U.S. patent application number 09/725246 was filed with the patent office on 2001-05-10 for coating apparatus, printing apparatus, imaging apparatus, printing system and printing method.
This patent application is currently assigned to Toray Industries, Inc.. Invention is credited to Inoue, Yoshinori, Iwai, Hiroaki, Yamasaki, Michio.
Application Number | 20010000861 09/725246 |
Document ID | / |
Family ID | 27465160 |
Filed Date | 2001-05-10 |
United States Patent
Application |
20010000861 |
Kind Code |
A1 |
Inoue, Yoshinori ; et
al. |
May 10, 2001 |
Coating apparatus, printing apparatus, imaging apparatus, printing
system and printing method
Abstract
A printing apparatus (1001) having a plurality of blanket
cylinders (1051 to 1054) normally-contacting to impression
cylinders (1031, 1032), plate cylinders (1041 to 1044)
normally-contacting to the respective blanket cylinders, and a ink
coating apparatus(1061 to 1064), a printing apparatus, an imaging
apparatus, an imaging method, an imaging medium, a printing system,
and a printing method. In the printing apparatus (1001), a
plurality of ink coating apparatus (1061 to 1064) is arranged in a
substantially gravity direction, a feeding apparatus (1020) of
sheets of recording mediums to the printing apparatus and a
discharging apparatus (1070) are provided at a side opposite to a
setting side of the ink coating apparatus with respect to the
blanket cylinders. The printing apparatus can execute a back face
printing easily, and has good workability.
Inventors: |
Inoue, Yoshinori; (Otsu-shi,
JP) ; Yamasaki, Michio; (Otsu-shi, JP) ; Iwai,
Hiroaki; (Kyoto-shi, JP) |
Correspondence
Address: |
MORGAN, LEWIS & BOCKIUS
1800 M STREET NW
WASHINGTON
DC
200365869
|
Assignee: |
Toray Industries, Inc.
|
Family ID: |
27465160 |
Appl. No.: |
09/725246 |
Filed: |
November 29, 2000 |
Related U.S. Patent Documents
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Application
Number |
Filing Date |
Patent Number |
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09725246 |
Nov 29, 2000 |
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09197489 |
Nov 23, 1998 |
|
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09197489 |
Nov 23, 1998 |
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PCT/JP98/01281 |
Mar 24, 1998 |
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Current U.S.
Class: |
101/183 |
Current CPC
Class: |
B41F 7/10 20130101; B41F
27/005 20130101; B41F 7/02 20130101; H04N 1/00278 20130101 |
Class at
Publication: |
101/183 |
International
Class: |
B41F 005/16; B41F
005/18 |
Foreign Application Data
Date |
Code |
Application Number |
Mar 24, 1997 |
JP |
9-069637 |
Apr 25, 1997 |
JP |
9-109375 |
May 21, 1997 |
JP |
9-130990 |
Jul 16, 1997 |
JP |
9-191491 |
Claims
What is claimed is:
1. A multicolor printing apparatus comprising: a plurality of print
units each including a plurality of blanket cylinders
normally-contacting to an impression cylinder having an outer
circumference twice as long as an outer circumference of a plate
cylinder, a plurality of said plate cylinders normally-contacting
to the respective blanket cylinders, and a plurality of ink coating
apparatus for coating the respective plate cylinders with ink, said
plurality of ink coating apparatus being arranged in a
substantially vertical direction parallel to the direction of
gravity; a transfer cylinder connecting said plurality of print
units and having an outer circumference three times the outer
circumference of each said plate cylinder; a feeding apparatus and
a discharging apparatus for respectively feeding and discharging
sheets of recording medium to an from said printing apparatus, said
feeding apparatus and said discharging apparatus being arranged on
one side of said plurality of blanket cylinders opposite said ink
coating apparatus, said feeding apparatus being positioned at a
lower level than said discharging apparatus such that the sheets of
recording medium flow from a lower side to an upper side.
2. The multicolor printing apparatus according to claim 1, wherein
said plurality of plate cylinders, said plurality of blanket
cylinders, and said plurality of impression cylinders are
individually arranged in a substantially vertical direction
parallel to the direction of gravity.
3. The multicolor printing apparatus according to claim 1, wherein
said plurality of ink coating apparatus each include a coating
roller contacting the corresponding plate cylinder and having an
elastic surface, the elastic surface having hardness set such that
a surface layer thereof has higher hardness than an inner layer
thereof, and a doctor blade movable toward and away from an outer
peripheral surface of said coating roller, an amount by which said
doctor blade is pushed into said coating roller being changed to
control the thickness of a coated ink film formed on the outer
peripheral surface of said coating roller.
4. The multicolor printing apparatus according to claim 1, wherein
each of said ink coating apparatus comprises a coating roller with
an elastic surface, and a doctor blade structured to move back and
forth freely to the outer peripheral surface of said coating
roller, for controlling the thickness of coated ink film formed on
said outer peripheral surface.
5. The multicolor printing apparatus according to claim 2, wherein
said impression cylinders have an outer circumference twice as long
as an outer circumference of said plate cylinders, and a transfer
cylinder having an outer circumference three times the outer
circumference of said plate cylinders is provided for transferring
the recording mediums between the impression cylinders.
6. The multicolor printing apparatus according to claim 2, further
comprising means for drying coloring agent on said sheets of
recording mediums after discharging printed sheets of recording
mediums between a final blanket cylinder and a final impression
cylinder.
7. The multicolor printing apparatus according to claim 2, further
comprising a discharge station on which the printed sheets of
recording mediums are stacked after the printed sheets of recording
mediums are discharged between a final blanket cylinder and a final
impression cylinder, said discharge station is configured to be
horizontally rotatable, thereby said stacked printed sheets or
recording mediums can be rotatable in a 180.degree. arc with
respect to the direction of a normal line.
8. The multicolor printing apparatus according to claim 8, further
comprising discharge station moving means for moving said discharge
station to the feeding position of said recording mediums of said
feeding means after said stacked printed sheets of recording
mediums are rotated in a 180.degree. arc with respect to the
direction of the normal line of said recording mediums.
9. The multicolor printing apparatus according to claim 1, wherein
said plate cylinders have waterless plates wound therearound.
Description
1. This is a continuation-in-part application of PCT International
Application number PCT/JP98/01281 filed Mar. 24, 1998 designating
the United States for the national phase.
TECHNICAL FIELD
2. The present invention relates to a coating apparatus, a printing
apparatus, an imaging apparatus, an imaging method, an imaging
medium, a printing system, and a printing method.
BACKGROUND ART
3. As a technique of this type of printing apparatus, there are
known the techniques disclosed in, for example, Unexamined Japanese
Patent Publication No. 54-152504 (corresponding to U.S. Pat. No.
4,280,406), Examined Japanese Patent Publication No. 55-28860
(corresponding to U.S. Pat. No. 4,141,293), and Examined Japanese
Patent Publication No. 3-71983. All of the above mentioned
publications are incorporated by reference.
4. In the printing apparatus of Unexamined Japanese Patent
Publication No. 54-152504, as shown in FIG. 29, plate cylinders
1041 to 1044 and blanket cylinders 1051 to 1054, which were
positioned at an ink coating apparatus setting side separately from
a feeding side for web paper and a discharging side for paper cut
into sheets, were arranged in the same frame to be slidably drawn.
This resulted in easy plate replacements, and easy change of a
print format, and operability of the printing apparatus was
improved.
5. In Examined Japanese Patent Publication No. 55-28860, as shown
in FIG. 30, in order to carry out multicolor printing on continuous
paper, a plurality of print units was vertically arranged, thereby
reducing a setting floor area for the printing apparatus. Also, the
ink coating apparatus were provided on the same side, so that easy
plate replacements were achieved. In the printing apparatus of
Examined Japanese Patent Publication No. 3-71983, as shown in FIG.
31, spaces for setting dampening water apparatuses are omitted by
use of waterless plates. Instead, a plate feed and discharge device
was provided to the omitted space for each plate cylinder so as to
improve operability.
6. As a technique of the coating apparatus used in these printing
apparatus, there are known the techniques disclosed in, for
example, Unexamined Japanese Patent Publication No. 57-178872,
Unexamined Japanese Utility Model Publication No. 56-76438, and
Examined Japanese Patent Publication No.4-68147. These techniques
are used as an ink coating technique for the printing apparatus,
and frequently employed mainly in waterless lithographic printing,
a letterpress printing, etc. In particular, Examined Japanese
Patent Publication No. 4-68147 disclosed a coating apparatus having
a coating roller with an elastic surface, and a doctor blade, which
freely moved back and forth to the outer peripheral surface of the
coating roller and controlled a thickness of a coated ink film to
be formed on the outer peripheral surface. This was an extremely
useful coating technique when ink having high viscosity was
used.
7. The feature of the techniques used in these coating apparatus is
that the doctor blade is used as a method for setting the thickness
of the ink film to be applied onto the coating roller. For example,
in the technique of Examined Japanese Patent Publication No.
4-68147, as shown in FIG. 32, an ink unit 1002, serving as an ink
coating apparatus, comprises an form roller 1201, a doctor blade
1202, an eccentric cam 1203 for controlling the movement of the
doctor blade, ink distributing rollers 1210, 1211, and an auxiliary
form roller 1212 having an elastic surface. The form roller 1201,
the doctor blade 1202, side plates 1207 and 1208, which are
arranged at both sides of the form roller 1201 in its axial
direction, and an ink fountain 1206 form an ink fountain space
1205, which is filled with printing ink i.
8. A small gear (not shown) rotating solidly with the form roller
1201 is engaged with a large gear (not shown) rotating solidly with
a plate cylinder 1015. Thus, the form roller 1201 and the plate
cylinder 1015 are synchronized with each other and rotated at the
same circumferential speed at their contact section.
9. The ink unit 1002 is configured so that the eccentric cam 1203
attached to a shaft 1204 is rotated so as to move the doctor blade
1202 back and fourth in a direction of an arrow A, thereby changes
the engagement between the doctor blade 1202 and the form roller
1201 in order to control the thickness of the coated ink film
formed on the outer periphery of the form roller 1201.
10. Conventionally, a printing plate, serving as an imaging medium
used in such a printing apparatus, has been generally manufactured
by a photomechanical process in which a with type film
(lithographic film) for plate-making is applied to a PS plate
(presensitized plate or the like). Since the plate-making apparatus
and the printing apparatus are normally independent devices, the
positioning of the imaging medium of each color in the multicolor
printing is carried out by the following process.
11. At the outset register marks was drawn on the imaging medium
for each color. Then, the imaging medium for each color was
installed around each plate cylinder of the printing apparatus. Ink
was fed to the imaging medium of each color, and printing was
performed on a recording medium such as paper. Then, the positions
of the imaging mediums of the respective colors in the printing
apparatus and the print timing were adjusted until the positions of
the register marks printed on the recording mediums of the
respective colors were coincide with each other. Thus the mutual
positions of the imaging mediums of the respective colors were
determined.
12. In recent years, there has been increased the use of the
imaging apparatus for making the printing plate, which serves as
the imaging medium, based on digital imaging information in
accordance with imaging data. As an imaging medium fixing method in
these imaging apparatuses, there are known techniques disclosed in
Unexamined Japanese Patent Publication No.3-24549 (corresponding to
U.S. Pat. No.5,094,933) and Unexamined Japanese Patent Publication
No. 5-8366, which are incorporated by reference.
13. In the apparatus of Unexamined Japanese Patent Publication No.
3-24549, as shown in FIG. 33, after imaging on a web imaging
medium, the imaging medium is cut to a predetermined size,
developed and carried by a transfer roller or a conveyor belt.
14. In Unexamined Japanese Patent Publication No. 5-8366, as shown
in FIG. 34, the imaging medium is wound around an attaching member
and rotated, and imaging is executed by irradiation of an energy
beam. The imaging medium is fixed to the plate cylinders with
flat-headed screws, or adhered thereto with adhesive.
15. As a technique in which the imaging medium is wound around an
attaching member and rotated, and imaging is executed by
irradiation of the energy beam, the imaging apparatus disclosed in
Unexamined Japanese Patent Publication No. 5-8366 was configured as
described as follows.
16. That is, the attaching member to which the imaging medium was
attached was rotated and the energy beam scans in a circumferential
direction of the imaging medium. Also, the laser block having a
semiconductor laser is scanned in the axial direction of the
attaching member by use of a ball screw.
17. The shaft of the attaching member and the ball screw are
arranged to be parallel with the axial direction of the attaching
member. The scanning in the axial direction is executed for each
scanning in the circumferential direction while the attaching
member is rotated. The scanning is performed over the entire
surface of the imaging medium thereby imaging is executed.
18. The imaging apparatus disclosed in Unexamined Japanese Patent
Publication No. 8-72311 is configured as follows.
19. That is, as shown in FIG. 35, the imaging medium, which is
wound around the attaching member and rotates, is irradiated with
the energy beam from a plurality of recording heads having a
plurality of energy beam irradiation sources, so as to execute
imaging. The imaging medium, which is wound around the attaching
member and rotates, is scanned in the circumferential direction by
its rotation and simultaneously, the recording heads are scanned in
the axial direction of the attaching member by a linear motor, etc.
Therefore, the rotation shaft of the attaching member and a
carriage apparatus such as a linear motor, which scans the
plurality of recording heads in the axial direction of the
attaching member, are arranged in parallel with respect to the
axial direction of the attaching member.
20. The energy beam irradiation position is determined by detecting
means for detecting the position of a beam spot light of the energy
beam and means for correcting the irradiation position of the beam
spot light to the attaching member based on the output from the
detecting means.
21. In the printing apparatus of Unexamined Japanese Patent
Publication No. 54-152504 shown in FIG. 29, there was a problem in
that it was impossible to carry out a back face printing after
feeding a sheet of paper. When the interval between grippers for
gripping paper on an impression cylinder 1031 in the
circumferential direction is shorter than a length of the sheet of
paper to be printed in the progress direction the paper is
sandwiched between the pressure cylinder 1031 and blanket cylinders
at two portions simultaneously so that the paper is suffered some
tension. As a result, if the printing position may shift, which is
a problem. Moreover, the interval between the grippers for gripping
paper is increased in order to solve the problem, the ink coating
apparatuses could not be arranged for three or more color printing,
which is also a problem.
22. On the other hand, if the impression cylinder 1031 is enlarged
in order to arrange the ink coating apparatus, the diameter of the
impression cylinder 1031 becomes too large, and the entire printing
apparatus must be enlarged. As a result, a large setting space for
such a printing apparatus was required and the cost of the
impression cylinder 1031 was increased, so that the printing
apparatus became expensive.
23. The method disclosed in Examined Japanese Patent Publication
No. 55-28860 was limited to the printing apparatus using continuous
webs, and could not be applied to the printing apparatus using
sheets of paper. In the technique disclosed in Examined Japanese
Patent Publication No. 3-71983, since one blanket cylinder was
shared by two ink coating apparatus, there occurred a problem in
which process color printing could not be carried out. Also, since
one blanket cylinder was shared by two ink coating apparatus, the
distance of the ink coating apparatus could not be increased due to
the structure of the printing apparatus, so that workability of
plate replacements became worse. In the technique disclosed in
Examined Japanese Patent Publication No. 3-71983, a plate feeding
and discharging apparatus was used to improve workability. Though
the plate was easily replaced by use of the plate feeding and
discharging apparatus, there occurred a problem in which the
printing apparatus became expensive.
24. In the ink coating apparatus disclosed in Examined Japanese
Patent Publication No. 4-68147, there was a problem in which
striped defects were generated in the circumferential direction of
the surface of the coated ink film because of paper dust clogged at
the doctor blade portion as shown in FIG. 6. In other words, when
the doctor blade portion is clogged with paper dust, a form roller
1201 bends at the clogging portion and escapes therefrom. Since the
thickness of the ink layer of this portion is increased and the
portion between the doctor blade 1202 and the form roller 1201 is
clogged with paper dust, striped defects 1252 are generated in an
ink layer in the circumferential direction.
25. Since the defects were left in the ink layer on the coating
roller as a deep groove, such troublesome defects could not be
easily eliminated even if the distributing roller is simply
used.
26. In the imaging apparatus disclosed in Unexamined Japanese
Patent Publication No. 3-24549, the printing plate, which is the
imaging medium exposed and developed, is cut by a built-in cutting
apparatus, thereafter the printing plate is automatically on the
imaging apparatus. According to such the imaging apparatus, the
positioning of the mutual printing positions of imaging mediums of
the respective colors was not accurately made in the multicolor
printing apparatus. As a result, there was a problem in which the
mutual printing positions of imaging mediums of the respective
colors had to be adjusted again before continuous printing was
executed.
27. Unexamined Japanese Patent Publication No. 5-8366 describes a
method in which the imaging medium is fixed to the plate cylinder
with a flat-headed screw, or adhered thereto with adhesive.
However, the positioning of the imaging medium and that of the
print pattern cannot be accurately made. Moreover, this publication
describes no specific method other than the positioning of the
imaging medium and that of the print pattern. Therefore, in the
imaging medium prepared by the apparatus as described in Unexamined
Japanese Patent Publication No. 5-8366, there was no other way than
the aforementioned method of positioning the register marks in
connection with the positioning method at attaching of the imaging
medium to the printing apparatus.
28. On the other hand, the printing apparatus having a laser head
for imaging is known. In this apparatus, imaging is executed after
imaging medium is wound around the plate cylinder, and ink is
directly fed and printing is executed. In this apparatus, if the
positional relationship between the plate cylinder and the imaging
head are made to completely corresponding to each other for each
color, the positioning of the imaging medium can be omitted or
largely simplified at the printing time.
29. However, the above printing apparatus can neither perform
imaging during the printing and nor print during the imaging when
the imaging head is provided therein. It cannot avoid a decrease in
productivity as a printing apparatus or independent apparatus. In
addition, since the imaging head occupies most of the manufacturing
cost of the imaging apparatus. If the head is provided for each
plate cylinder of each color, the manufacturing cost of the entire
apparatus is largely increased. One imaging apparatus is not
necessary for one printing apparatus. Generally, imaging mediums to
be used for many printing apparatus are made by one imaging
apparatus. As compared with the case in which the printing
apparatus and the imaging apparatus are separately provided as a
different structure, the structure in which the imaging apparatus
is provided in the printing apparatus as in the above-mentioned
apparatus has demerits in terms of productivity and the
manufacturing cost.
30. As explained above, the mutual positioning of the image
patterns for the respective colors in the multicolor printing was
performed as the follows. That is, the positioning was made by
adjusting the position of the plates in the printing apparatus and
the timing such that the positions of the register marks printed on
the recording mediums for the respective colors were coincide with
each other.
31. Hence, simple installing of the imaging medium S which were
directly prepared by the imaging apparatus to the printing
apparatus cannot achieve accurate positioning of the imaging
mediums.
32. Moreover, there has been no imaging apparatus in which some
contrivance was added to a positioning hole size, which was
necessary for adjusting the positions of the imaging mediums, and
chamfering of end portions of the imaging mediums for another
reason. Moreover, there was no imaging apparatus in which the
imaging medium attaching member was subjected to a surface coating
process to improve accuracy of attaching the imaging medium to the
imaging apparatus.
33. In the configuration that a beam irradiation apparatus having a
plurality of beam irradiation sources is continuously scanned in
the direction of a rotation axis of the attaching member at a fixed
speed as continuously rotating the attaching member around which
the imaging medium is wound at a fixed speed, there was a problem
in which the image was obliquely formed with respect to a reference
direction of an original imaging area of the imaging medium.
34. In the imaging apparatus as shown in FIG. 34, the imaging
medium is rotated in a direction of an arrow R (rotational
direction of the attaching member) at peripheral speed Vr, and that
the beam irradiation apparatus is scanned in a direction of an
arrow S (direction of a rotation axis of the attaching member) at
feeding speed Vy. As shown in FIG. 27A, it would be ideal if
imaging dots 2092 formed in an imaging area 2091 of an imaging
medium 2018 would be arranged in a matrix form of rectangle along
an arrow direction 93 of the imaging area 2091.
35. However, in the imaging apparatus as shown in FIG. 34, since
the beam irradiation apparatus is scanned in the direction of the
rotation axis of the attaching member as rotating the attaching
member, if the imaging medium 2018 is fixed to a plate cylinder
2011, serving as the attaching member, such that the reference
direction of the imaging area is parallel to the rotation axis of
the plate cylinder 2011, and the scanning direction of the beam
irradiation apparatus completely coincide with the direction of an
arrow S (.theta.=0 in FIGS. 27A to 27C), there occurred a problem
in which the imaging dots 2092 were deformed to be a parallelogram
as shown in FIG. 27B.
36. A first object of the present invention is to provide a
multicolor printing apparatus in which the disadvantages of the
prior art can be improved in that a back face printing can be
easily carried out, and a good workability can be obtained.
37. A second object of the present invention is to provide a
multicolor printing apparatus in which a good printing quality can
be obtained, no large space is necessary for setting a printing
apparatus, and a manufacturing cost is reasonable.
38. A third object of the present invention is to provide an duplex
printing method for providing a good printing quality at a small
space easily.
39. A fourth object of the present invention is to provide a
coating apparatus in which disadvantages of the prior art can be
improved and striped defects are not easily generated in the
circumferential direction of the surface of the coated ink film
because of paper dust even when ink having high viscosity is
coated.
40. A fifth object of the present invention is to provide an
imaging apparatus in which the disadvantages of the prior art can
be improved in that the positioning of the printing position at
printing in that can be easily realized in a state that an imaging
apparatus and a printing apparatus are maintained as independent
structures, and provide a printing apparatus and a printing system,
and an imaging method, and a printing method.
41. A sixth object of the present invention is to provide an
imaging apparatus with a reasonable cost in which disadvantages of
the prior art can be improved in that an image can be formed
without having an inclination with respect to the imaging medium,
the positioning of the imaging medium at an imaging time can be
easily carried out where an imaging apparatus and a printing
apparatus are independent structures, and an inclination of the
image position in the imaging medium can be restrained and
corrected, so that the positioning of printing plate in a printing
apparatus can be easily carried out, and provide an imaging method
and a printing system.
DISCLOSURE OF INVENTION
42. According to the present invention, there is provided a
multicolor printing apparatus including a printing apparatus
comprising a plurality of blanket cylinders normally-contacting to
a impression cylinder plate cylinders normally-contacting to the
respective blanket cylinders; and ink coating apparatus for coating
the respective plate cylinders with ink, wherein the ink coating
apparatus are arranged substantially in a direction of gravity, a
feeding apparatus for feeding sheets of recording mediums to the
printing apparatus and a discharging apparatus for discharging
sheets of recording mediums are provided on a side opposite to a
setting side of the ink coating apparatus with respect to the
blanket cylinders.
43. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the multicolor printing apparatus wherein the
number of the impression cylinder is the plural number.
44. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the multicolor printing apparatus wherein the
feeding apparatus for feeding sheets of recording mediums is
positioned at a lower side than the discharging apparatus such that
the sheets of recording mediums flow from a lower side to an upper
side.
45. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the multicolor printing apparatus wherein each of
the ink coating apparatus comprises a coating roller with an
elastic surface, and a doctor blade, structured to move back and
forth freely to the outer peripheral surface of the coating roller,
for controlling the thickness of coated ink film formed on the
outer peripheral surface.
46. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the multicolor printing apparatus wherein the
impression cylinders are double-diametered impression cylinders,
and the transfer of the recording mediums between the
double-diametered impression cylinders is carried out by a
triple-diametered transfer cylinder.
47. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the multicolor printing apparatus wherein the
impression cylinders are triple-diametered impression cylinders,
and the transfer of the recording mediums between the
triple-diametered impression cylinders is carried out by a
double-diametered transfer cylinder.
48. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the multicolor printing apparatus further
comprising means for drying coloring agent on the sheets of
recording mediums after discharging printed sheets of recording
mediums between the final blanket cylinder and the final impression
cylinder.
49. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the multicolor printing apparatus further
comprising a discharge station on which the printed sheets of
recording mediums are stacked after the printed sheets of recording
mediums are discharged between the final blanket cylinder and the
final impression cylinder, the discharge station is configured to
be horizontally rotatable, thereby the stacked printed sheets of
recording mediums can be rotatable in a 180.degree. arc with
respect to the direction of a normal line.
50. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the multicolor printing apparatus further
comprising discharge station moving means for moving the discharge
station to the feeding position of the recording mediums of the
feeding means after the stacked printed sheets of recording mediums
are rotated in a 180.degree. arc with respect to the direction of
the normal line of the recording mediums.
51. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the multicolor printing apparatus wherein the
plate cylinders will have waterless plates to be wound
therearound.
52. According to another embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided a duplex printing method, in a printing apparatus
comprises a plurality of blanket cylinders normally-contacting to
an impression cylinder, plate cylinders normally-contacting to the
respective blanket cylinders, and ink coating apparatus, arranged
in a substantially gravity direction, for coating the respective
plate cylinders with ink, the duplex printing method comprising the
steps of: feeding recording mediums to the blanket cylinders of the
printing apparatus from a recording medium feeding position on a
side opposite to a side where the ink coating apparatus are
arranged; passing the sheets of recording mediums between the
blanket cylinders and the impression cylinders so as to transfer an
ink image onto a first surface of the recording mediums; stacking
the recording mediums discharged from the opposite side on a
discharge station; rotating the discharge station in a 180.degree.
arc with respect to the direction of a normal line of the recording
mediums so as to feed the stacked recording mediums to the
recording medium feeding position; and passing the recording
mediums again between the blanket cylinders and the impression
cylinder so as to transfer an ink image onto a second surface of
the recording mediums.
53. According to the present invention, there is provided a coating
apparatus comprising: a coating roller with an elastic surface; and
a doctor blade, configured to move back and forth freely to the
outer peripheral surface of the coating roller, for controlling the
thickness of coated film formed on the outer peripheral surface;
wherein the coating apparatus is provided at least one flattening
member for flattening a surface of the coated film on the coating
roller.
54. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the coating apparatus wherein a plurality of
flattening members for flattening the surface of the coated film is
provided.
55. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the coating apparatus wherein at least one
flattening member for flattening the surface of the coated film is
a blade.
56. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the coating apparatus wherein at least one
flattening member for flattening the surface of the coated film is
a roller, and its peripheral speed is lower than the coating roller
or its rotational direction is the same as the coating roller.
57. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the coating apparatus wherein at least one
flattening member for flattening the surface of the coated film is
positioned at an upstream side of the doctor blade with respect to
the direction where the coating roller progresses.
58. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the coating apparatus wherein at least one
flattening member for flattening the surface of the coated film is
positioned at a downstream side of the doctor blade with respect to
the direction where the coating roller progresses on a coating
surface.
59. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the coating apparatus wherein at least one
flattening member for flattening the surface of the coated film is
a blade, front edges of leading sides of the doctor blade and the
blade as the flattening member, are formed to be curved, and the
radius of curvature of the doctor blade is the same as that of the
flattening blade or larger than that of the flattening blade.
60. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the coating apparatus, further comprising: an
auxiliary coating roller provided at each of the upstream and
downstream sides of the coating roller to the direction where the
surface to be coated by the coating roller progresses; and ink
distributing rollers, provided between the coating roller and the
auxiliary coating rollers, contacting the coating roller and the
auxiliary coating roller simultaneously and oscillating in the
axial direction.
61. According to another embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided a printing apparatus comprising: a coating apparatus
and plate cylinders around which printing plates for receiving ink
supply from the coating apparatus are wound.
62. According to another embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided a coating apparatus comprising: a coating roller with
an elastic surface; and a doctor blade, configured to move back and
forth freely to an outer peripheral surface of the coating roller,
for controlling the thickness of coated film formed on the outer
peripheral surface; wherein the coating apparatus is provided at
least one auxiliary coating roller provided at each of the upstream
and downstream sides of the coating roller to the direction where
the surface to be coated by the coating roller progresses; and ink
distributing rollers, provided between the coating roller and the
auxiliary coating rollers, contacting the coating roller and the
auxiliary coating rollers simultaneously and oscillating in the
axial direction.
63. According to another embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided a coating apparatus comprising: a coating roller with
an elastic surface; and a doctor blade, configured to move back and
forth freely to an outer peripheral surface of the coating roller,
for controlling the thickness of coated film formed on the outer
peripheral surface; wherein the coating apparatus is provided at
least one auxiliary coating roller provided at each of the upstream
and downstream sides of the coating roller to the direction where
the surface to be coated by the coating roller progresses; ink
distributing rollers, provided between the coating roller and the
auxiliary coating rollers, contacting the coating roller and the
auxiliary coating rollers simultaneously and oscillating in the
axial direction; and at least one flattening member for flattening
the surface of the coated film on the coating roller.
64. According to another embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided a coating apparatus comprising: a coating roller with
an elastic surface; and a doctor blade, configured to move back and
forth freely to the outer peripheral surface of the coating roller,
for controlling the thickness of coated film formed on the outer
peripheral surface, wherein the coating roller is formed of a
non-elastic rotation shaft and an elastic member having a
multilayer structure in which at least an uppermost surface layer
wrapping the rotation shaft is formed of polyurethane, and hardness
of each elastic layer of the elastic member of the coating roller
becomes higher than an inner layer as approaching to the surface
layer.
65. According to another embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided the coating apparatus wherein surface hardness of the
coating roller surface layer is more than 40.degree. of rubber
hardness based on JISA.
66. According to the present invention, there is provided a
printing system comprising: an imaging apparatus for generating a
change in an imaging characteristic according to imaging data on
the imaging medium by irradiation of an energy beam so as to
execute imaging; and a printing apparatus for supplying ink to the
imaging medium so as to execute printing on recording mediums,
wherein a positioning method of the imaging medium in the printing
apparatus is substantially the same as that of the imaging medium
in the imaging apparatus.
67. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the printing system wherein an fixing method of
the imaging medium to the printing apparatus is substantially the
same as that of the imaging medium to the imaging apparatus.
68. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the printing system wherein both the imaging
apparatus and the printing apparatus are configured such that the
imaging medium is wound around plate cylinders, and the plate
cylinders of the imaging apparatus and that of the printing
apparatus have substantially the same configuration.
69. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the printing system wherein the positioning
method of the imaging medium in the imaging apparatus is carried
out by engaging positioning holes provided in the imaging medium
with positioning pins provided in the imaging apparatus.
70. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the printing system wherein the positioning
method of the imaging medium in the imaging apparatus and that of
the imaging medium in the printing apparatus are carried out by
abutting an abutting portion processed to a predetermined shape in
the imaging medium against an abutment receiving portion of the
imaging apparatus or the printing apparatus.
71. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the printing system wherein the positioning
method of the imaging medium in the imaging apparatus is carried
out based on a detection result of the positioning holes provided
in the imaging medium detected by positioning hole detecting means
provided in the imaging apparatus.
72. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the printing system wherein the positioning
method of the imaging medium in the printing apparatus is carried
out by engaging positioning holes provided in the imaging medium
with positioning pins provided in the printing apparatus.
73. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the printing system wherein the positioning
method of the imaging medium in the printing apparatus is carried
out based on a detection result of the positioning holes provided
in the imaging medium detected by positioning hole detecting means
provided in the printing apparatus.
74. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the printing system wherein the positioning
method of the imaging medium in the imaging apparatus is carried
out based on a detection result of position of a register mark,
formed on the imaging medium prior to imaging, detected by register
mark position detecting means provided in the imaging
apparatus.
75. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the printing system wherein the positioning
method of the imaging medium in the printing apparatus is carried
out based on a detection result of a position of a register mark,
formed on the imaging medium prior to printing, detected by
register mark position detecting means provided in the printing
apparatus.
76. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the printing system, wherein a positioning method
of an image on the imaging medium in the imaging apparatus is
carried out based on a detection result of a position of a register
mark formed on an imaging medium attaching member of the imaging
apparatus detected by register mark position detecting means
provided in the imaging apparatus.
77. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the printing system wherein the positioning
method of a printing position in the printing apparatus is carried
out based on a detection result of a position of a register mark
formed on an imaging medium attaching member of the printing
apparatus detected by register mark position detecting means formed
in the printing apparatus.
78. According to another embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided a printing method comprising the steps of: positioning
an imaging medium at an imaging apparatus; generating a change in
an imaging characteristic according to imaging data on the imaging
medium by irradiation of an energy beam so as to execute imaging;
positioning the imaging medium at a printing apparatus by
substantially the same positioning method as the imaging apparatus;
and feeding ink to the imaging medium so as to execute printing on
a recording medium.
79. According to another embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided a printing method comprising the steps: positioning an
imaging mediums at an imaging apparatus; positioning the imaging
medium, on which a change in an imaging characteristic according to
imaging data is generated by irradiation of an energy beam, at a
printing apparatus by substantially the same positioning method as
the imaging apparatus; and feeding ink to the imaging medium so as
to execute printing on a recording medium.
80. According to another embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided an imaging apparatus for generating a change in an
imaging characteristic according to imaging data on an imaging
medium by irradiation of an energy beam so as to execute imaging,
wherein the imaging medium is positioned by substantially the same
method as a printing apparatus for feeding ink onto the imaging
medium imaged by the imaging apparatus so as to execute printing on
a recording medium.
81. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the imaging apparatus wherein the imaging medium
is wound around plate cylinder as rotating the plate cylinder in a
first rotation direction, imaging is executed in this state, and
the imaging medium is detached from the plate cylinder as rotating
the plate cylinder in a second rotation direction opposite to the
first rotation direction.
82. According to another embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided a printing apparatus, which uses an imaging apparatus
for generating a change in an imaging characteristic according to
imaging data on an imaging medium by irradiation of an energy beam
so as to execute imaging, for printing on a recording medium by
feeding ink onto the imaging medium imaged by the imaging
apparatus, wherein the imaging medium is positioned by
substantially the same method as the imaging apparatus.
83. According to another embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided an imaging method for executing imaging using an
imaging apparatus for generating a change in an imaging
characteristic according to imaging data on an imaging medium by
irradiation of an energy beam so as to execute imaging, wherein the
imaging medium is positioned at the imaging apparatus by
substantially the same method as a printing apparatus for printing
on a recording medium by feeding ink onto the imaging medium imaged
by the imaging apparatus.
84. According to another embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided an imaging apparatus, which comprises a feeding
apparatus for feeding an imaging medium to the imaging apparatus
and a discharging apparatus for discharging the medium from the
imaging apparatus on the same side, wherein the imaging medium fed
from the feeding apparatus is wound around plate cylinder as
rotating the plate cylinder in a first rotation direction, imaging
is executed in this state, the imaging medium is detached from the
plate cylinder as rotating the plate cylinder in a second rotation
direction opposite to the first rotation directions so as to
discharge the imaging medium by the discharging apparatus.
85. According to another embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided an imaging apparatus, in which a positioning method of
an imaging medium is carried out by engaging positioning holes
provided in the imaging medium with positioning pins provided in
the imaging apparatus, wherein for use of a resin film as a base
material of the imaging medium, when the engagement state between
the positioning holes provided in the imaging medium and the
positioning pins provided in the imaging apparatus is set such that
an opening diameter of each of the positioning holes is larger than
an outer diameter of each of the positioning pins, the diameter
difference is set to be smaller than the dot pitch, and when the
engagement state is set such that the opening diameter of each of
the positioning holes is smaller than the outer diameter of each of
the positioning pins, the diameter difference is set to be within a
range where the positioning holes are not broken by the
engagement.
86. According to another embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided a printing apparatus, in which a positioning method of
an imaging medium is carried out by engaging positioning holes
provided in the imaging medium with positioning pins provided in
the printing apparatus, wherein for use of a resin film as a base
material of the imaging medium, when the engagement state between
the positioning holes provided in the imaging medium and the
positioning pins provided in the imaging apparatus is set such that
an opening diameter of each of the positioning holes is larger than
an outer diameter of each of the positioning pins, the diameter
difference is set to be smaller than the dot pitch, and when the
engagement state is set such that the opening diameter of each of
the positioning holes is smaller than the outer diameter of each of
the positioning pins, the diameter difference is set to be within a
range where the positioning holes are not broken by the
engagement.
87. According to another embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided an imaging apparatus, in which a positioning method of
an imaging medium is carried out by engaging positioning holes
provided in the imaging medium with positioning pins provided in
the imaging apparatus, wherein for use of metal as a base material
of the imaging medium, when the engagement state between the
positioning holes provided on the imaging medium and the
positioning pins provided in the imaging apparatus is set such that
an opening diameter of each of the positioning holes is larger than
an outer diameter of each of the positioning pins and the diameter
difference is smaller than the dot pitch.
88. According to another embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided a printing apparatus, in which a positioning method of
an imaging medium is carried out by engaging positioning holes
provided on the imaging medium with positioning pins provided in
the printing apparatus, wherein for use of metal as a base material
of the imaging medium, when the engagement state between the
positioning holes provided in the imaging medium and the
positioning pins provided in the imaging apparatus is set such that
an opening diameter of each of the positioning holes is larger than
an outer diameter of each of the positioning pins and the diameter
difference is smaller than the dot pitch.
89. According to another embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided the printing system, in which a positioning method of
an imaging medium in the imaging apparatus is carried out by
engaging positioning holes provided in the imaging medium with
positioning pins provided in the imaging apparatus, wherein for use
of a resin film as a base material of the imaging medium, when the
engagement state between the positioning holes provided in the
imaging medium and positioning pins provided in the imaging
apparatus is set such that an opening diameter of each of the
positioning holes is larger than an outer diameter of each of the
positioning pins, the diameter difference is set to be smaller than
the dot pitch, and when the engagement state is set such that the
opening diameter of each of the positioning holes is smaller than
the outer diameter of each of the positioning pins, the diameter
difference is set to be within a range where the positioning holes
are not broken by the engagement.
90. According to another embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided the printing system, in which a positioning method of
an imaging medium in the imaging apparatus is carried out by
engaging positioning holes provided in the imaging medium with
positioning pins provided in the imaging apparatus, wherein for use
of metal as a base material of the imaging medium, when the
engagement state between the positioning holes provided on the
imaging medium and positioning pins provided in the imaging
apparatus is set such that an opening diameter of each of the
positioning holes is larger than an outer diameter of each of the
positioning pins and the diameter difference is smaller than the
dot pitch.
91. According to another embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided the printing system in which a positioning method of an
imaging medium in the imaging apparatus is carried out by engaging
positioning holes provided in the imaging medium with positioning
pins provided in the imaging apparatus, wherein at least one of the
sizes, the arrangement, and the shapes of the positioning pins and
the positioning holes is changed in each of the cases when the base
material of the imaging medium is the resin film and when the base
material of the imaging medium is metal.
92. According to another embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided an imaging medium imaged by an imaging apparatus for
generating a change in an imaging characteristic according to
imaging data on the imaging medium by irradiation of an energy beam
so as to execute imaging, wherein at least a side end portion on
the opposite side surface to the imaging surface of the imaging
medium, in which the imaging medium is started to be wound around
an imaging medium attaching member of the imaging apparatus, is
chamfered.
93. According to another embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided an imaging medium imaged by an imaging apparatus for
generating a change in an imaging characteristic according to
imaging data on the imaging medium by irradiation of an energy beam
so as to execute imaging, wherein the imaging medium is cut from an
opposite side surface of an imaging surface when being cut to a
predetermined size.
94. According to another embodiment of the present invention, there
is provided an imaging apparatus for generating a change in an
imaging characteristic according to imaging data on the imaging
medium by irradiation of an energy beam so as to execute imaging,
wherein at least the circumferential surface of an attaching member
around which the imaging medium is wound is treated so that it is
harder than the base material of the imaging medium.
95. According to the present invention, there is provided an
imaging apparatus for generating a change in an imaging
characteristic according to imaging data on the imaging medium by
irradiation of an energy beam so as to execute imaging, wherein the
imaging apparatus comprising: an attaching member for winding the
imaging medium therearound; a motor for rotating the attaching
member; and scanning means for scanning an irradiation apparatus of
the energy beam in substantially the same direction as the
direction of the rotation axis of the attaching member, wherein the
scanning direction is inclined against the rotation axis of the
attaching member substantially by a ratio of a scanning speed of
the scanning means to a peripheral speed of the surface of the
imaging medium wound around the attaching member when the
irradiation apparatus is scanned in substantially the same
direction as the direction of the rotation axis of the attaching
member.
96. According to the present invention, there is provided an
imaging apparatus for generating a change in an imaging
characteristic according to imaging data on the imaging medium by
irradiation of an energy beam so as to execute imaging, wherein the
imaging apparatus comprising: an attaching member for winding the
imaging medium therearound; a motor for rotating the attaching
member; scanning means for scanning an irradiation apparatus of the
energy beam in substantially the same direction as the direction of
the rotation axis of the attaching member; and positioning means
for positioning the imaging medium such that a reference direction
of an imaging area is inclined against the rotation axis of the
attaching member substantially by a ratio of a scanning speed of
the scanning means to a peripheral speed of the surface of the
imaging medium wound around the attaching member when the imaging
medium is attached to the attaching member.
97. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the imaging apparatus wherein the scanning
direction of the irradiation apparatus of the energy beam is
inclined against the rotation axis of the attaching member
substantially by a ratio of a scanning speed of the scanning means
to a peripheral speed of the surface of the imaging medium wound
around the attaching member.
98. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided an imaging method wherein when imaging is
executed by attaching an imaging medium to an attaching member,
rotating the attaching member, scanning an irradiation apparatus of
energy beam in substantially the same direction as the direction of
a rotation axis of the attaching member and generating a change in
an imaging characteristic according to imaging data on the imaging
mediums by irradiation of the energy beam, a reference direction of
an imaging area is inclined against the rotation axis of the
attaching member substantially by a ratio of a scanning speed of
the irradiation apparatus to a peripheral speed of the surface of
the imaging medium wound around the attaching member when the
imaging medium is wound around the attaching member.
99. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided an imaging method wherein when the irradiation
apparatus of energy beam is scanned, a scanning direction of the
energy beam is inclined against the rotation axis of the attaching
member and about a beam irradiation direction of the irradiation
apparatus as the rotation axis substantially by a ratio of a
scanning speed of the irradiation apparatus to a peripheral speed
of the surface of the imaging medium wound around the attaching
member.
100. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided a printing system comprising: an imaging
apparatus for generating a change in an imaging characteristic
according to imaging data on an imaging medium by irradiation of an
energy beam so as to execute imaging; and a printing apparatus for
printing on a recording medium by feeding ink onto the imaging
medium imaged, wherein the imaging apparatus comprises an attaching
member for imaging to wind the imaging medium therearound, a motor
for rotating the attaching member for imaging, and scanning means
for scanning an irradiation apparatus of the energy beam in
substantially the same direction as the direction of the rotation
axis of the attaching member, and the printing apparatus comprises
an attaching member for printing to wind the imaging medium
therearound after imaging, and a motor for rotating the attaching
member for printing, the printing system wherein the direction
where the imaging medium is wound around the each attaching member
is different substantially by a ratio of a scanning speed of the
scanning means of the irradiation apparatus of energy beam to a
peripheral speed of the surface of the imaging medium wound around
the attaching member in each of the cases when the imaging medium
is wound around the attaching member for imaging and when the
imaging medium after imaging is wound around the attaching member
for printing.
101. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the printing system wherein the scanning
direction of the irradiation apparatus of energy beam is inclined
against the rotation axis of the attaching member and about a beam
irradiation direction of the irradiation apparatus as the rotation
axis substantially by a ratio of a scanning speed of the scanning
means to a peripheral speed of the surface of the imaging medium
wound around the attaching member.
102. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the printing system wherein a positioning method
of the imaging medium in the printing apparatus is substantially
the same as that of the imaging medium in the imaging apparatus
except for the difference in the winding direction.
103. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the printing system wherein a attaching method of
the imaging medium in the printing apparatus is substantially the
same as that of the imaging medium in the imaging apparatus except
for the difference in the winding direction.
104. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the printing system wherein the attaching member
of the imaging medium in the imaging apparatus and that of a
printing plate in the printing apparatus have substantially the
same configuration excepting the difference in the winding
direction.
105. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the imaging apparatus wherein the positioning
method of the imaging medium in the imaging apparatus is carried
out by engaging positioning holes provided in the imaging mediums
with positioning pins provided in the imaging apparatus.
106. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the imaging apparatus wherein the positioning
method of the imaging medium in the imaging apparatus and that of
the imaging medium in the printing apparatus are carried out by
abutting an abutting portion of the imaging medium processed to a
predetermined shape against an abutment receiving portion of the
imaging apparatus.
107. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the imaging apparatus wherein a positioning
method of an image on the imaging medium in the imaging apparatus
is carried out based on a detection result of the positioning holes
provided on the imaging medium detected by positioning hole
detecting means provided in the imaging apparatus.
108. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the imaging apparatus wherein a positioning
method of an image on the imaging medium in the imaging apparatus
is carried out based on a detection result of a position of a
register mark formed on the imaging medium attaching member of the
imaging apparatus detected by register mark position detecting
means provided in the imaging apparatus.
109. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
there is provided the imaging apparatus wherein a positioning
method of an image on the imaging medium in the imaging apparatus
is carried out based on a detection result of a position of a
register mark, formed on the imaging medium prior to imaging,
detected by register mark position detecting means provided in the
imaging apparatus.
110. In the present invention, a plurality of cylinders
normally-contacts each other, means that the cylinders contact in a
state that the axial directions of the respective cylinder are
substantially parallel to each other, and ink or an ink image can
be transferred from one of the cylinder to another.
111. In the present invention, "an imaging medium" indicates a film
and a plate for manufacturing a printing plate etc, which have a
multilayer structure containing layers showing specific reactions
to irradiation by a beam irradiation source such as a laser
source.
112. In many cases, the specific reactions are classified into a
photon mode and a heat mode depending on the difference in the
reaction.
113. In the case of the photon mode, a layer showing the specific
reaction, that is, a photosensitive layer, physical and chemical
properties such as solubility to specific solvent are changed by
optical energy of the beam. For example, a soluble property is
changed to an insoluble property, and vice versa. Also, there is a
possibility that a change in light transmission, and occurrence of
an affinity for specific solution in the surface layer will be
brought about. Then, a developing process using specific solvent is
done after an imaging process, so that a film plate or a printing
plate are made.
114. In the case of the heat mode, there occur changes such as a
layer showing the specific reaction, that is, a heat sensitive
layer is removed by heat energy of the beam, or the heat sensitive
layer is likely to be removed, or the heat sensitive layer is not
easily removed. If an irradiation section or a non-irradiation
section is not completely removed by only the beam irradiation, a
physical post-process is added thereto, so that the irradiation
section or the non-irradiation section is completely removed. Thus,
physical projections and/or depressions are generated on the
surface of the imaging medium, and the film plate or the printing
plate are formed.
115. As the film plate for printing of the photon mode, there are a
film plate having a photosensitive layer such as silver salt, a
film plate having a resin layer of a photodislocation type or a
resin layer of a photopolymerization type. As the film plate for
printing of the heat mode, there is a film plate having a thermal
decomposition layer, a thermal bonding layer, or a thermal
condensing layer.
116. As the plate for printing, as described in Unexamined Japanese
Patent Publication No. 6-186750 (corresponding to U.S. Pat. No.
5,339,731), incorporated by reference, there is favorably used the
press plate comprising a substrate, a heat sensitive layer
(photosensitive layer) formed thereon, and a surface layer formed
on the heat sensitive layer, wherein the heat sensitive layer and
the surface layer have a different affinity for printing liquid
such as ink or liquid of ink repulsion (dampening water).
117. Moreover, a primer layer or the like is formed between the
heat sensitive layer (photosensitive layer) and the substrate, and
the difference in the affinity may be provided between the primer
layer and the surface layer. As the heat sensitive layer for the
heat mode, a material in which carbon black is diffused to
nitrocellulose, or the metal film such as titanium oxide is
favorably used.
118. Thus, in the specification of the present invention, the
difference in the shape, or the chemical affinity, or the optical
property such as light transmission between the portion subjected
to the beam irradiation and the portion not subjected to the beam
irradiation are referred to as physical properties of the imaging
medium.
119. In the present invention, the beam irradiation sources
includes a source for generating a beam of light such as a laser
beam (including electromagnetic waves such as ultraviolet rays,
visible radiation, infrared rays), and a generation source of
particle beams such as electron beams. Also, other than the beams
having the define directivity, the following sources are included
in the beam irradiation source of the present invention. That is,
there are included all sources, which can resultingly cause the
change in the physical properties in the minute portion of the
imaging medium by the discharge of such as a stylus electrode used
in electrostatic printers.
120. The most favorable beam irradiation source is an optical fiber
emission end to which the emission end of the laser light source or
the light source is coupled. To miniaturize the apparatus, a
semiconductor laser is favorably used as the laser light source. To
obtain high power, a gas laser such as an argon ion laser, a carbon
dioxide laser, or a solid laser such as a YAG laser is favorably
used.
121. In the present invention, "the attaching member of the imaging
medium" is the member for attaching the imaging medium to the
imaging apparatus or the printing apparatus in one. Also, the
attaching member is formed such that the imaging medium is fixed or
moved to a predetermined position with respect to imaging means (a
head for imaging) of the imaging apparatus or the recording medium
transfer path of the printing apparatus. In the type of apparatus
in which the imaging medium is attached to the plate cylinders, the
plate cylinders serve as the attaching member. Moreover, in the
type of apparatus in which the imaging medium is attached to the
interior of the cylinder drum, the cylinder drum serves as the
attaching member. Also, in the case of the flat bed arrangement,
the base on which the imaging medium is loaded is used as the
attaching member.
122. In the present invention, "the image medium positioning
method" indicates the method of positioning the imaging medium at
an attaching member in attaching the imaging medium to the
attaching member of an imaging apparatus or a printing apparatus.
As a preferred embodiment, there is a method using the positioning
holes provided in the imaging medium and the corresponding
positioning pins provided in the attaching member.
123. In the present invention, "the breakage of the positioning
holes" indicates the state in which the positioning holes are
deformed by a physical force so that the original function is lost.
As the breakage of the positioning holes, for example, there are
the expansion of the positioning holes due to plastic deformation,
the shift of the hole center position, and the generation of cracks
around the holes.
124. In the present invention, "the imaging medium attaching
method" indicates the method of attaching the imaging medium to the
attaching member in attaching the imaging medium to the attaching
member of the imaging apparatus or the printing apparatus.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
125. FIG. 1 is a cross-sectional view of a multicolor printing
apparatus of one embodiment of the present invention;
126. FIG. 2 is a plan view of the multicolor printing apparatus of
one embodiment of the present invention;
127. FIG. 3 is a cross-sectional view of a multicolor printing
apparatus of another embodiment of the present invention;
128. FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional view of a coating apparatus of one
embodiment of the present invention;
129. FIG. 5 is a cross-sectional view showing a shape of a front
edge portion on a blade leading side according to the present
invention;
130. FIG. 6 is a cross-sectional view of striped defects in the
circumferential direction of a plate cylinder;
131. FIG. 7 is a cross-sectional view in which circumferential
striped defects in a plate cylinder are flattened;
132. FIG. 8 is a cross-sectional view of an ink unit of a coating
apparatus of another embodiment of the present invention;
133. FIG. 9 is a cross-sectional view of a coating apparatus of one
embodiment of the present invention;
134. FIG. 10 is a plan view of a coating apparatus of one
embodiment of the present invention;
135. FIG. 11 is a cross-sectional view of an ink unit of a coating
apparatus of one embodiment of the present invention;
136. FIG. 12 is a cross-sectional view of another ink unit of a
coating apparatus of one embodiment of the present invention;
137. FIG. 13 is a perspective view showing an imaging apparatus of
one embodiment of the present invention;
138. FIG. 14 is a perspective view showing a laser diode array used
in an imaging apparatus of one embodiment of the present
invention;
139. FIG. 15 is a perspective view showing a fiber array used in an
imaging apparatus of one embodiment of the present invention;
140. FIG. 16 is a front view showing an outgoing end of the optical
fiber of FIG. 15;
141. FIG. 17 is a front view for explanation of an inclination of
an array;
142. FIG. 18 is a plan view of an imaging medium for an imaging
apparatus of one embodiment of the present invention;
143. FIG. 19 is a cross-sectional view of a plate cylinder of an
imaging apparatus of one embodiment of the present invention;
144. FIG. 20 is a cross-sectional view of a plate cylinder of an
imaging apparatus of another embodiment of the present
invention;
145. FIG. 21 is a perspective view of an imaging apparatus of one
embodiment of the present invention;
146. FIG. 22 is an explanatory view of a detachment of an imaging
medium of one embodiment of the present invention;
147. FIG. 23 is a perspective view of an imaging apparatus of the
present invention;
148. FIG. 24 is a perspective view of an imaging apparatus of one
embodiment of the present invention;
149. FIG. 25 is a front view explaining an inclination of an
array;
150. FIG. 26 is an explanatory view of an image shape created by an
imaging apparatus of the present invention;
151. FIGS. 27A to 27C are explanatory views of an image shape
created by an imaging apparatus of the present invention;
152. FIG. 28 is a perspective view of an imaging apparatus of one
embodiment of the present invention;
153. FIG. 29 is a front view of a conventional multicolor printing
apparatus disclosed in Unexamined Japanese Patent Publication No.
54-152504;
154. FIG. 30 is a front view of a conventional multicolor printing
apparatus disclosed in Examined Japanese Patent Publication No.
55-28860;
155. FIG. 31 is a front view of a conventional multicolor printing
apparatus disclosed in Examined Japanese Patent Publication No.
3-71983;
156. FIG. 32 is a cross-sectional view of a conventional coating
apparatus disclosed in Examined Japanese Patent Publication No.
4-68147;
157. FIG. 33 is a schematic cross-sectional view of a conventional
imaging apparatus disclosed in Unexamined Japanese Patent
Publication No. 3-24549;
158. FIG. 34 is a perspective view of a conventional imaging
apparatus disclosed in Unexamined Japanese Patent Publication No.
5-8366; and
159. FIG. 35 is a perspective view of a conventional imaging
apparatus disclosed in Unexamined Japanese Patent Publication No.
8-72311.
BEST MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION
160. The following will explain a multicolor printing apparatus and
a duplex printing method of a favorable embodiment of the present
invention with reference to drawings.
161. FIG. 1 is a schematic cross-sectional view of a multicolor
printing apparatus of one embodiment of the present invention. FIG.
2 is the plan view.
162. As shown in FIG. 1, a printing apparatus 1001 comprises a
frame body 1011. The frame body 1011 comprises a recording medium
supplying apparatus 1020 of a unit type, a delivery cylinder 1030,
impression cylinders 1031, 1032, a transfer cylinder 1033, a
discharging apparatus 1070, and ink coating apparatus 1061, 1062,
1063 and 1064. Plate cylinders 1041, 1042, 1043, 1044 each having a
printing plate are attached to the ink coating apparatus 1061,
1062, 1063, 1064, respectively. Blanket cylinders 1051, 1052, 1053,
1054 are provided to contact the plate cylinders 1041, 1042, 1043,
1044, respectively. The paper supplying apparatus 1020 comprises a
feeding station 1021, serving as a stacker for a recording medium,
a paper pickup apparatus 1022, a paper transfer conveyor 1023,
serving as a paper supplying apparatus, a feeding apparatus 1024,
which detects a head of a sheet of paper so as to feed paper to the
delivery cylinder 1030.
163. The discharging apparatus 1070 comprises a rod 1071, a chain
delivery 1072, a discharge station 1073, and a dryer 1074. The rod
1071 has a paper holding apparatus for receiving a printed sheet of
recording medium P from the impression cylinder. The chain delivery
1072 delivers paper to the discharging station 1073. The
discharging station 1073 stacks the printed recording mediums,
rotates horizontally after the end of printing so as to change the
direction by 180.degree. about the direction of the normal line of
the recording mediums. The dryer 1074 dries the recording mediums P
being delivered by the chain delivery 1072.
164. In the printing operation in the printing apparatus 1001 of
FIG. 1, the sheets of recording mediums P are dealt by a human or a
machine, and then stacked in good order at a predetermined position
of the feeding station 1021 of FIG. 1. When the printing apparatus
1001 is actuated, the recording mediums P stacked on the feeding
station 1021 are separated one by one by the injection of
compressed air from an air nozzle (not shown) attached to the paper
pickup apparatus 1022. Thereafter, the recording mediums P are sent
to the paper transfer conveyor 1023 one by one with a distance by
the paper pickup apparatus 1022.
165. The recording mediums P sent to the paper transfer conveyor
1023 are fed by feeding apparatus 1024 at timing when the head
position of the recording medium is just adjusted to the paper
holding sections of the delivery cylinder 1030. Then, the head
position is held by the paper holding apparatus of the delivery
cylinder 1030, and delivered to the paper holding apparatus of the
impression cylinder 1031, which rotates in synchronous with the
delivery cylinder 1030.
166. The delivery cylinder 1030 and the impression cylinder 1031
are formed such that an outer diameter ratio of the cylinder 1030
to the cylinder 1031 is 1 to 2, and the paper holding sections of
the respective cylinders are provided in the respective cylinders
at the above ratio. In other words, one paper holding section is
provided in the delivery cylinder 1030 and tow paper holding
sections are provided in the impression cylinder 1031 (the distance
between two paper holding sections in the cylinder outer peripheral
direction is adjusted to the cylinder outer peripheral length of
the delivery cylinder 1030). The feeding pitch of recording mediums
P and that of impression cylinder 1031 become the same, and paper
can be surely delivered by the paper holding section of the
delivery cylinder 1030 and that of the impression cylinder 1031.
Also, the paper holding sections do not interfere with each other
between the cylinders. In this apparatus, the outer diameter ratio
of the cylinder 1030 to the cylinder 1031 is 1 to 2 in order to
miniaturize the printing apparatus.
167. The recording mediums P whose heads are held by the paper
holding apparatus of the impression cylinder 1031 rotate with the
impression cylinder 1031. Then, the recording mediums P are
sandwiched by the contact portion between the bracket cylinder 1051
and the impression cylinder 1031, and the contact portion between
the blanket cylinder 1052 and the impression cylinder 1031,
sequentially, and predetermined pressure is applied thereto.
168. At this time, image patterns, in the form of as ink images, on
the printing plates 1141 and 1142, which are wound around the plate
cylinders 1041, 1042, respectively, are transferred onto the
blanket cylinders 1051 and 1052 with color ink supplied by ink
coating apparatus 1061, 1062, respectively. Each ink image is
transferred onto the recording mediums P rotating with the
impression cylinder 1031. The distance from the portion where the
impression cylinder 1031 contacts the blanket cylinder 1051 to the
portion where the impression cylinder 1031 contacts the blanket
cylinder 1052 is set to be longer than the maximum length of the
recording mediums P in the direction of the progress. As a result,
there occurs no case in which the recording mediums P contact two
blanket cylinders at the same time.
169. Thus, ink images of two colors, which are supplied from the
ink coating apparatus 1061 and 1062, respectively, are transferred
onto the recording mediums P on the impression cylinder 1031. Then,
the recording mediums P are carried from the impression cylinder
1031 to the transfer cylinder 1033 having the same paper holding
apparatus as the impression cylinder 1031.
170. The impression cylinder 1031 and the transfer cylinder 1033
are formed such that an outer diameter ratio of the cylinder 1031
to the cylinder 1033 is 2 to 3. Then, the paper holding sections of
the respective cylinders are provided in the respective cylinders
at the above ratio, similar to the delivery cylinder. As a result,
the paper holding section of the impression cylinder 1031 and that
of the transfer cylinder 1033 can deliver the recording mediums P
at the same timing. In the printing apparatus 1001, the outer
diameter ratio of 2 to 3, which can reduce the diameter of the
impression cylinder as small as possible, is set in order that the
printing apparatus is miniaturized and the impression cylinder is
manufactured at a low cost as possible.
171. A special paper having a large amount of minute particles is
wound around the surface of the transfer cylinder 1033, and print
ink of the ink images transferred onto the recording mediums P is
not transferred onto the surface of the transfer cylinder 1033.
172. The recording mediums P thus delivered to the transfer
cylinder 1033 are carried from the transfer cylinder 1033 to the
impression cylinder 1032 having the same shape and the same paper
holding apparatus as the impression cylinder 1031. At this time,
image patterns, in the form of ink images, of printing plates 1143
and 1144, which are wound around plate cylinders 1043, 1044,
respectively, are transferred onto the blanket cylinders 1053 and
1054 with color ink supplied by ink coating apparatus 1063, 1064,
respectively. Sequentially, ink images are transferred onto the
recording mediums P, which have been delivered to the impression
cylinder 1032 and rotate with the impression cylinder 1032.
173. The recording mediums P to which four colors have been thus
transferred are carried from the impression cylinder 1032 to the
rod 1071, which is the paper holding member of the chain delivery
1072. The surfaces of the recording mediums P carried to the rod
1071 are dried by the simple dryer 1074 such as an ultra violet ray
curing apparatus in the process in which the recording mediums P
are carried to the discharging station 1073 by the chain delivery
1072. This prevents offset of the print image onto the sheet of
paper. The recording mediums P thus carried to the discharging
station 1073 by the chain delivery 1072 are stacked, and a series
of multicolor printing processes is ended.
174. At this time, as being obvious from FIG. 1, the printed
surfaces of the recording mediums P are placed at a lower surface
side of the recording mediums P in a state in which the recording
mediums P are stacked on the feeding station 1021. Then, the
printed surfaces of the recording mediums P are placed at an upper
surface side of the recording mediums P in a state in which the
recording mediums P are stacked on the discharge station 1073 at
the end of printing. Therefore, even when abnormality such as a
print defectiveness occurs during printing, an operator can confirm
the printing result immediately.
175. In the case where the printing to the back face of the printed
sheet is sequentially performed, the feeding station 1021 is
detached, the discharging station 1073 is rotated, and the
direction of the sheet is changed at by 180.degree. horizontally.
Then, the recording mediums P are shifted to the position of the
feeding station 1021 with the discharging station 1073, and the
discharging station 1073 is used as the feeding station 1021.
Thereby, the discharging station 1073 can be set to the sheet
feeding position of the recording medium supplying apparatus 1020.
Namely, in the printing apparatus 1001, the printing to the back
face can be continuously performed only by installing the empty
feeding station 1021 in place of the discharging station 1073, and
complicated movement of the recording mediums at the duplex
printing can be kept to a minimum. The printing apparatus 1001 can
easily carry out the duplex printing having a good quality even in
a small space.
176. In the above embodiment, double-diametered cylinders are used
(the outer peripheral length of the surface around which the
recording medium is wound was twice as large as the plate cylinder)
as the impression cylinders. And as the transfer cylinder,
triple-diametered cylinder is used. In addition to such the
configuration, waterless plates are used, so that the dampening
water apparatus are omitted. As a result, the ink coating apparatus
can be easily arranged substantially in a direction of gravity.
Note that substantially the same result can be obtained if the
configuration having a triple-diametered cylinder as the impression
cylinders, and a double-diametered cylinder as the transfer
cylinder, are used as shown in FIG. 3. In this case, an outer
diameter ratio of the transfer cylinder 1030 to the impression
cylinder 1031 is 1 to 3.
177. Next, one preferred embodiment of the coating apparatus and
that of the print apparatus of the present invention will be
explained.
178. The multicolor printing or the duplex printing according to
the present embodiment uses waterless plates. In this embodiment,
there are provided unit-typed ink coating apparatus, which are
small and light and detachable. Each ink coating apparatus, as
shown in FIG. 4, comprises the form roller 1201 having an elastic
layer of a single or a multilayer, the doctor blade 1202, the
eccentric cam 1203 for controlling the movement of the doctor
blade, a flattening member 1209, the ink distributing rollers 1210,
1211, and the auxiliary form roller 1212, serving as an auxiliary
coating roller, having an elastic surface.
179. The form roller 1201, the doctor blade 1202, the side plates
1207 and 1208, which are arranged at both sides of the in the form
roller 1201 in its axial direction, and the ink fountain 1206 form
the ink fountain space 1205. The side plates 1207 and 1208 are
gently pressed to the form roller 1201 so as to be sealed. This
prevents ink i of the ink fountain space 1205 from being leaked
outside.
180. A small gear (not shown) rotating solidly with the form roller
1201 is engaged with a large gear (not shown) rotating solidly with
a plate cylinder 1041. Thus, the form roller 1201 and the plate
cylinder 1041 are synchronized with each other and rotated at the
same circumferential speed at their contact section.
181. The ink coating apparatus is configured so that the eccentric
cam 1203 attached to the shaft 1204 is rotated so as to move the
doctor blade 1202 back and fourth in a direction of an arrow A,
thereby changes the engagement between the doctor blade 1202 and
the form roller 1201 in order to control the thickness of the
coated ink film formed on the outer periphery of the form roller
1201.
182. The surface of the coated ink film, whose thickness has been
controlled, on the form roller 1201 is flattened by the flattening
blade 1209, serving as the flattening member.
183. The doctor blade 1202 used in this coating apparatus is made
of steel such as Swedish steel having a thickness of 0.1 to 0.5 mm.
The doctor blade 1202 is held to be inserted from the upper and
lower sides by the ink fountain 1206 and a lower face pressing
member 1214, thereby forming an ink quantity controlling member
1221. Thus, it is configured that by limiting the rotation angle of
a motor (not shown) according to a sensor, which motor is mounted
on each of the ink coating apparatus 1061 to 1064, by controlling
its reciprocal rotation with an electric circuit, and by slightly
rotating the eccentric cam 1203 for controlling the movement of the
doctor blade 1202 through the shaft 1204, the engagement quantity
of the doctor blade 1202, which forms the ink quantity controlling
member 1221, to the surface of the form roller 1201 is controlled.
As a result, the thickness of the coated ink film formed on the
form roller 1201 can be controlled.
184. In the embodiment shown in FIG. 4, the flatting blade 1209 is
used as the flatting member, and the flattening member is made of
steel having the thickness of 0.1 to 0.5 mm. Also, one flattening
member is provided at the downstream side of the doctor blade 1202
to the direction where the form roller 1201 progresses with an
interval of several millimeters. The interval of 1 mm or more is
favorable in view of the flattening effect, and the interval of 10
mm or less is favorable in view of the miniaturization of the
apparatus. Moreover, a favorable range of the interval is about 1
to 3 mm.
185. When the flattening member is positioned at the upstream side
of the doctor blade 1202 in the direction where the form roller
1201 progresses, the striped defects, which have been generated in
the doctor blade portion in the circumferential direction of the
surface of the ink layer because of paper dust or the like, do not
grow and are not so conspicuous. It is because the surface of the
form roller 1201 is once flattened at the place where the
flattening member is set. In particular, this is useful in the
prevention of the striped defects in the printing pattern, which is
uniform to the axial direction of the roller, such as a solid
printing, a screen tint printing, etc, and in the printing pattern
having a small image area such as rules and characters.
186. On the other hand, when the flattening member is positioned at
the downstream side of the doctor blade 1202 in the direction where
the form roller 1201 progresses as shown in FIG. 4, the striped
defects, which have been generated in the doctor blade portion
1202, can be easily made not to be conspicuous regardless of the
image patterns of the printing plates by the flattening blade 1209
serving as the flattening member. It is because the film thickness
of the ink layer on the ink form roller 1201 at the flattering
blade 1209 is uniform and substantially as large as at the doctor
blade 1202. Moreover, since the film thickness of the ink layer on
the ink form roller 1201 at the flattering blade is uniform and
substantially as large as at the doctor blade 1202, the contacting
pressure between the flattening blade 1209 and the surface of the
form roller 1201 can be easily controlled. Therefore, the attaching
position of the flattening member is favorably set to the
downstream side of the doctor blade in the direction where the form
roller 1201 progresses as shown in FIG. 4.
187. As a favorable example in which the blade is used as the
flattening member as shown in FIG. 4, there is a coating apparatus
as shown in FIG. 5. In the coating apparatus, the front edge of the
leading side of the doctor blade 1202 and that of the flattening
blade 1209, serving as the flattening member are curved. Moreover,
the curvature R of the doctor blade 1202 is the same as the
curvature r of the flattening blade 1209 or more. For example, if
the engagement between the surface of the form roller 1201 and the
doctor blade 1202 and between the surface of the form roller 1201
and the flattening blade 1209 are set to be the same, when the ink
layer formed on the surface of the form roller 1201 passes through
the flattening blade 1209, the ink layer is subjected to resistance
by a curvature difference between the front edges of the leading
sides. The resistance is higher than resistance which is obtained
when the ink layer passes through the doctor blade 1209. Hence, it
is easily to provide a coating apparatus which can easily flatten
the ink layer surface, and which can easily control the contacting
pressure between the surface of the form roller 1201 and the doctor
blade 1202 and between the surface of the form roller 1201 and the
flattening blade 1209.
188. Favorable curvature R of the doctor blade 1202 is 15 .mu.m or
more when ordinary waterless ink is used. The curvature R is
varied, depending on degree of elasticity of the form roller 1201,
relative speed of the form roller 1201 to the doctor blade 1202,
viscosity of ink i, etc, so that a suitable value within the range
of 15 .mu.m or more may be selected.
189. As an example, a favorable value of the curvature R is 50 to
75 .mu.m under conditions in which the form roller 1201 is one
layer roller, a surface rubber hardness is 30.degree. of JISA
(corresponding to a durometer A type by Shore), relative velocity
to the doctor blade 1202 is 36 m/min., viscosity of ink i is about
900 poise.
190. In the explanation hereinafter, the rubber hardness indicates
JISA hardness based on the corresponding durometer A type by
Shore.
191. The important technical concept of the present invention is to
separate two functions, which are conventionally imposed on the
doctor blade, that is, the adjustment of film thickness of the
coated ink film, and the flattening of the coated ink film surface
layer. The function of adjusting ink film thickness is provided to
the doctor blade, and the function of flatting the coated ink film
surface is provided to the flattening member.
192. The function of the flattening member is to give suitable
resistance to the surface of an ink layer 1251, as a coated layer,
during the movement of the ink layer, thereby flattening the ink
layer surface just like a trowel.
193. In other words, when the doctor blade portion 1202 is clogged
with paper dust or the like, the form roller 1201 bends at the
clogged portion and escapes therefrom. For this reason, the
thickness of the ink layer of this portion increases, and the
circumferential striped defects 1252 as shown in FIG. 6 are
generated in the ink layer with the clogged paper dust or the like.
Then the striped defects 1252 contact the flattening member, the
risen portion of the ink layer is blocked and ink cannot pass
thereunder, so that ink is pressed into the groove portions of the
striped defects 1252. The groove portions of the stripped defects
1252 are filled with ink, and flattened as shown in FIG. 7.
194. The function of the flattening member is as mentioned above,
and any member may be used if the member gives the suitable
resistance to the surface of the ink layer to block the ink layer.
Basically, there is no limitation in the material of the flattening
member, the shape, and the quantity. However, in consideration of a
simpler structure, and an easier adjustment, it is desirable from
the easiness of the manufacture that the flattening member be
shaped to be a blade as shown in FIG. 4, and that its material be
metal such as iron, ceramics, resin, etc.
195. Moreover, there is a more preferred embodiment of the coating
apparatus. As shown in FIG. 8, the auxiliary form rollers 1212,
1213 are provided at the upstream side of the form roller 1201 and
the downstream side thereof to the progress direction of the
printing plate, serving as surface to be coated by the form roller
1201, respectively. Then, the ink distributing rollers 1210, 1211
are provided between the form roller 1201 and the auxiliary form
rollers 1212 and 1213. The ink distributing rollers 1210 and 1211
come in contact with the form roller 1201 and the auxiliary form
rollers 1212 and 1213 at the same time, and oscillate in the axial
direction.
196. According to the above coating apparatus, the ink layer
surface on the form roller 1201 is flattened by the flattening
member, so that the striped defects 1252 are hardly generated in
the circumferential direction of the surface of the coated ink film
by paper dust or the like. Even if the striped defects are
generated, the striped defects become inconspicuous at the time
when the ink layer is transferred onto the printing plate 1141. It
is because the phases of the striped defects on the auxiliary form
roller 1213 and the form roller 1201 and the auxiliary form roller
1213 differ from each other by the functions of the ink
distributing rollers 1210 and 1211 oscillating in the axial
direction.
197. For example, in the ink coating apparatus as shown in FIGS. 9
and 10, even if the striped defects are generated in the portion of
the doctor blade 1202, each phase of the striped defects is axially
shifted from the form roller 1201, and transferred onto the
auxiliary form rollers 1212 and 1213 by the functions of the ink
distributing rollers 1210 and 1211 oscillating in the axial
direction. For this reason, the ink coating on the printing plate
1141 using each of the auxiliary form roller 1213, the form roller
1201, and the auxiliary form roller 1212 is performed in the state
that the phase is axially shifted. As a result, the striped defects
become inconspicuous on the printing plate 1141 serving as the
coating surface.
198. The form roller 1201 used in this coating apparatus comprises,
for example, a rubber or plastic elastomeric roller having an
elastic surface. The structure of the elastic portion of the roller
may be one layer. Preferably, a multilayer structure having two or
more layers in which its hardness becomes higher than an inner
layer as approaching to the surface layer may be used as shown in
FIGS. 4, 8, 9, 11, and 12 since the generation of the striped
defects can be reduced.
199. In this type of coating apparatus, the thickness of the coated
ink film is controlled by only the change in the engagement between
the doctor blade 1202 and the form roller 1201. If, for example, a
rubber like nitrile rubber is used as material of the form roller
1201, the thickness of the coated ink film is changed by wear of
the roller surface or plasticizer in the rubber is extracted and
the surface hardness of the roller becomes 10.degree. or more
higher than an initial setting value when such a roller is used for
a long period of time. As a result, there occurs a problem in which
the striped defects are frequently generated because of paper
dust.
200. For that reason, the form roller 1201 having the multilayer
structure in which the hardness of the surface layer is set higher
than that of the inner layer may be preferably used. Preferably,
the uppermost surface layer is at least polyurethane rubber, and
more preferably the respective layers may be polyurethane
rubber.
201. Here, the condition "the hardness of the surface layer is set
higher than that of the inner layer" includes the following cases.
Namely, attention is paid to the adjacent two layers, and the
relationship in which the hardness of the layer close to the
surface is higher than that of the layer close to the interior is
established in all adjacent two layers as a more favorable
configuration. The above condition is not limited to the
above-mentioned case. The above condition also means that the
average hardness of the surface layer, which is obtained when the
multilayer of rubber is divided into two halves in the radial
direction, is higher than the average hardness of the inner layer
(the average hardness is a value obtained when the total sum, which
is obtained by multiplying hardness of each layer by the thickness,
is divided by the total thickness). Therefore, even if the rubber
layer does not have a definite layer structure, the above condition
is satisfied in the case in which the above relationship is
established when the layer is divided into two in view of the above
point.
202. The reason why polyurethane rubber is used is as follows:
203. Polyurethane rubber is rich in elasticity and toughness, and
has high tear strength and good abrasion resistance. Due to this,
polyurethane rubber has a good dimensional stability at the time of
friction between the form roller and the doctor blade, so that the
thickness of the coated ink film can be maintained constant. Also,
polyurethane rubber has a considerable low content of plasticizer
as compared with nitrile rubber or the like, which is generally
used in the printing apparatus. The change of the rubber hardness,
which is caused when plasticizer in rubber is extracted, is small.
Moreover, by use of the multilayer in which the hardness of the
surface layer is set higher than that of the inner layer,
polyurethane rubber can largely reduce the striped defects due to
paper dust as compared with the single layer.
204. If all layers are formed of polyurethane rubber, abrasion of
the roller surface is small. As a result, the change in the
thickness of the coated ink film is low even if the roller is used
for a long period of time. By use of the multilayer in which the
hardness of the surface layer is set higher than that of the inner
layer, the generation of the striped defects due to paper dust is
low, and plasticizer in rubber is not extracted, so that the change
in the rubber hardness is small. Therefore, the use of polyurethane
rubber is favorable since good coating conditions can be maintained
for a long period time.
205. In the above-mentioned ink unit, since the form roller 1201
and the doctor blade 1202 rub on each other through the ink layer,
the form roller 1201 is easily worn. The wear of the form roller
1201 increases as the surface hardness of the form roller 1201
decreases. Also, the quantity of heat at the portion of the form
roller 1201 increases, and ink temperature rises, with the result
that they have an unfavorable influence on the printing conditions.
In the single layer of polyurethane rubber had a disadvantage in
which the surface hardness of the form roller could not be highly
increased because of the limitation of hardness. In contrast, when
the form roller is formed of the multilayer structure, the
condition in which no striped defects are generated can be prepared
by reducing the hardness of the inner layer even if the surface
hardness of the uppermost layer is set to 50.degree. or more, which
cannot be used in the single layer. As a result, the form roller
can be used without any problem.
206. In the form roller 1201 of polyurethane rubber, it is required
that the engagement with the doctor blade 1202 be maintained
constant. For this reason, there is favorably used an elastic
structure in which the form roller is immediately returned to the
original state from the deformed state. A foaming structure, which
needs much time to return to the original state from the deformed
state, is not favorable.
207. The present invention obtained the above-mentioned good
advantages by using the polyurethane rubber of the multilayer
structure, which was conventionally difficult to be
manufactured.
208. As polyurethane rubbers that can be used in the present
invention, there are UV Summit by Meiwa Rubber Industrial Co., Ltd,
Uron H by Kinyousha Co., Ltd. New UV by Kanuki Roller Works, Col,
Ltd, etc.
209. In a case where the form roller 1201 having the single
structure of rubber or plastic elastomer is used, the surface
hardness of the form roller 1201 is preferably set to 15.degree. to
70.degree. based on the rubber hardness defined by JISA
(corresponding to a durometer A type by Shore). It is because it is
difficult to form a thin ink film if the hardness is below
15.degree.. Also, a stable ink film can neither be obtained and
normal ink transfer to the plate surface can nor be performed if
the hardness exceeds 70.degree..
210. The favorable value of the hardness is 25.degree. to
50.degree.. The reason is as follows:
211. Specifically, if the surface hardness of the form roller 1201
is low, a frictional heat between the form roller 1201 and the
doctor blade 1202 pressure contacted to the form roller 1201 during
the printing is largely generated. By this influence, the form
roller 1201 is thermally expanded, a difference in peripheral speed
between the form roller 1201 and the plate cylinders occurs and a
slip is induced, and the blanket cylinders easily become dirty. The
favorable value of the surface hardness of the form roller 1201,
which can avoid the above problem, is 40.degree. to 50.degree..
212. On the other hand, when the form roller 1201 having the
multilayer structure of rubber or plastic elastomer is used, the
stable ink film can be obtained by reducing the hardness of the
inner layer even if the surface hardness exceeds 70.degree.. There
is no problem as long as the surface hardness does not become too
low. Therefore, the favorable value of the hardness of the
outermost layer of the form roller 1201 is 40.degree. or more.
213. Next, the following will explain a favorable embodiment of
each of the imaging apparatus of the present invention, the imaging
method, the imaging medium, the printing system, the printing
apparatus, and the printing method with reference to the
drawings.
214. FIG. 13 shows a perspective view of one embodiment of the
imaging apparatus of the present invention. As shown in FIG. 13, an
imaging apparatus 2001 comprises a plate cylinder 2011, serving as
a medium support drum for winding an imaging medium 2018 around its
outer surface, an imaging head 2012 including a beam irradiation
source and an optical system for focusing beams emitted from the
beam irradiation source, a control unit 2016 for controlling the
beam irradiation source, and a cable 2015 for connecting the
imaging head 2012 and the control unit 2016 to each other.
215. The imaging head 2012 is fixed onto a linear stage 2014 for
realizing a parallel movement to an axial direction of the plate
cylinder 2011. The distance between the imaging head 2012 and the
imaging medium 2018 is controlled such that the beams are focused
on the surface of the imaging medium. The output of the beam
irradiation source is controlled based on a value of a laser power
detector 2017. More specifically, the output of the beam
irradiation source is controlled in order to sufficiently generate
the change in the physical properties such as physical projections
and depressions or the change in solubility to solvent at a beam
irradiated section and non-radiated section of the imaging medium
2018.
216. Then, when the imaging of the print pattern is executed, the
plate cylinder 2011 around which the imaging medium 2018 is wound
is rotated in a direction of an arrow R of the figure directly by
use of a drive motor 2013 such as a pulse motor or through a change
gear. In addition, the beam irradiation source is switched
according to imaging data as moving the imaging head 2012 fixed
onto the linear stage 2014 in a direction of an arrow S parallel to
the shaft of the plate cylinder in the figure. Thereby, the imaging
apparatus 2001 generates the change in the physical properties such
as physical concave and convex portions or the change in solubility
to solvent on the surface of the imaging medium 2018 according to
two dimentional imaging data.
217. In the imaging apparatus 2001, the use of a plurality of beam
irradiation sources, which can drive independently, can be
considered to improve the performance. In this case, the
improvement of the performance of the imaging apparatus 2001 means
improvement of imaging speed and resolution, and a trade-off
relationship is established between the imaging speed and the
resolution.
218. The resolution in this case shows how many dots can be formed
per unit length, and dpi (dots per inch) is generally used as a
unit. For example, 2540 dpi corresponds to 100 dots/mm.
219. Suppose that i lines continuous to a fast scan direction
emitted simultaneously from i beam irradiation sources are imaged
using the imaging head 2012 having i beam irradiation sources.
220. In this case, dot pitches dp for achieving a predetermined
resolution r are 1/r. A direction R of lines imaged by the rotation
of the plate cylinder 2011, is defined as a fast scan direction,
and a direction S of lines imaged by the parallel movement of the
imaging head 2012 is defined as a slow scan direction. The imaging
head is shifted in the slow scan direction by a predetermined
distance after finishing the imaging corresponding to one
revolution in the fast scan direction. The predetermined distance
is i times as large as the dot pitch d.sub.p on the imaging medium.
Thereafter, next i lines are imaged, and a series of operations is
repeated so that the imaging of the entire imaging area is
finished.
221. Thus, by use of i beam irradiation sources, time required for
imaging can be reduced to 1/i when the resolution is the same. In
order to increase the resolution j times, it is needed that the dot
pitch be set to d.sub.p/j and that the distance of the movement of
the imaging head be set to d.sub.p X i/j. Then, time required for
imaging results in j/i times.
222. There is a laser diode array as one of methods using a
plurality of beam irradiation sources. The general outline view is
shown in FIG. 14.
223. A laser diode array 2008 includes eight laser diodes, which
are capable of driving independently, in one chip. Laser beam
emission ends 2081a to 2081h, drive side electrodes 2082a to 2082h,
a rear face common electrode 2083 common to all laser diodes are
provided to the eight diodes, respectively. A predetermined current
to the drive side electrodes 2082a to 2082h allows the laser beam
to be emitted from the corresponding laser beam emission ends 2081a
to 2081h. In this case, the predetermined current means a current
value more than a threshold value at which the laser diode starts
to generate a laser beam.
224. There is a fiber array as one of another methods using a
plurality of beam irradiation sources. The outline view of a laser
apparatus 2006 for a fiber output is shown in FIG. 15.
225. The laser apparatus 2006 comprises a package section 2061 and
an optical fiber 2062 for guiding a laser beam to an outer unit.
The package section 2061 comprises a laser diode chip having at
least one light-emission end, a conductive member for an electrical
contact between an electrode of the diode chip and the outer unit,
a heat conduction member for radiating heat from the diode chip to
the outer unit, and an optical system for making the laser beam
being incident onto the optical fiber from the laser diode. Then,
the laser beam is emitted from an emission end 2063 of the optical
fiber 2062.
226. The emission end 2063 of the optical fiber 2062 shown in FIG.
16 has a core portion 2064 and a clad portion 2065, and the laser
beam is emitted from the core portion 2064. Then, the emission ends
2063 of the plurality of fibers of the laser apparatus for the
fiber output are arranged in an array form and fixed to form the
fiber array. When the fiber array is used as the beam irradiation
source, the minimum distance between the beam irradiation sources
is restricted by an outside dimension of the clad portion 2065.
227. In many cases, it is impossible to arrange the beam
irradiation sources, that are the respective emission ends, to be
close to each other without any space in either of the methods of
the laser diode array and the fiber array. In order to perform the
imaging in the imaging area of the imaging medium without any
space, the array must be inclined to the slow scan direction S by a
predetermined angle .theta. as shown in FIG. 17. An array 2007
comprises eight beam irradiation sources 2071a to 2071h, and its
inclination angle .theta. is defined by the following equation
(1).
cos .theta.=d.sub.s/a Eq. (1)
228. where a is the interval between the beam irradiation sources,
a dot pitch at light source surface d.sub.s that is obtained by
converting the dot center pitch corresponding to the predetermined
resolution in the slow scan direction S to the dimension on the
beam irradiation source surface, which is obtained by dividing the
medium surface dot pitch d.sub.p by the magnification of the
optical system. For example, when the resolution is 2540 dpi, i.e,
d.sub.p=10 .mu.m and the magnification of the optical system is
1/4, d.sub.s=40 .mu.m is met.
229. In order to improve the quality of printing in the multicolor
printing, it is obviously important to improve the position
accuracy of the dots on the imaging medium imaged by the imaging
apparatus having a single head or a plurality of imaging heads. It
is also obviously important to align the imaging start position of
the imaging medium for each color. In other words, if the imaging
medium is directly imaged without using the intermediate member and
the imaging start position of the imaging medium is set to the same
position, a minute positional shift of the printing pattern of the
imaging medium of each color in the multicolor printing can be can
be reduced, which is effective means for improving the quality of
multicolor printing without taking much time.
230. Conventionally, sharing of the positioning method, the
attaching method, and components were not conducted between the
imaging apparatus and the printing apparatus for the following
reasons: 1) the direct imaging to the imaging medium was not often
performed, 2) there was few common items in the technical concept
in manufacturing the apparatus, e.g., the imaging apparatus aimed
to obtain weight reduction while the printing apparatus aimed to
increase strength to obtain high quality of printing, 3) generally,
the manufacturers are not the same in the imaging apparatus and the
printing apparatus.
231. Even these days when immediate preparation of the imaging
medium by the imaging apparatus is frequently done, the
above-mentioned sharing has not been conducted.
232. The feature of the printing system of the present invention
lies in the point that the positioning method of the imaging medium
in the printing apparatus is substantially the same as used the
imaging apparatus. For example, in the imaging apparatus in which
the positioning holes are provided in the imaging medium and the
printing pattern is directly formed on the imaging medium with the
energy beam with reference to the positioning holes, the plate
cylinder used in the printing apparatus is provided as the
attaching member of the imaging medium. Thereby, the reference
attaching position of the imaging medium to the imaging apparatus
and the reference attaching position to the printing apparatus are
set to be the same as each other.
233. In this way, the minute positional shift, which is caused by
the difference in the reference attaching position of the imaging
medium between the respective apparatus, is eliminated. Moreover,
the minute positional shift, which is caused by the curvature
specific to the plate cylinders of both apparatus and the habit of
the apparatus caused at the time of winding the imaging medium, can
be minimized. As a result, the designing and manufacturing cost is
reduced by sharing the plate cylinders. Thereby, the printing
apparatus and the imaging apparatus are structured at reasonable
cost.
234. Even in a case where the complete sharing with the plate
cylinders of the printing apparatus cannot be executed due to
weight reduction of the plate cylinders of the imaging apparatus,
the structure of the imaging medium attaching section may be
shared. Thus, the minute positional shift, which is caused by the
difference in the reference attaching position of the imaging
medium between the respective apparatus, can be minimized. Also,
the minute positional shift, which is caused by the curvature
peculiar to the plate cylinders of each apparatus and the habit of
the apparatus caused at the time of winding the imaging medium, can
be minimized. Therefore, it is obvious that the high quality
printing in which the positional shift of the similar imaging
mediums is small can be carried out as well as the case of the
sharing of the plate cylinders.
235. FIG. 18 shows an example of the imaging medium in the case
where the positioning method of the imaging medium in the printing
system of the present invention is carried out by engaging
positioning holes provided in the imaging medium with positing pins
provided in the imaging apparatus. FIG. 13 is a perspective view of
the imaging apparatus relating to this case.
236. As shown in FIG. 18, an imaging medium 1018A has a plurality
of positioning holes 2181 at the imaging medium head portion and
attaching holes 2182 at the imaging medium bottom portion. In the
plurality of positioning holes 2181 and the attaching holes 2182,
the imaging medium is cut such that two sides, having at least one
of two sides along the feeding direction to the plate cylinder and
a head side of the imaging medium, intersect at right angles at the
time of preparing the imaging medium 2018A. Thereafter, the
positioning holes 2181 and the attaching holes 2182 are correctly
processed to predetermined shapes by a special-purpose processing
machine based on the two sides intersecting at right angles. In the
plate making and the printing, the reference attaching position of
the imaging medium is set to the plurality of positioning holes
2181. Two sides, that is, the side, serving as a reference of
holing, and the head side of the imaging medium, do not necessarily
intersect at right angles. However, two sides preferably intersect
at right angles since workability increases in the cutting process
of the imaging medium, the holing process of the positioning holes
2181, and the packing process of the imaging medium.
237. The engagement of the positioning holes 2181 provided in the
imaging medium with the positioning pins provided in the imaging
apparatus will be explained as follows. That is, for use of a resin
film as the base material of the imaging medium, when the opening
diameter of each of the positioning holes of the imaging medium is
larger than the outer diameter of each of the positioning pins, the
difference between the opening diameter and the outer diameter are
smaller than the dot pitch. On the other hand, when the opening
diameter of each of the positioning holes of the imaging medium is
smaller than the outer diameter of each of the positioning pins,
the positioning is preferably set to a range in which the
positioning holes provided in the resin film are not broken.
238. The reason will be explained as follows. That is, for use of
the resin film as the base material of the imaging medium, even if
the outer diameter of each of the positioning pins is larger than
each of the opening diameters of the positioning holes 2181, the
resin film is elastically deformed and the positioning pins are
fitted to the positioning holes. As a result, a good positioning
can be made without breaking the positioning holes. However, when
the outer diameter of each of the positioning pins is smaller than
each of the opening diameters of the positioning holes 2181, the
positioning accuracy worsens by a space between the positioning
holes 2181 and the positioning pins.
239. For use of metal as the base material of the imaging medium,
the opening diameter of each of the positioning holes 2181 provided
in the imaging medium is preferably larger than the outer diameter
of each of the positioning pins. And, the difference between the
opening diameters and the outer diameters is preferably smaller
than the dot pitch.
240. The reason will be explained as follows. That is, for use of
metal as the base material of the imaging medium, when the outer
diameter of each of the positioning pins is larger than the opening
diameter of each of the positioning holes, the positioning holes
are broken and the positioning accuracy worsens. When the outer
diameter of each of the positioning pins is much smaller than the
opening diameter of each of the positioning holes, the positioning
accuracy worsens by the space between the positioning holes and the
positioning pins.
241. An operation of attaching/detaching the imaging medium to/from
the imaging apparatus in this embodiment will be explained as
follows:
242. FIG. 19 shows the state in which the imaging medium 2018A is
attached to a plate cylinder 2011A in the imaging apparatus 2001 of
FIG. 13.
243. The imaging medium 2018A mounted on a stocker (not shown) is
fed to the plate cylinder 2011A by a feeding roller 2026. The plate
cylinder 2011A has the same structure as the pin-attaching typed
plate cylinder of the printing apparatus. The plate cylinder 2011A
comprises a shaft 2020, a pin row 2023 for positioning, a head
portion fixing claw 2022, and a bottom portion fixing claw 2025.
The shaft 2020 holds the plate cylinder 2011A to be rotatable, and
serves as a center of rotation. The pin row 2023 for positioning is
axially arranged to be engaged with the positioning holes of the
head portion of the imaging medium 2018A. The head portion fixing
claw 2022 is a member for fixing the head portion of the imaging
medium 2018A in a state that a shaft 2021 is a center of rotation.
The bottom portion fixing claw 2025 is a member for fixing the
bottom portion of the imaging medium 2018A in a state that a shaft
2024 is a center of rotation and for applying tension to the
imaging medium 2018A so as to eliminate looseness of the imaging
medium.
244. In order to maintain the phase of the plate cylinder 2011A at
the plate cylinder stopping time, a sensor (not shown) detects the
phase to control a drive motor 2013, thereby controlling the
stopping position. The imaging medium 2018A sent to the plate
cylinder 2011A stopped at a predetermined position is stopped to be
fed by a feed roller 2026 for feeding the imaging medium by a
signal from a position detecting sensor (not shown) for detecting
the head position of the imaging medium 2018A. Also, the imaging
medium 2018A is positioned by engaging the positioning holes 2181
with the pin row 2023 when the head fixing claw 2022 actuates in
accordance with the signal from the position detecting sensor and
rotates anticlockwise.
245. A pressing force is applied to the pin row 2023 through the
shaft 2021 having the head fixing claw 2022 by a spring, etc. As a
result, the imaging medium 2018A whose head portion is positioned
is surely held on the plate cylinder 2011A. Thereafter, the plate
cylinder 2011A is rotated by the drive motor 2013 at considerable
low speed less than {fraction (1/10)}of the peripheral speed of 2
to 10 m/sec at which the imaging operation is executed. Also, the
imaging medium 2018A is wound around the plate cylinder 2011A as
being fed by the feeding roller 2026 at the same peripheral speed
as the plate cylinder 2011A.
246. The portion of intersection between the pin row 2023 and the
outer periphery of the plate cylinder 2011A is finished such that
no flaws are formed on the imaging medium 2018A at the attaching
time and no looseness is generated in the imaging medium 2018A.
More specifically, the portion of intersection between the pin row
2023 and the outer periphery of the plate cylinder 2011A is
finished to have a smooth curvature r with a radius of about 15 mm
along the peripheral direction of the plate cylinder 2011A. As a
result, the flaws are not easily formed on the imaging medium at
the winding time.
247. A pressing roller 2027 is placed around the plate cylinder
2011A. The pressing roller 2027 comprises a metal shaft having a
plurality of rollers formed of soft and elastic material such as
rubber sponge. The pressing roller 2027 is freely rotatable, and
has a touching/detouching mechanism to/from the plate cylinder
2011A. Also, when the plate cylinder 2011A rotates, the roller 2027
is rotated while engaged such that no looseness is generated in the
imaging medium 2018A wound around the plate cylinder 2011A.
248. The plurality of rollers of the pressing roller 2027, the head
portion fixing claw 2022, and the bottom portion fixing claw 2025
are arranged to be axially shifted such that the rollers and the
claws do not collide with each other.
249. At the time when the imaging medium bottom portion of the
imaging medium 2018A passes through the pressing roller 2027 by the
rotation of the plate cylinder 2011A, the bottom portion attaching
claw 2025 is driven by a cam (not shown) and rotates about the
shaft 2024 in a B direction. Tension is applied to the imaging
medium 2018A by the spring through the bottom portion fixing claw
2025 inserted to a attaching hole 2128 of the bottom portion. Also,
the pressing roller 2027 is separated from the plate cylinder 2011A
by the connecting/separating mechanism. In this way, the attaching
operation of the imaging medium 2018A is ended.
250. A register mark 2028 is provided on the plate cylinder 2011A
as shown in FIG. 13, and a register mark detecting apparatus 2019
provided on the imaging head 2012 reads the register mark 2028.
Thereby, the imaging apparatus 2001 confirms the positional
relationship between the imaging head 2012 and the plate cylinder
2011A, and starts imaging. The position of the imaging medium 2018A
attached to the plate cylinder 2011A is maintained by the pin row
2023.
251. When the imaging is started at a predetermined position by the
imaging head 2012 as controlling and driving the plate cylinder
2011A at a fixed peripheral speed, the printing pattern is formed
at a determined position on the imaging medium 2018A. Therefore, in
the multicolor printing, the minute position shift of the imaging
pattern of the imaging medium of each color can be minimized and
the imaging medium having high position accuracy can be created
without taking much time.
252. The engagement of the positioning holes 2181 provided in the
imaging medium 2018A with the positioning pins 2023 provided in the
imaging apparatus 2001 will be explained as follows. That is, for
use of the resin film as the base material of the imaging medium
2018A, when the opening diameter of each of the positioning holes
2181 of the imaging medium is larger than the outer diameter of
each the positioning pins, the difference between the opening
diameters and the outer diameters is smaller than the dot pitch. On
the other hand, when the opening diameter of each of the
positioning holes 2181 is smaller than each of the outer diameters
of the positioning pins, the positioning is preferably set to a
range in which the positioning holes 2181 provided in the resin
film are not broken.
253. For use of metal as the base material of the imaging medium,
as mentioned above, the engagement of the positioning holes 2182
provided in the imaging medium with the positioning pins are
preferably set such that the opening diameter of each of the
positioning holes 2181 is larger than the outer diameter of each of
the positioning pins and that the difference between the opening
diameters and the outer diameters is smaller than the dot
pitch.
254. In order to satisfy the above condition, at least one of the
size, the arrangement, and the shape in the positioning holes and
the positioning pins may be changed at each of the cases when the
imaging medium is the resin film and when the imaging medium is the
metal.
255. For example, it is assumed that the pin diameter of the pin
row 2023 of the plate cylinder 2011A is the same as in the case
when the imaging medium is the resin film and the case when the
imaging medium is the metal. When the base material is the resin
film, the diameter of each of the positioning holes 2181 provided
in the imaging medium is larger than that of the positioning pins
and the difference between the positioning pins and the positioning
holes is smaller than the dot pitch. Or, the diameters of the
positioning holes may be smaller than those of the positioning pins
in the range where the positioning holes are not broken. When the
base material is the metal, the diameters of the positioning holes
may be- larger than those of the positioning pins, and the
difference between the positioning pins and the positioning holes
may smaller than the dot pitch.
256. As another example, it is assumed that the diameters of the
positioning holes 2181 are the same as in the case when the resin
film is used as the base material of the imaging medium and in the
case when the metal is used as the base material. When the base
material is the resin film, the pin diameters of the pin row 2023
of the plate cylinder 2011A are smaller than those of the
positioning holes and the difference between the positioning pins
and the positioning holes is smaller than the dot pitch. Or, the
diameters of the positing pins may be larger than those of the
positioning holes in the range where the positioning holes are not
broken. When the base material is the metal, the diameters of the
positioning pins may be larger than those of the positioning holes
and the difference between the positioning pins and the positioning
holes may be smaller than the dot pitch.
257. In this case, a half of the pins of the pin row 2023 may be
used for the film and the other half may be used for the metal. As
the method for arranging the pins of the pin row 2023, there is a
method in which the pins of both ends are used for the film and the
inner pins are used for the metal, and the further inner pins are
used for the film in order. Or, there is a method in the pins for
the film and the pins for the metal are arranged in a staggered
form. To sum up, the same effect can be obtained by either method
unless the pins for the film and the pins for metal are arranged in
the same phase in the circumferential direction.
258. Also, as another method, the pin shapes of the pin row 2023
provided in the plate cylinder 2011A are differently formed such as
circles and squares in each of the cases when the imaging medium
base material is the film and when the imaging medium base material
is the metal. The holes of the imaging medium placed at the
positions where no pins are used for positioning may be
sufficiently enlarged with respect to the pins. According to the
present invention, the holes with the diameter of 5 to 4.995 mm
were formed in the imaging medium of the film base material with
respect to the pins having the diameter of 5 to 4.995 mm.
259. As mentioned above, at least one of the sizes, the
arrangement, and the shapes in the positioning holes and the
positioning pins, which are used for positioning the imaging medium
2018A in the imaging apparatus 2001, may be changed in each of the
cases when the imaging medium is the resin film and when the
imaging medium is the metal. In the method other than the
above-mentioned methods, it is obvious that the same effect can be
obtained if two or more of the size, the arrangement, and the shape
in the positioning holes and the positioning pins are changed.
260. Next, the example of the imaging apparatus using the imaging
medium with no positioning holes will be explained with reference
to FIGS. 20 and 21.
261. As shown in FIG. 20, after preparing an imaging medium 2018B
having the two sides along the feeding direction to the plate
cylinder, one of which intersects with the head side of the imaging
medium at right angles, the imaging medium 2018B is attached to the
stocker (not shown). Then, the imaging medium 2018B is fed to a
plate cylinder 2011B by the feeding roller 2026.
262. The plate cylinder 2011B has the same structure as the plate
cylinder of the printing apparatus of the system in which the
imaging medium is fixed by the griping claw. Specifically, the
plate cylinder 2011B comprises a shaft 2038, a projection 2033 for
positioning in the circumferential direction, a projection 2039 for
positioning in the axial direction, a gripping claw 2032, and a
suction hole 2037. The shaft 2038 holds the plate cylinder 2011B to
be rotatable, and serves as a center of rotation. The projection
2033 abuts against the side of the head portion of the imaging
medium 2018B to be positioned in the circumferential direction. The
gripping claw 2032 fixes the head portion of the imaging medium.
The suction hole 2037 fixes the bottom portion of the imaging
medium by vacuum suction.
263. In the above case, a portion ranging from a portion close to a
point where two sides of the imaging medium intersect at right
angles to the side of the medium head portion corresponds to the
abutting portion of the imaging medium processed to the
predetermined shape in the present invention. Note that the
respective sides do not necessarily intersect at right angles as
far as they are formed to the predetermined shapes.
264. In order to maintain the phase of the plate cylinder 2011B at
the plate cylinder stopping time, a sensor (not shown) detects the
phase to control the drive motor 2013, thereby controlling the
stopping position. The imaging medium 2018B, which is sent to the
plate cylinder 2011B stopped at a predetermined position, is
stopped to be fed by the feed roller 2026 by a signal from a
position detecting sensor (not shown) of the imaging medium head
position. Also, the imaging medium 2018B is positioned by abutting
the respective sides of the imaging medium 2018b against the
projection 2033 for positioning circumferentially and the
projection 2039 for positioning axially.
265. A pressing force is applied to the head portion fixing claw
2022 through the shaft 2031 by a spring, etc, thereby the imaging
medium 2018B whose head portion is positioned is surely held on the
plate cylinder 2011B. Thereafter, the plate cylinder 2011B is
rotated by the drive motor 2013 at considerable low speed less than
{fraction (1/10)}of the peripheral speed of 2 to 10 m/sec at which
the imaging operation is executed. Also, the imaging medium 2018B
is wound around the plate cylinder 2011B as being fed by the
feeding roller 2026 at the same peripheral speed as the plate
cylinder 2011B.
266. A point of intersection between the circumferential
positioning portion and the outer periphery of the plate cylinder
2011B is finished such that no flaws are formed on the imaging
medium 2018B at the attaching time and no looseness is generated in
the imaging medium 2018B, i.e., the point of intersection between
the circumferential positioning portion and the outer periphery of
the plate cylinder 2011B is finished to have a smooth curvature r
of about 15 mm along the peripheral direction of the plate cylinder
2011B. As a result, the flaws are not easily formed on the imaging
medium when the imaging medium is wound around the plate
cylinder.
267. The pressing roller 2027 is placed around the plate cylinder
2011B. The pressing roller 2027 comprises a metal shaft having a
plurality of rollers formed of soft and elastic material such as
rubber sponge. The pressing roller 2027 is freely rotatable, and
has a connecting/separating mechanism to/from the plate cylinder
2011B.
268. Also, when the plate cylinder 2011B rotates, the roller 2027
is pressingly rotated such that no looseness is generated in the
imaging medium 2018B wound around the plate cylinder 2011B.
269. The plurality of rollers of the pressing roller 2027 and the
head portion fixing claw 2022 are arranged to be axially shifted
such that the rollers and the fixing claws do not collide with each
other.
270. The suction is started through a hole 2036 from a vacuum
suction hole 2038 by a suction apparatus (not shown) at the same
time with starting the rotation of the plate cylinder 2011B. Then,
the imaging medium 2018B wound around the plate cylinder 2011B is
sucked and fixed from an imaging medium suction hole 2037 through a
space 2030 surround with a side plate of the plate cylinder 2011B,
and bulkheads 2034, 2035. Then, at the time when the bottom portion
of the imaging medium 2018B passes through the pressing roller
2027, the pressing roller 2027 releases the engagement to the plate
cylinder 2011B and separates therefrom, thereby the attaching
operation to the imaging medium 2018B is ended.
271. As shown in FIG. 21, a register mark 2028 is provided on the
plate cylinder 2011B, and the register mark 2028 is read by a
register mark detecting apparatus 2019 formed on the imaging head
2012. Thereby, the positional relationship between the imaging head
2012 and the plate cylinder 2011B is confirmed, and the imaging is
started. The attaching position of the imaging medium 2018B
attached to the plate cylinder 2011B is maintained by abutting the
end surface of the imaging medium 2018B against the projection 2033
for positioning circumferentially and the projection 2039 for
positioning axially. Therefore, if the imaging is started at the
predetermined position by the imaging head 2012 as controlling and
driving the plate cylinder 2011B at a fixed peripheral speed, the
printing pattern is prepared at the predetermined position on the
imaging medium 2018B.
272. As a result, it is possible to minimize the minute positional
shift of the printing pattern of the imaging medium of each color
in the multicolor printing. Then, the imaging medium with high
positional accuracy can be prepared without taking much time.
273. The following will explain another method for correctly
preparing the printing pattern at the predetermined position on the
imaging medium 2018. The following process is carried out before
the imaging medium 2018 is attached to the imaging apparatus 2001
to image the print pattern. As shown in FIG. 21, the positions of a
plurality of register marks 2028P (register holes for positioning
is possible) formed on the imaging medium 2018 in advance are
detected from the imaging head by a register detecting apparatus
2019 provided at the predetermined position. Thus, the position of
the imaging medium 2018 in the circumferential direction and that
of the imaging medium 2018 in the axial direction are detected.
274. Thereafter, the imaging is started at the predetermined
position by the imaging head 2012 based on the detected
circumferential and axial positions of the imaging medium 2018 as
controlling and driving the plate cylinder 2011 at the fixed
peripheral speed. As a result, the printing pattern is prepared at
the correct position on the imaging medium 2018. Then, it is
possible to minimize the minute positional shift of the printing
pattern of the imaging medium for each color in the multicolor
printing. Also, the imaging medium with high positional accuracy
can be prepared without taking much time. The method using the
register marks formed on the imaging medium may be supplementally
used to improve the accuracy of the abutting method shown in FIGS.
20 and 21.
275. According to the method in which a plurality of register marks
formed on the imaging medium 2018 in advance or a plurality of
register pin hole positions are used as a reference for imaging,
the imaging medium is not necessarily formed to have the
rectangular outline. Also, an imaging medium having the two sides
along the feeding direction to the plate cylinder, one of which
intersects with the head side of the imaging medium at right
angles, and it can be easily inferred that even in this case the
imaging medium with high position accuracy can be obtained by
executing the imaging medium cutting process and the holing
processing based on the plurality of register marks in a
post-process. However, the two sides preferably intersect at right
angles since workability increases in the imaging medium cutting
process and the holing process of the positioning holes 2181, and
the imaging medium packing process.
276. Next, the imaging medium is detached from the plate cylinder
of the imaging apparatus as follows.
277. For instance, in the case of the apparatus shown in FIG. 20,
the rotation of the plate cylinder 2011B is stopped after the
imaging of the printing pattern is ended as shown in FIG. 22.
Thereafter, the plate cylinder 2011B is rotated in the direction
opposite to the case of the imaging time by the driving motor
2013.
278. At this time, the plate cylinder 2011B is rotated at
considerable low speed less than {fraction (1/10)}of the peripheral
speed of 2 to 10 m/sec at which the imaging operation is executed
in order that no flaws are formed on the imaging medium 2018. At
the same time with the rotation of the plate cylinder 2011B, the
imaging medium 2018 is sequentially separated from the plate
cylinder 2011B by a separation claw 2041 for separating the imaging
medium 2018. The separation claw 2041 has the touching/detouching
mechanism to/from the plate cylinder 2011B around a shaft 2042.
Then, the imaging medium 2018 is discharged by an image medium
discharge roller 2043 whose peripheral speed is the same as the
plate cylinder 2011B.
279. The head portion fixing claw 2022 by which the head portion of
the imaging medium 2018 is fixed is rotated by a cam (not shown)
and releases the imaging medium 2018B before reaching the
separation claw 2041. As a result, the imaging medium 2018B is
smoothly discharged by the plate cylinder 2011B so as to be sent to
a post-process. This operation is not limited to the apparatus
shown in FIG. 20. Namely, this operation can be easily applied to
the apparatus having the positioning pin row shown in FIG. 19 if
only a member for lifting the imaging medium head portion is added
thereto.
280. Generally, in the imaging medium making apparatus, which
carries out the positioning of the imaging medium, in many cases,
the fixing of the imaging medium is made by firmly fixing the
imaging medium head portion by the fixing claw. Then, a complicated
mechanism is required in detaching the imaging medium. Therefore,
as mentioned above, the plate cylinder is inversely rotated in
detaching the imaging medium. Then, the imaging medium is detached
from the imaging medium bottom side having the structure in which
the imaging medium is relatively easily detached. As a result, the
imaging medium can be surely detached with the simple structure
without damaging the imaging medium.
281. Also, the direction of moving the imaging medium in attaching
and detaching the imaging medium is reversely set so that the work
side where the imaging medium is attached and detached can be
provided at the same side. As a result, the work side can be
concentrated at one location, and it is unnecessary to provide
extra locations at the opposite work side of the imaging apparatus
and the right and left sides thereof. Therefore, the imaging
apparatus having a good workability can be easily configured even
if the setting space is small.
282. Moreover, the image medium feeding apparatus and the discharge
apparatus are provided at the same side, so that the imaging medium
can be continuously fed and discharged. Therefore, the continuous
imaging operation can be carried out and the apparatus can be set
at the location having a small area since the operation sides are
provided at the same location.
283. As mentioned above, the imaging medium positioning method to
the plate cylinder and the fixing method in the printing apparatus
1001 shown in FIG. 1 is the same as in the imaging apparatus. Then,
there is no the minute positional shift, which is caused by the
difference in the reference position for attaching imaging medium
between the printing apparatus and the imaging apparatus.
284. The positioning method of the imaging medium to each of the
plate cylinders 1141 to 1144 of the printing apparatus 1001 is
substantially the same as the positioning method of the imaging
medium to the plate cylinders 2011 of the imaging apparatus 2001.
For example, it is assumed that the imaging medium is positioned by
the method in which the positioning holes are provided in the
imaging medium and the positing pins are provided in the plate
cylinder side in the imaging apparatus. In this case, the same
method or the method for detecting the positions of the positioning
holes is preferably used even in the printing apparatus.
285. Also, when the imaging medium is positioned by the method
using the abutting portion of the imaging medium and the abutment
receiving portion of the plate cylinder, the same method is
preferably used in the printing apparatus. If the sufficient
positioning accuracy can be expected, the imaging medium may be
positioned by the method using the pin holes in the imaging
apparatus, and is positioned by the abutting method in the printing
apparatus side, or the opposite combination may be used. Thus,
substantially the same effect can be obtained. However, in many
cases, the use of the same or similar positioning method in both
apparatus is simple and results in the good positioning
accuracy.
286. Moreover, the fixing method of the imaging medium in the
printing apparatus is substantially the same as in the imaging
apparatus. Therefore, even in a case where the habit such as
deformation is formed in the imaging medium, the habit is
positively used so that the imaging medium can be fixed with high
accurate positioning. Since the design of the plate cylinder is set
to be the same or substantially the same in both apparatus, the
influence of curls exerted on the imaging medium is substantially
the same in both apparatus.
287. The laser array or the fiber array is generally used as an
energy beam irradiation source of the imaging apparatus. In either
case, the distance between the imaging head including the optical
system for condensing the emitted beams and the imaging medium is
small, and the depth of focus is extremely small such as several
tens of .mu.m. In consideration of the accuracy of the entire
assembly, the vibration of the attaching member of the imaging
apparatus and the thickness accuracy of the imaging medium, the
diameter accuracy of the attaching member in the imaging apparatus
is about .+-.5 .mu.m. Conventionally, there was no imaging
apparatus in which the surface of the attaching member was
subjected to coating process or some contrivance so that the
attaching member is not heated, in order to obtain the diameter
accuracy of the attaching member in the imaging medium.
288. Generally, the imaging medium attaching member of the imaging
apparatus is formed of aluminum of 6000 family, e.g., A6061, which
is generally called corrosion resisting aluminum, and its surface
hardness of H.sub.B ranges from 30 to 95 of Brinell hardness. On
the other hand, the imaging medium using the metal as the base
material is formed of aluminum of A1000 family, e.g., A1100, which
is generally called pure aluminum, and its surface hardness of
H.sub.B ranges from 23 to 44.
289. As mentioned above, the difference between the attaching
member of the imaging medium and the base material of the imaging
member in the hardness is small. For this reason, the following
problem is considered if the imaging member is used for a long
period of time.
290. That is, a side end portion on the opposite side surface to
the imaging surface of the imaging medium, in which the imaging
medium is started to be wound around the imaging medium attaching
member, rubs against the imaging medium attaching member when the
imaging medium is attached thereto. As a result, there is fear that
the surface of the imaging medium attaching member is roughened,
and that the diameter accuracy of the imaging medium attaching
member cannot be maintained.
291. According to the present invention, in the printing system
having the imaging apparatus for generating the change in the
imaging characteristic according to imaging data on the imaging
medium by the irradiation of the energy beam so as to execute the
imaging and the printing apparatus for printing on the recording
medium by supplying ink to the imaged imaging medium, the imaging
medium is subjected to the following processes, thereby eliminating
the above-mentioned problem in advance.
292. That is, at the time of winding the imaging medium around the
attaching member of the imaging apparatus, the side end portion on
the opposite side surface to the imaging surface of the imaging
medium, in which the imaging medium is started to be wound around
the imaging medium attaching member, is chamfered. Or, at the time
of cutting the imaging medium to the predetermined size to be wound
around the attaching member, the imaging medium is cut and
processed from the opposite side surface of the imaging
surface.
293. In the imaging apparatus according to the above embodiment of
the present invention, the surface of the imaging medium attaching
member is subjected to a coating process such as electroless
plating at low temperature with nickel or the like. This process is
performed not to exert influence on the process accuracy of at
least the circumferential surface of the attaching member around
which the imaging medium is wound. Thereby, the surface of the
attaching member is hardened to a value corresponding to hardened
steel of HB 200 or more, in terms of Brinell hardness.
294. Next, the following will explain a preferred embodiment of
each of the imaging apparatus of the present invention, the imaging
method, and the printing system with reference to the drawings.
295. FIG. 23 shows a perspective view of one embodiment of the
imaging apparatus of the present invention.
296. As shown in FIG. 23, the imaging apparatus 2001 comprises the
plate cylinder 2011 for winding the imaging medium 2018 around its
outer surface, the imaging head 2012 including the beam irradiation
source and the optical system for condensing beams emitted from the
beam irradiation source, the beam irradiation source control unit
2016, and the cable 2015 for connecting the imaging head 2012 and
the control unit 2016 to each other, and the ball screw unit 2014
for scanning in an axial direction of the energy beam irradiation
apparatus.
297. With respect to the rotation axis of the plate cylinder 2011
serving as the attaching member for winding the imaging medium 2018
on its outer surface, the shaft of the ball screw unit 2014, which
executes the scanning in the axial direction of the energy beam
irradiation apparatus, is inclined at only .theta. corresponding to
a ratio of the scanning speed to the axial direction of the energy
beam irradiation apparatus to the peripheral speed of the imaging
medium 2018 wound around the plate cylinder 2011.
298. The distance between the imaging head 2012 and the imaging
medium 2018 is controlled such that the beams are condensed on the
surface of the imaging medium. The output of the beam irradiation
source is controlled based on a value of a laser power detector
2017. And, the output of the beam irradiation source is controlled
in order to sufficiently generate the change in the physical
properties such as physical projections and depressions or the
change in solubility to solvent at the beam irradiation section and
the non-radiation section of the imaging medium 2018.
299. Then, when the imaging of the print pattern is executed, the
plate cylinder 2011 around which the imaging medium 2018 is wound
is rotated in a direction of an arrow R of the figure directly by
use of the drive motor 2013 such as a pulse motor or through a
change gear. In addition, the beam irradiation source is switched
according to imaging data as moving the imaging head 2012 fixed
onto the ball screw unit 2014 in a direction of an arrow S in the
figure.
300. In this way, the change in the physical properties according
to two-dimensional imaging data such as physical projections and
depressions or the change in solubility to solvent is generated on
the surface of the imaging medium. For example, even if imaging
data of a rectangle is imaged as scanning in the axial direction of
the energy beam irradiation apparatus and the circumferential
direction of the imaging medium 2018 wound around the plate
cylinder 2011 at the same time, the two-dimensional imaging pattern
formed on the surface of the imaging medium is not distorted to a
parallelogram as in FIG. 27C.
301. FIG. 24 shows a perspective view of one embodiment of another
imaging apparatus of the present invention.
302. As shown in FIG. 24, the imaging apparatus 2001 comprises the
plate cylinder 2011 for winding the imaging medium 2018 around its
outer surface, the imaging head 2012 including the beam irradiation
source and the optical system for condensing beams emitted from the
beam irradiation source, the control unit 2016, and the cable 2015
for connecting the imaging head 2012 and the control unit 2016 to
each other.
303. The imaging medium 2018 is fixed to the plate cylinder 2011 to
be inclined by the ratio of the scanning speed in the axial
direction of the energy beam irradiation apparatus to the
peripheral speed of the imaging medium 2018 wound around the plate
cylinder 2011. The imaging head 2012 is fixed onto a ball screw
unit 2014B, which moves to be inclined with respect to the rotation
axis of the plate cylinder 2011 by the ratio of the scanning speed
to the axial direction of the energy beam irradiation apparatus to
the peripheral speed of the imaging medium 2018 wound around the
plate cylinder 2011. The distance between the imaging head 2012 and
the imaging medium 2018 is controlled such that the beams are
condensed on the surface of the imaging medium.
304. The output of the beam irradiation source is controlled based
on the value of the laser power detector 2017. That is, the output
of the beam irradiation source is controlled in order to
sufficiently generate the change in the physical properties such as
physical projections and depressions or the change in solubility to
solvent by the beam irradiation section and the non-radiation
section of the imaging medium 2018.
305. Then, when the imaging of the print pattern is executed, the
plate cylinder 2011 around which the imaging medium 2018 is wound
is rotated in a direction of an arrow R of the figure directly by
use of the drive motor 2013 such as a pulse motor or through the
change gear. In addition, the beam irradiation source is switched
according to imaging data as moving the imaging head 2012 fixed
onto the ball screw unit 2014B in a direction of an arrow S
substantially parallel to the shaft of the plate cylinder in the
figure.
306. Thus, the change in the physical properties according to
two-dimensional imaging data such as physical projections and
depressions or the change in solubility to solvent is generated on
the surface of the imaging medium.
307. As mentioned above, it can be easily considered that the
plurality of beam irradiation sources, which are capable of
independently driving, is used as the method for improving the
performance of the imaging apparatus.
308. For example, suppose that n lines continuous to a fast scan
direction emitted simultaneously from n beam irradiation sources
are imaged using the imaging head having n beam irradiation
sources. At this time, dot pitches d.sub.p for achieving a
predetermined resolution r are 1/r.
309. The direction R, which is substantially parallel (inclined
only an angle .theta.) to the lines to be imaged by the rotation of
the plate cylinder 2011, is defined as a fast scan direction. Then,
the direction S, which is substantially parallel (inclined only an
angle .theta.) to the lines to be imaged by moving the imaging head
2012, is defined as a slow scan direction. The imaging head is
shifted in the S direction by a predetermined distances after
finishing the imaging corresponding to one revolution in the fast
scan direction. The predetermined distance s is n times as large as
the dot pitch dp on the imaging medium. Thereafter, next n lines
are imaged, and a series of operations is repeated so that the
imaging of the entire imaging area is finished.
310. By use of n beam irradiation sources, time required for
imaging can be reduced to 1/n when the resolution is the same. In
order to increase the resolution j times, it is needed that the dot
pitch be set to d.sub.p/j and that the distance of the movement of
the imaging head be set to d.sub.p X n/j. Then, time required for
imaging is multiplied by j/n times.
311. For example, when the imaging medium is attached to the
imaging medium attaching member, if the outer diameter is 160 mm, a
modulation frequency of laser is 1 MHz and dot density is 2540 dpi
(dot pitch is 10 .mu.m), the rotation speed of the imaging medium
is 1193. 7 rpm, and the peripheral speed is 10 m/sec. Also, if the
number of beam irradiation sources of the imaging head is 40, the
feeding of the energy beam in the direction, which is substantially
the same as the direction of the rotation axis, is 400
.mu.m/rotation and the scanning speed is 8 mm/sec.
312. Therefore, the inclination .theta. of the imaging medium
becomes 0.046.degree.. Then, the imaging medium is inclined about
0.4 mm with respect to the axial length of 480 mm to be used as an
imaging area corresponding to an A3 horizontal size.
313. The use of the laser diode array or the fiber array as one of
the methods using the plurality of beam irradiation sources has
been already mentioned. In many cases, however, it is impossible to
arrange the beam irradiation sources, i.e., the respective emission
ends to be close to each other without any space in either of the
methods of the laser diode array and the fiber array. In order to
perform the imaging in the imaging range of the imaging medium
without any space, the array is often inclined to the slow scan
direction S by a predetermined angle .phi. as shown in FIG. 25. The
array 2007 comprises eight beam irradiation sources 2071a to 2071h,
and its inclination angle .phi. is defined by the following
equation (2).
cos.phi.=d.sub.a/a Eq. (2)
314. where a is the interval between the beam irradiation sources,
a dot pitch at light source surface pitch d.sub.a that is obtained
by converting the dot center pitch corresponding to the
predetermined resolution in the slow scan direction S to the
dimension on the beam irradiation source surface, which is obtained
by dividing the medium surface dot pitch d.sub.p by the
magnification of the optical system. For example, when the
resolution is 2540 dpi, i.e., d.sub.p=10 .mu.m and the
magnification of the optical system is 1/4, d.sub.a=40 .mu.m is
met.
315. The feature of the imaging apparatus of the present invention
is the imaging apparatus for generating the change in the imaging
characteristic according to imaging data on the imaging medium by
the irradiation of the energy beam so as to execute the imaging
wherein the imaging apparatus comprises the attaching member for
winding the imaging medium, means for rotating the attaching
member, scanning means for scanning the energy beam irradiation
apparatus to substantially the same direction as the axial
direction of the attaching member, and positioning means for
positioning the imaging medium such that a reference direction of
the imaging area is inclined against the shaft of the attaching
member as a rotation center substantially by the ratio of the
scanning speed of the scanning means of the energy beam to the
peripheral speed of the surface of the imaging medium wound around
the attaching member.
316. FIG. 26 shows the relationship between the imaging medium
attaching direction and the image to be generated in connection
with FIG. 23. As mentioned above, the imaging medium mounting
direction is inclined by .theta., thereby making it possible to
obtain the imaging which is the same as the ideal state shown in
FIG. 27A.
317. By the positioning the imaging medium to be inclined as
mentioned above, the image on the imaging medium is formed at the
correct position without being inclined to the imaging medium.
Therefore, when the operator attaches a printing plate, which is
the imaging medium prepared by the above-mentioned method, to the
printing apparatus, the operator does not have to incline the
imaging medium. As a result, the positioning can be carried out
without taking extra time.
318. Also, in a register pin system in which the positioning holes
provided on a plate blank in advance is used to position the
printing plate in the printing apparatus, the image on the imaging
medium can be formed at the accurate position without being
inclined to the imaging medium. Therefore, it is possible to use
the printing plate prepared by a direct plate-making. Also, the
position of the printing plate in the printing apparatus can be
extremely easily adjusted. Also, in the printing apparatus having
no plate twisting and adjusting mechanism of the printing plate,
the printing plate can be easily attached.
319. The corrected positioning method in the printing apparatus,
which is substantially the same as in the imaging apparatus and the
method in which the inclination caused when the imaging medium is
cancelled, is favorably used. Thus, the load of attaching the
printing plate in the printing apparatus and that of positioning
the plate of each color in the multicolor printing can be greatly
reduced. Note that the same effect can be obtained by the method in
which inclination on the imaging apparatus side is not done and the
similar inclination is done to the printing apparatus side,
instead. Essentially, in both cases, the inclination at the time of
positioning the imaging medium may be made different by the angle
.theta.. It is needless to say that the direction of the
inclination should be such that it cancels the inclination of the
imaging area caused by scanning of the energy beam irradiation
apparatus of the imaging apparatus.
320. For example, in the imaging apparatus, in which the
positioning holes are provided in the imaging medium in advance and
the printing pattern is directly formed in the imaging medium with
the energy beams based on the positioning holes, the same plate
cylinder as used in the printing apparatus is provided as the
imaging medium attaching member, except for the presence and
absence of the above-mentioned correction of inclination. Thus, the
reference position of attaching the imaging medium to the imaging
medium and that of attaching the imaging medium to the printing
apparatus can be the same.
321. In this way, the minute positional shift, which is caused by
the difference in the reference attaching position of the imaging
medium between the respective apparatus, is eliminated. Also, the
minute positional shift, which is caused by the curvature specific
to the plate cylinders of each apparatus and the habit of the
apparatus caused at the time of winding the imaging medium, are
minimized. As a result, the designing and manufacturing cost is
reduced by sharing the plate cylinders. Thus, the printing
apparatus and the imaging apparatus are structured at reasonable
cost.
322. Even in a case where the complete sharing with the plate
cylinders of the printing apparatus cannot be executed due to
weight reduction of the plate cylinders of the imaging apparatus,
the structure of the imaging medium attaching section is shared.
Thus, the minute positional shift, which is caused by the
difference in the reference attaching position of the imaging
medium between the respective apparatus, can be eliminated. Also,
the minute positional shift, which is caused by the curvature
peculiar to the plate cylinders of each apparatus and the habit of
the apparatus caused at the time of winding the imaging medium, can
be minimized. Therefore, it is obvious that the high quality
printing in which the positional shift of the similar imaging
mediums is small can be carried out as well as the case of the
sharing of the plate cylinders. Thus, the structure of the imaging
medium attaching section is shared in both apparatus and the main
part of the plate cylinder itself is shared, thereby the plate
cylinder of the imaging apparatus and that of the printing
apparatus can be substantially the same. Also, the outer diameters
of the respective plate cylinders are preferably coincide to each
other.
323. FIG. 18 shows an example of the imaging medium in the case
where the positioning method of the imaging medium in the present
invention is carried out by engaging positioning holes provided in
the imaging medium with positing pins provided in the imaging
apparatus. FIG. 24 is a perspective view of the imaging apparatus
relating to this case.
324. As shown in FIG. 18, an imaging medium 1018A has a plurality
of positioning holes 2181 at the imaging medium head portion and
attaching holes 2182 at the imaging medium bottom portion. In the
plurality of positioning holes 2181 and the attaching holes 2182,
the imaging medium is cut such that two sides, having at least one
of two sides along the feeding direction to the plate cylinder and
a head side of the imaging medium, intersect at right angles at the
time of preparing the imaging medium 2018A. Thereafter, the
positioning holes 2181 and the attaching holes 2182 are accurately
processed to predetermined shapes by a special-purpose processing
machine based on the two sides intersecting at right angles. In the
plate making and the printing, the reference attaching position of
the imaging medium is set to the plurality of positioning holes
2181. Two sides, that is, the side, serving as a reference of
holing, and the head side of the imaging medium, do not necessarily
intersect at right angles. However, two sides preferably intersect
at right angles since workability increases in the cutting process
of the imaging medium, the holing process of the positioning holes
2181, and the packing process of the imaging medium. In many cases,
the direction, which is parallel to either one of the sides of the
outer shape of the imaging medium or the array direction of the pin
hole row, is used as a reference direction of the imaging area.
325. According to the present embodiment, though the attachment and
detachment of the imaging medium to/from the imaging apparatus are
the same as the case of .theta.=0, there is no problem since the
angle .theta. is sufficiently small.
326. Even in the type of imaging apparatus using the imaging medium
having no positioning pin holes as shown in FIG. 28, the attachment
and detachment of the imaging medium to/from the imaging apparatus
is the same as in the case of .theta.=0, similar to the type of
imaging apparatus using the imaging medium having the positioning
pin holes. In this case, it is obvious that there is no problem
since the angle .theta. is sufficiently small.
327. In either case, although the imaging head is configured to be
scanned in the direction inclined by .theta. than the rotation
axial direction of the plate cylinder, the imaging head may be
scanned in the direction coinciding to the rotation axial direction
of the plate cylinder. In this case, the timing of the beam
irradiation is slightly shifted, thereby the image can be prevent
from being deformed to the parallelogram.
328. The printing apparatus to be used in the printing system of
the present invention corresponds to the multicolor printing shown
in FIG. 1.
329. As mentioned above, the imaging medium positioning method to
the plate cylinder and the fixing method in the printing apparatus
1001 is the same as in the imaging apparatus except for no arranged
inclination (inclination corrected) in the positioning of the
imaging medium in the attaching body for imaging. Then, there is no
minute positional shift, which is caused by the difference in the
reference position for attaching imaging medium between the
printing apparatus and the imaging apparatus.
330. The positioning method of the imaging medium to each of the
plate cylinders 1141 to 1144 of the printing apparatus 1001 is
substantially the same as the positioning method of the imaging
medium to the plate cylinders 2011 of the imaging apparatus
2001.
331. For example, when the imaging medium is positioned by the
method in which the positioning holes are provided in the imaging
medium and the positing pins are provided in the plate cylinder
side in the imaging apparatus, the same method or the method for
detecting the positions of the positioning holes is preferably used
in the printing apparatus. Also, when the imaging medium is
positioned by the method using the abutting portion of the imaging
medium and the abutment receiving portion of the plate cylinder,
the same method is preferably used even in the printing apparatus.
When the sufficient positioning accuracy can be expected, the
imaging medium may be positioned by the method using the pin holes
in the imaging apparatus, and is positioned by the abutting method
in the printing apparatus side, or the opposite combination may be
used. Thus, substantially the same effect can be obtained.
Generally, in many cases, the use of the same or similar
positioning method in both apparatus is simple and results in the
good positioning accuracy.
332. Moreover, the fixing method of the imaging medium in the
printing apparatus is substantially the same as in the imaging
apparatus. Therefore, even in a case where the habit such as
deformation is formed in the imaging medium in the imaging
apparatus side, the habit is positively used so that the imaging
medium can be fixed with high accurate positioning. Since the
design of the plate cylinder is set to be the same or substantially
the same in both apparatus, influence of curls exerted on the
imaging medium is substantially the same in both apparatus.
EXAMPLE 1
333. The ink unit of FIG. 4 was attached to the printing apparatus
of the present invention shown in FIG. 1, and a print evaluation
test was performed at printing speed 5000 sheets/hour under
conditions of room temperate of 23.degree. C. and humidity of
40%.
334. As a result, as shown in Table 1, in the printing apparatus of
the present invention shown in FIG. 1, no striped defects were
generated before the number of printed sheets reached 1500 as
compared with the conventional coating apparatus shown in Examined
Japanese Patent Publication No. 4-68147 in which striped defects
were generated when the number of printed sheets reached 100.
335. As the conditions of the rollers and the blades, one-layer
rubber roller having the rubber hardness of 43.degree. of JISA
(corresponding to a durometer A type by Shore), the outer diameter
of 60.1 mm was used as the form roller 1201. One-layer rubber
roller having the rubber hardness of 350 of JISA, the outer
diameter of 30.1 mm was used as the auxiliary form roller 1212. The
stainless roller having the outer diameter of 19.6 mm was used as
the ink distributing rollers 1210, 1211.
336. As the doctor blade 1202 and the flat blade 1209, steel having
the thickness of 0.15 mm, the curvature at the front edge of the
leading side of the scraper portion was used, and the curvatures of
the doctor blade 1202 and the flat blade 1209 were 50 .mu.m, and 15
.mu.m, respectively. The distance between the doctor blade 1202 and
the flat blade 1209 was set to 2 mm. Wood free paper, 70 Kg at
Shiroku-han size (788 mm.times.1091 mm), and A3-size was used as
the sheets.
EXAMPLE 2
337. The ink unit of FIG. 8 was attached to the printing apparatus
of the present invention shown in FIG. 1, and a print evaluation
test was performed at printing speed 5000 sheets/hour under
conditions of room temperate of 23.degree. C. and humidity of
40%.
338. As a result, as shown in Table 1, in the printing apparatus of
the present invention shown in FIG. 1, no striped defects were
generated before the number of printed sheets reached 2000 as
compared with the conventional coating apparatus shown in Examined
Japanese Patent Publication No. 4-68147 in which striped defects
were generated when the number of printed sheets reached 100.
339. As the conditions of the rollers and the blades, one-layer
rubber roller having the rubber hardness of 43.degree., the outer
diameter of 60.1 mm was used as the form roller 1201. One-layer
rubber roller having the rubber hardness of 35.degree., the outer
diameter of 30.1 mm was used as the auxiliary form rollers 1212,
1213. The stainless roller having the outer diameter of 19.6 mm was
used as the ink distributing rollers 1210, 1211.
340. As the doctor blade 1202 and the flat blade 1209, steel having
the thickness of 0.15 mm, the curvature at the front edge of the
leading side of the scraper portion was used, and the curvatures of
the doctor blade 1202 and the flat blade 1209 were 50 .mu.m, and 15
.mu.m, respectively. The distance between the doctor blade 1202 and
the flat blade 1209 was set to 2 mm. Wood free paper, 70 Kg at
Shiroku-han size (788 mm.times.1091 mm), and A3-size was used as
the sheets.
EXAMPLE 3
341. The ink unit of FIG. 9 was mounted on the printing apparatus
of the present invention shown in FIG. 1, and a print evaluation
test was performed at printing speed 5000 sheets/hour under
conditions of room temperate of 23.degree. C. and humidity of
40%.
342. As a result, as shown in Table 1, in the printing apparatus of
the present invention shown in FIG. 1, no striped defects were
generated before the number of printed sheets reached 1000 as
compared with the conventional coating apparatus shown in Examined
Japanese Patent Publication No. 4-68147 in which striped defects
were generated when the number of printed sheets reached 100.
343. As the conditions of the rollers and the blade, one-layer
rubber roller having the rubber hardness of 43.degree., the outer
diameter of 60.1 mm was used as the form roller 1201. One-layer
rubber roller having the rubber hardness of 35.degree., the outer
diameter of 30.1 mm was used as the auxiliary form rollers 1212,
1213. The stainless roller having the outer diameter of 19.6 mm was
used as the ink distributing rollers 1210, 1211.
344. As the doctor blade 1202, steel having the thickness of 0.15
mm, the curvature at the front edge of the leading side of the
scraper portion was used, and the curvature of the doctor blade
1202 was 50 .mu.m. Wood free paper, 70 Kg at Shiroku-han size (788
mm.times.1091 mm), and A3-size was used as the sheets.
EXAMPLE 4
345. The ink unit of FIG. 9 was attached to the printing apparatus
of the present invention shown in FIG. 1, and a print evaluation
test was performed at printing speed 5000 sheets/hour under
conditions of room temperate of 23.degree. C. and humidity of
35%.
346. As a result, as shown in Table 1, in the printing apparatus of
the present invention shown in FIG. 1, no striped defects were
generated even when the number of printed sheets reached 6000 as
compared with the conventional coating apparatus shown in Examined
Japanese Patent Publication No. 4-68147 in which striped defects
were generated when the number of printed sheets reached 100.
347. As the conditions of the rollers and the blade, two-layer
polyurethane rubber roller having the outer layer rubber hardness
of 40.degree., the inner layer rubber hardness of 25.degree., and
the outer diameter of 59.5 mm was used as the form roller 1201.
One-layer polyurethane rubber roller having the rubber hardness of
35.degree., the outer diameter of 30.2 mm was used as the auxiliary
form rollers 1212, 1213. The Rilsan roller having the outer
diameter of 19.6 mm was used as the ink distributing rollers 1210,
1211.
348. As the doctor blade 1202, steel having the thickness of 0.15
mm, the curvature at the front edge of the leading side of the
scraper portion was used, and the curvature of the doctor blade
1202 was 30 .mu.m. Wood free paper, 70 Kg at Shiroku-han size (788
mm.times.1091 mm), and A3-size was used as the sheets.
349. The evaluation results of Examples 1 to 4 are as shown in
Table 1. At the time of using the ink unit disclosed in Examined
Japanese Patent Publication No. 4-68147, striped defects were
generated when the number of printed sheets reached 100. It was
confirmed that the number of sheets, which was printed before
striped defects were generated, was increased to 1500 in Example 1,
2000 in Example 2, 100 in Example 3, and 6000 or more in Example
4.
1TABLE 1 Number of sheets before striped defects are generated
Apparatus Specification Number of Printed Sheets Conventional
Apparatus 100 (Examined Japanese Patent Publication No. 4-68147)
Example 1 1500 Example 2 2000 Example 3 1000 Example 4 6000 or
more
Industrial Applicability
350. As mentioned above, according to the multicolor printing
apparatus, the back face printing can be easily carried out with
the minimum movement of the recording medium and good
workability.
351. According to the present invention, there can be provided the
multicolor printing apparatus having a good printing quality at low
cost without requiring a large space for setting the printing
apparatus.
352. According to the coating apparatus of the present invention,
even if striped detects are generated on the surface of the coated
ink film in the circumferential direction because of clogging with
paper dust, the coated ink film surface is flattened by the
flattening material, thereby the generation of striped detects can
not easily occurs on the surface of the coated ink film in the
circumferential direction.
353. According to the present invention, the imaging medium
prepared by the imaging apparatus can be positioned only by
attaching the imaging medium to the printing apparatus, the imaging
medium positioning operation can largely reduced, the printing
quality can be improved without taking much time, no large setting
space is needed, so that the imaging apparatus having good
workability can be easily structured.
354. According to the imaging apparatus of the present invention,
the imaging apparatus executes the imaging by scanning the beam
irradiation apparatus in substantially the same direction as the
rotation axis of the attaching member at a fixed speed as
continuously rotating the attaching member around which the imaging
medium is wound at a fixed speed, thereby the image is formed
without being inclined to the imaging medium, the imaging medium
can be easily positioned as the imaging apparatus and the printing
apparatus are separately maintained, and the image position on the
imaging medium is always correctly set without being inclined, with
the result that there can be easily configured the imaging
apparatus, which can easily execute the positioning of the printing
plate in the printing apparatus, and there can be easily configured
the printing system having good workability.
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