, the sheet  60  is drawn by operation of the duplexing rollers  16 A down along path  24 G until the trailing edge  60 B has passed the juncture of paths  24 F and  24 H, and after passing through the nip between rollers  42  but before the trailing edge passes through the rollers  16 A. This movement can be based on a given number of motor steps or rotational movement of the rollers, or can be determined by another sensor (not shown). Now the direction of roller rotation is reversed, driving the edge  60 B, now the leading edge of the sheet, upwardly into path  24 H and thence back to the input to the print engine. The sheet  60  has been flipped, so that the surface printed on the previous pass through the print engine now faces downwardly, and the unprinted surface is in position to receive the printed image. After printing, the sheet  60  will be passed through the print engine  14  to either the face-up output  18  or the face-down output  20 , or by use of the correct order mode as described below to path  24 F, as determined by the commanded position of the diverter  26 ′. 
     To achieve the correct (face-down) order at output  18  in accordance with the invention, after the sheet  60  has been diverted into path portion  24 F and into the duplexer roller nip, the sensor  40  is again used to determine passage of the trailing edge  60 B. The diverter  26 ′ is moved back to the downward position. Now the direction of rotation of rollers  42  is reversed, so that the edge  60 B is now the leading edge. The sheet is passed along path portion  24 J to the output  18 . The orientation of the sheet has been flipped, so that the printed surface faces down and the print output for a single sheet or for a multi-sheet job will be in correct order. 
     With the technique illustrated in FIGS. 3 and 4, a second face-down output can be provided at output  18 . This second output is particularly useful when an output device is assembled to the printer at output  18 , as represented by phantom line  19 . Exemplary output devices include sorters, stackers and stapler systems. Now these devices do not need to include a flipper apparatus to flip the orientation of sheets received at output  18 , since the printer can be controlled to provide sheet outputs in either a face-up or a face-down orientation. 
     The diverter structure and path defining components shown in FIGS. 4A-4D illustrate an exemplary apparatus for implementing the invention, but other structures and apparatus can be devised by those skilled in the art. For example, multiple diverter devices can be used instead of a single structure  26 ′ to divert the sheet into the different paths. 
     FIGS. 5-8 illustrate a third embodiment of a printer employing the invention. The printer  100  includes an input tray  102 , from which sheets are picked and transported by a pick and transport mechanism  104  into a path portion  108 A, using techniques which are well known in the art. The leading edge of the picked sheet is advanced into the registration assembly  110  for de-skewing, and then along path  108 B into the print engine including in this example an electrophotographic recording apparatus  111  and a fuser assembly  112 . After passing through the recording apparatus  111 , the sheet proceeds along path portion  108 C to the fuser assembly  112 , and then along path  108 D to a diverter assembly  114 . The diverter assembly can allow the sheet to proceed along straight path portion  108 E to output area  120 , to upwardly curved path portion  108 F to output area  122  or to downwardly curved path portion  108 G to the duplexer  116  or for an orientation reversal or flipping, as well be explained in more detail with respect to FIG.  8 . 
     FIGS. 6 and 7 illustrate the duplexer operation of the printer  100 , for double-sided printing. In this case, the diverter assembly  114  diverts the leading edge of the sheet downwardly into path portion  108 G, entering the duplexer  116 . When the trailing edge of the sheet passes the sensor  118 , the transport rollers  116 B are turned a predetermined number of steps so that the trailing edge is below the guide  116 C, but still in the nip of the transport rollers. At this time, the feed direction of the transport rollers  116 B is reversed, and the trailing edge of the sheet, now the leading edge, is transported under the guide  116 C. This motion is aided by the angle of contact of the transport rollers  116 B, which tends to move the paper to the right as well as upwardly. Now the sheet is guided by guide  116 C to follow path  1081 , and is transported through the duplexer to the path portion  108 A, and back to the print engine. Second and third sets  116 D and  116 E of transport rollers engage the sheet and drive it along path portion  1081  and into the merger with path portion  108 A, as generally shown in FIG.  7 . The orientation of the sheet has been reversed, so that the previously unprinted surface of the sheet is now positioned for printing by the print engine. 
     To achieve correct ordering of a print job at output  120  in accordance with the invention, the sheet will be moved into the duplexer  116 , but instead of passing the sheet under the guide and toward the input of the printer, the sheet is instead directed upwardly toward output  120 . This is shown in FIG.  8 . The sheet is fed, leading edge first, down through the duplexer as before. Once the trailing edge of the sheet is detected by the sensor  118 , the sheet continues to be transported downwardly a fixed number of steps until the trailing edge is known to be past the diverter assembly  114 . At this point, the diverter vane  114 A is repositioned, and the duplexer transport rollers reverse direction to feed the sheet upwardly. The diverter vane is now positioned to divert the leading edge of the sheet toward the output  120 . The sheet is now in a face-down, correct order orientation. 
     FIG. 9 is a control block diagram illustrating exemplary control features of a printer embodying the invention. The printer includes a controller  200 , which can be a microprocessor, ASIC, discrete logic or other type of electronic control system. The controller  200  provides appropriate drive signals to the print engine  14  for print jobs received from a print source  202 , which can be a personal computer, workstation, digital camera, or other print sources. The controller activates and controls the pick drive  204  to pick sheets from the input media source such as the input tray  12  (FIG.  1 ). The media drive  206  drives the print media along the media path, and to the output locations. The duplexer drive  208  is controlled when the printer is in a duplexer mode, or in a mode to achieve correct face-down order in the case of printer  10  described with respect to FIGS. 1-2. The diverter drive  210  is provided for the printers of FIGS. 3-8, and positions the diverter structure  26  and  26 ′ in the appropriate positions for the different operating modes. The controller also receives sensor signals from the media sensors  40 / 118 . 
     It is understood that the above-described embodiments are merely illustrative of the possible specific embodiments which may represent principles of the present invention. Other arrangements may readily be devised in accordance with these principles by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention.