Laminated product, an apparatus and a method for forming a laminated product
US-2015037593-A1 · Feb 5, 2015 · US
US10112412B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-10112412-B2 |
| Application number | US-201715477292-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Apr 3, 2017 |
| Priority date | Apr 3, 2017 |
| Publication date | Oct 30, 2018 |
| Grant date | Oct 30, 2018 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
What is disclosed is an object holder for securely retaining an object while it is being printed in a direct-to-object print system and a direct-to-object print system configured to use various embodiments of the object holder of the present invention. In one embodiment, the object holder comprises a back support configured to slideably traverse a support member positioned parallel to a plane formed by at least one printhead configured to eject marking material on to a surface of an object A top and bottom arm are attached to the back support. At least two support braces are attached to the top and bottom arms. At least one restraining bar is slideably attached to the support braces such that the bar can be raised or lowered on to the object seated between the top and bottom arms. The bar physically retains the object while the object is being printed.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. An object holder for retaining an object in a direct-to-object print system, the object holder comprising: a back support configured to slideably traverse a support member positioned parallel to a plane formed by at least one printhead of a direct-to-object print system; a top and bottom arm attached to the back support; at least two support braces each attached to the top and bottom arms; and at least one restraining bar slideably attached to the support braces so the bar can be lowered on the object between the top and bottom arms. 2. The object holder of claim 1 , further comprising at least one spring attached at one end to the top arm and attached at another end to the restraining bar, the spring exerting a tension to help secure the object held in the object holder. 3. The object holder of claim 1 , wherein the back support is adjustable to fit objects of different sizes. 4. The object holder of claim 3 , wherein the adjustable back support comprises a threaded shaft for selectively adjusting a distance between the top and bottom arms to accommodate objects of different sizes. 5. The object holder of claim 1 , wherein the restraining bar further comprises at least one set screw for locking the restraining bar to a support brace in a desired position. 6. The object holder of claim 1 , wherein the restraining bar is shaped to conform to one end of the object. 7. The object holder of claim 1 , wherein the object holder is attached to a shuttle mount configured to slideably traverse the support member. 8. The object holder of claim 7 , wherein a position of the object is fixed and a motor rotates the object holder. 9. The object holder of claim 7 , wherein a position of the object holder is fixed and a motor rotates the object. 10. A direct-to-object print system for printing on a surface of an object, the direct-to-object print system comprising: at least one printhead configured to eject marking material on to a surface of an object; a support member positioned parallel to a plane formed by the printhead; an object holder configured to slideably traverse the support member, the object holder comprising: a back support and a top and bottom arm attached to the back support; at least two support braces each attached to the top and bottom arms; and at least one restraining bar slideably attached to the support braces so the bar can be lowered on the object between the top and bottom arms; and a controller configured to cause the printhead to eject marking material onto the object held by the object holder as the object passes the printhead. 11. The direct-to-object print system of claim 10 , further comprising an actuator for operatively causing the object holder to slideably traverse the support member. 12. The direct-to-object print system of claim 11 , further comprising a belt that contacts pulleys, one of the pulleys being operatively connected to the actuator which causes the pulley to move the belt about the pulleys and move the object holder past the printhead. 13. The direct-to-object print system of claim 12 , wherein the belt is entrained about the pulleys to form an endless belt, further comprising an additional pulley that engages the endless belt to enable the additional pulley to rotate in response to a movement of the endless belt to move the object holder. 14. The direct-to-object print system of claim 10 , wherein the support member is oriented to enable one end of the support member to be at a higher gravitational potential than another end of the support member. 15. The direct-to-object print system of claim 10 , further comprising at least one spring attached at one end to the top arm and attached at another end to the restraining bar, the spring exerting a tension to help secure the object held in the object holder. 16. The direct-to-object print system of claim 10 , wherein the back support is adjustable to fit objects of different sizes. 17. The direct-to-object print system of claim 16 , wherein the adjustable back support comprises a threaded shaft for selectively adjusting a distance between the top and bottom arms to accommodate objects of different sizes. 18. The direct-to-object print system of claim 10 , wherein the restraining bar further comprises at least one set screw for locking the restraining bar to a support brace in a desired position. 19. The direct-to-object print system of claim 10 , wherein the restraining bar is shaped to conform to one end of the object. 20. The direct-to-object print system of claim 10 , wherein the object holder is attached to a shuttle mount configured to slideably traverse the support member. 21. The direct-to-object print system of claim 20 , wherein a position of the object is fixed and a motor rotates the object holder. 22. The direct-to-object print system of claim 20 , wherein a position of the object holder is fixed and a motor rotates the object. 23. The direct-to-object print system of claim 10 , further comprising an identification tag and an input device. 24. The direct-to-object print system of claim 23 , wherein the identification tag comprises any of: a RFID tag containing an identifier and the input device is a RFID reader, a barcode containing an identifier and the input device is a barcode reader, and at least one mechanical feature and the input device is a biased arm that follows the mechanical features and converts a position of the arm into an electrical signal comprising an identifier. 25. The direct-to-object print system of claim 23 , wherein the controller is further configured to: receive the identifier from the input device; compare the identifier to at least one identifier stored in a memory; and disable the actuator in response to the identifier failing to correspond to any of the identifiers stored in memory. 26. The direct-to-object print system of claim 23 , wherein the controller is further configured to: receive the identifier from the input device; compare the identifier to identifiers stored in a memory; and disable operation of the printhead in response to the identifier failing to correspond to any of the identifiers stored in memory. 27. The direct-to-object print system of claim 10 , wherein the controller is further configured to operate a user interface comprising any of: a display, a user input device, and an annunciator for emitting an audible sound. 28. The direct-to-object print system of claim 27 , wherein the controller is further configured to: detect a configuration of the printhead and ink supplied to the printhead; and communicate a message to the user interface, the message being any of: that ink needs to be changed, and that the printhead needs to be reconfigured. 29. The direct-to-object print system of claim 10 , further comprising a sensor positioned to generate image data from one of: the object holder, the object, and a sheet of printed media, the controller being configured to receive the image data from the sensor and analyze the image data to identify any of: printhead alignment, image quality, and inoperative ejectors.
the interrogation device being adapted for miscellaneous applications · CPC title
Printing on bodies of particular shapes, e.g. golf balls, candles, wine corks {(sublimation or volatilisation of pre-printed design B41M5/035)} · CPC title
using bar codes · CPC title
the record carrier comprising an arrangement for non-contact communication, e.g. wireless communication circuits on transponder cards, non-contact smart cards or RFIDs · CPC title
Printing on three-dimensional objects not being in sheet or web form, e.g. spherical or cubic objects (B41J3/283, B41J3/286 take precedence; building up a 3D object using individual droplets from jetting heads B29C64/112) · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.