Paper
25 January 2011 Integrated parallel printing systems with hypermodular architecture
David Biegelsen, Lara Crawford, Minh Do, Dave Duff, Craig Eldershaw, Markus Fromherz, Haitham Hindi, Greg Kott, Dan Larner, Barry Mandel, Steven Moore, Bryan Preas, Wheeler Ruml, Greg Schmitz, Lars Swartz, Rong Zhou
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 7872, Parallel Processing for Imaging Applications; 787206 (2011) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.880172
Event: IS&T/SPIE Electronic Imaging, 2011, San Francisco Airport, California, United States
Abstract
We describe here a system consisting of multiple, relatively inexpensive marking engines. The marking engines are interconnected using highly reconfigurable paper paths. The paths are composed of hypermodules (bidirectional nip assemblies and sheet director assemblies) each of which has its own computation, sensing, actuation, and communications capabilities. Auto-identification is used to inform a system level controller of the potential paths through the system as well as module capabilities. Motion control of cut sheets, which of necessity reside physically within multiple hypermodules simultaneously, requires a new abstraction, namely a sheet controller which coordinates control of a given sheet as it moves through the system. Software/hardware co-design has provided a system architecture that is scalable without requiring user relearning. Here the capabilities are described of an exemplary system consisting of 160 modular entities and four marking engines. The throughput of the system is very nearly four times that of a single print engine.
© (2011) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
David Biegelsen, Lara Crawford, Minh Do, Dave Duff, Craig Eldershaw, Markus Fromherz, Haitham Hindi, Greg Kott, Dan Larner, Barry Mandel, Steven Moore, Bryan Preas, Wheeler Ruml, Greg Schmitz, Lars Swartz, and Rong Zhou "Integrated parallel printing systems with hypermodular architecture", Proc. SPIE 7872, Parallel Processing for Imaging Applications, 787206 (25 January 2011); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.880172
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KEYWORDS
Printing

Control systems

Digital signal processing

Reliability

Sensors

System integration

Transceivers

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