BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Field of the Invention:
[0001] The present invention relates to a passbook printer in the bank terminal equipment
and a passbook printing apparatus suitable for the said passbook printer.
Description of the Prior Art:
[0002] In a passbook printer mounted in an automated teller machine or in a passbook printer
to be used by a clerk in charge, the machine performs turning over pages automatically
and makes printing in required positions.
[0003] Passbooks capable of being printed by such passbook printer are broadly classified
into two kinds which are a side-to-side opening, or lateral opening, passbook having
a sewing part perpendicular to the printing direction and a front-to-rear opening,
or longitudinal opening, passbook having a sewing part parallel to the printing direction.
[0004] The passbook printer referred to above is of a mechanism which permits turning over
pages for such two kinds of passbooks.
[0005] For example, in a transfer means for the transfer of a passbook in an open condition,
as described in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 9564/1988, there is disposed a rolling
member inclinedly at an angle of about 45° relative to the transfer direction of a
passbook being transferred by the said transfer means. This rolling member is brought
into contact with a leaf of the passbook and is rotated, allowing the leaf to expand
and move in the direction of about 45° mentioned above to turn over the leaf. In this
case, the leaf of the passbook is slightly curved in a convex shape by means of a
press-up plate disposed on the side opposite to the rolling member of the passbook
to prevent rolling up of two leaves at a time.
[0006] In the above prior art, a page rolling up roller for the passbook performs two motions
one of which is a rotational motion and the other is a translational motion in the
direction of about 45° relative to the passbook transfer direction. Consequently,
the mechanism is complicated, and no consideration is given to the handling time,
that is, the cost is high and the handling time is long.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0007] It is the first object of the present invention to provide a passbook printer capable
of handling both longitudinal and lateral types of passbooks, simple in mechanism
and short in handling time.
[0008] It is the second object of the present invention to provide a passbook printing apparatus
simple in mechanism and short in printing time for use in the above passbook printer.
[0009] In the present invention, for achieving the first object mentioned above, a page
turning roller is disposed in an obliquely intersecting relation to the passbook transfer
direction, and a paper guide which substantially intersects the rotating direction
of the page turning roller perpendicularly is disposed in the vicinity of the page
turning roller.
[0010] In the present invention, for achieving the second object mentioned above, the passbook
printing apparatus is provided within the body thereof with means for detecting the
type of a passbook, a reading unit for reading information which the passbook possesses
a page turning unit for turning over a leaf of the passbook, a printing unit for printing
of the leaf, and a passbook transfer unit.
[0011] In turning a page of a passbook according to the present invention, a hollow page
turning roller disposed obliquely relative to the transfer direction rotates and rolls
up the top page of the passbook while contacting the page. When this page is rolled
up to a certain extent, the passbook is transferred so that the page thus rolled up
strikes against a paper guide which is disposed obliquely relative to the transfer
direction. As a result, this page strikes obliquely against the paper guide and receives
a reaction force. If the angle between the transfer direction and the guide surface
direction is ϑ, the said reaction force acts in a direction of angle α° (α° = 360°
- ϑ°) from the paper guide surface. Therefore, the rolled-up page of the passbook
is moved in the angle α° direction from the paper guide surface. This movement means
a rotational motion of the said page around the sewing part as a central line. Thus,
the paper guide disposed obliquely relative to the transfer direction acts to turn
the page of the passbook in cooperation with the transfer force.
[0012] The passbook which has been inserted from a passbook inlet of the printer is detected
its type from the position of a magnetic stripe stuck on the cover of the passbook
and also from information recorded in the magnetic stripe. Then in accordance with
the detected signal there are performed positioning of the passbook and a page turning
operation, followed by printing by a printing unit.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0013]
Fig. 1 is a partially sectional plan view showing a principal portion of a passbook
printing apparatus according to an embodiment of the present invention;
Fig. 2 is a partially sectional side view of Fig. 1;
Figs. 3 and 4 are views showing examples of passbooks capable of being handled by
the apparatus of Fig. 1;
Fig. 5 is a view showing an example of a page turning roller illustrated in Fig. 1;
Figs. 6 to 16 are explanatory views of page turning operations for a side-to-side
opening type passbook in the apparatus of Fig. 1, of which Figs. 6 to 11 are partially
sectional side views, and Figs. 12 to 16 are partially sectional plan views;
Figs. 17 to 22 are partially sectional side views explanatory of page turning operations
for a front-to-rear opening type passbook in the apparatus of Fig. 1;
Fig. 23 is a view explanatory of a dynamical relation between a passbook page turning
force and a buckling force;
Fig. 24 is a view showing the relation between a deformation of a passbook when a
page thereof is turned and a reaction force;
Figs. 25 and 26 show other examples of the page turning roller illustrated in Fig.
1;
Fig. 27 is a view showing a constructional example of a passbook printer according
to the present invention;
Figs. 28 to 31 show examples of passbooks capable of being handled by the printer
of Fig. 27;
Fig. 32 is a passbook handling flow chart in the printer of Fig. 27; and
Fig. 33 is a schematic perspective view showing an example of an automated teller
machine having the printer of Fig. 27.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
[0014] An embodiment of the present invention will be described below.
[0015] Fig. 1 is a partially sectional plan view showing a principal portion of a passbook
printing apparatus according to an embodiment of the present invention, and Fig. 2
is a partially sectional side view of Fig. 1.
[0016] Figs. 3 and 4 illustrate passbooks to be handled by the apparatus, of which Fig.
3 shows a side-to-side opening, or lateral opening, type passbook 1, while Fig. 4
shows a front-to-rear opening, or longitudinal opening, type passbook 4. In the side-to-side
opening type passbook 1 shown in Fig. 3, pages are turned in a turning direction B
with a sewing part 2 as the center. The direction of the sewing part 2 and that of
a printing 3 are in an orthogonal relation. Usually, the passbook 1 is inserted in
a direction A into a printer (not shown).
[0017] In the front-to-rear opening type passbook 4 shown in Fig. 4, pages are turned in
a turning direction B with a sewing part 2 as the center. In the passbook 4, unlike
the side-to-side opening type passbook 1, the direction of the sewing part 2 is in
parallel with the direction of the printing 3. The passbook 4 is usually inserted
in a direction A into the printer and is opposed to a guide plate 5 serving as a first
guide in Figs. 1 and 2.
[0018] A paper guide 6 as a third guide and a paper guide 7 as a second guide provide a
suitable gap in an out-of-plane direction of the figures to form a passbook transfer
path. The guide plate 5 and the paper guide 7 are mounted between frames 12 and 13.
The paper guide 6 is mounted to the frame 12 which is disposed on the side opposite
to the side where a later-described page turning roller 10 is disposed with respect
to the passbook transfer direction. A span L₅ between the frames 12 and 13 must at
least be longer than the width in the passbook printing direction shown in Figs. 3
and 4. A line 14 represents a path obtained by following the transfer of the sewing
part 2 of the passbook 1 of Fig. 3 in the transfer direction A. A span L₆ of the paper
guide 6 is set so as to be at least shorter than the span L₅. The page turning roller
10 is disposed on one side with respect to the center of the passbook transfer direction
above the guide plate 5. As shown in Fig. 1, the paper guide 7 and a rotary shaft
21 of the page turning roller 10 obliquely intersect the transfer direction A. The
page turning roller 10 is driven by a motor 11 through a belt 20. It may be driven
by any other suitable method. In the portion where the paper guide 6 is disposed,
transfer rollers 8 are disposed rotatably so as to be in face-to-face contact with
transfer rollers 27. On the other hand, in the portion where the paper guide 7 is
disposed, a transfer roller 9 is disposed rotatably through a mounting piece 24 so
as to be in face-to-face contact with a transfer roller 26, and also disposed are
transfer rollers 22 rotatably through mounting pieces 25. The distance L₇ between
the transfer rollers 8 and 9 and the distance L₈ between the transfer rollers 9 and
22 must at least be shorter than the length in the transfer direction of the passbook
1 or 4. On the other hand, the distance L₉ between the transfer rollers 8 and 22 must
at least be longer than the length in the transfer direction of the passbook. The
reason is that when a leaf of the passbook 1 or 4 which has been rolled up by the
page turning roller 10 is rotated around the sewing part 2 along the paper guide 7,
there initially occurs the page displacement thereof in the transfer direction and
that in order for the said displacement to be eliminated by a restoring force based
on the stiffness of the paper and the constraint of the sewing part, it is necessary
to make free the rolled-up leaf of the passbook temporarily. A sensor 15 is provided
for determining a stop position of the passbook 1 or 4.
[0019] Fig. 5 shows a concrete example of the page turning roller 10 used in this embodiment.
The roller 10 is provided with a boss 111 and a frictional contact portion 112. The
frictional contact portion 112 has a structure capable of absorbing changes in thickness
of the passbook through elastic deformations, which structure is a hollow elastic
structure having a hollow part 113 and constituted by a high friction member such
as chloroprene or natural rubber. The shape of the frictional contact portion 112
is defined by a first curved surface 114 having a first profile curve and a second
curved surface having a second profile curve. The first and second curved surfaces
114 and 115 may have straight profile lines in place of curves. The boss 111 is formed
of a sintered alloy such as iron and has a central recess 116 for fitting therein
of the rotary shaft 21. The boss 111 and the frictional contact portion 112 are bonded
together through rubber lining. After the bonding, stepped areas are formed between
the boss 111 and the frictional contact portion 112 to constitute picker means 117.
[0020] The picker means 117 come into engagement with the front end of rolled-up paper surface,
and if this portion is coated with a friction member such as rubber, the retaining
force after the engagement with the paper surface will be enhanced.
[0021] Page turning operations for the side-to-side opening type passbook 1 will be described
below with reference to Figs. 6 to 16, of which Figs. 6 to 11 are side views explanatory
of operations and Figs. 12 to 16 are plan views.
[0022] The passbook 1 is transferred while being sandwiched in between the transfer rollers
8 and 27 and enters the page turning unit, then stops in the page turning position
(Fig. 6) in accordance with a command issued from the sensor 15. At this time, a page
1a having a mark 28 is positioned on the page turning roller 10 side with respect
to the sewing part 2 of the passbook 1 as a center line (Fig. 12). Then, the motor
11 is operated to rotate the page turning roller 10 in a rolling direction C, whereby
the top page 1a of the passbook 1 is rolled up as if it were fed to the sewing part
2 (Fig. 7). The reason why the page 1a hides the transfer rollers 8 in this figure
is that the transfer rollers 8 and the paper guide 6 have not crossed the guide plate
5, as shown in Fig. 1, thus permitting the page 1a of the passbook 1 to move in an
out-of-plane direction in Fig. 1. The page turning roller 10 makes approximately one
rotation and stops in its stop position (Figs. 8 and 13). Next, the transfer rollers
8, 27 and 9, 26 are rotated in a rotational direction
e to transfer the passbook 1 in a transfer direction E, so that the page 1a which has
been rolled up to a certain extent is further rolled up (Fig. 9).
[0023] At this time, as shown in Fig. 14, the page 1a strikes against the paper guide 7
and imparts a striking force
f to the guide 7. Since the paper guide 7 obliquely intersects the transfer direction
of the passbook 1 as mentioned above, the force
f is divided into a normal force f
n and a tangential force f
t. The tangential force f
t serves to impart a rotating motion with the sewing part 2 as a central line to the
page 1a of the passbook 1. Subsequently, as the transfer rollers 8, 27 and 9, 26 are
rotated in the rotational direction
e to transfer the passbook 1 in the transfer direction E, the page 1a is repulsed strongly
by virtue of the stiffness of the paper and the paper guide 7 (Fig. 10). When the
passbook 1 is further transferred in this state, the page 4a is rolled up to the opposite
side with the sewing part 2 as a central line, as shown in Fig. 15, resulting in that
the mark 28 is hidden on the back side. As the passbook 1 is further transferred in
the transfer direction D, the page 4a is turned completely. After this page turning
operation is over, the passbook 1 is further transferred in the direction D, whereby
the passbook in a page-turning completed form is fed to a place other than the page
turning unit (e.g. to the printing unit). In this way a series of page turning operations
are completed. (Figs. 11 and 16)
[0024] Now, page turning operations of the front-to-rear opening type passbook 4 will be
described with reference to Figs. 17 to 23.
[0025] The passbook 4 is transferred while being sandwiched in between the transfer rollers
8 and 27 and enters the page turning unit, and upon detection thereof by the sensor
15 the passbook 4 stops in a predetermined stop position or page turning position
(Fig. 17). Next, the page turning roller 10 rotates in the rolling direction C and
begins to contact a top page 1a of the passbook 1 (Fig. 18). When the page turning
roller 10 makes approximately one rotation and stops in a predetermined position,
the page 4a assumes a rolled-up form (Fig. 19). Then, the transfer rollers 9, 26 and
8, 27 rotate in a rotational direction
d to convey the passbook 4 in a transfer direction D, so that the page 1a strikes against
the paper guide 7 to create a force acting in a direction in which the page performs
a rotating motion with the sewing part 2 of the passbook 4 as a central line, namely
a force acting in a direction parallel to the end face in the transfer direction of
the paper guide 7 (Fig. 20). Under the action of this force the page 1a begins to
turn. As the passbook 4 is further transferred, the page 4a positioned on the side
of the page turning roller 10 of the passbook 4 turns to the opposite side with the
sewing part 2 of the passbook as the center (Fig. 21). When the passbook 4 is further
transferred in this state, the page 4a is turned completely. After this page turning
operation is over, if the passbook 4 is further transferred, it is fed in the page-turning
completed form to a plage (e.g. the printing unit) other than the page turning unit.
In this way a series of operations are completed (Fig. 22).
[0026] In the page turning operation for the passbook 1 or 4 described above, the page
thickness differs, depending on the page to be rolled up. Further, a cover and thin
papers differ in rigidity and frictional resistance. However, since the page turning
roller 10 is of a hollow structure in which the frictional contact portion 112 has
the hollow part 113, the rolling up of page is effected an optimal rolling force.
[0027] Fig. 23 shows a dynamical relation of the page turning mechanism, in which there
are illustrated dynamical models of thin paper 50X, thin paper 50Y and cover 50Z of
a passbook which is apt to be rolled up two leaves at a time. The property of eliminating
a dynamical boundary at the front end portion of the paper guide 6 can be approximated
to fixed conditions. It is necessary that there be a relation of F > f₁ + P₁ among
a rolling force F, a frictional force f₁ between the thin papers 50X and 50Y, and
a buckling resistance P₁ of the thin paper 50X. The rolling force F can be expressed
as the product, F = µ₀ × g₀, of a frictional coefficient µ₀ between the paper surface
and the frictional contact portion 112 of the page turning roller 10 and a reaction
force g₀ against compression of the frictional contact portion 112. On the next thin
paper 50Y there are exerted a frictional force f₁ = µ₁ × g₀ which is determined by
a frictional coefficient µ₁ between the thin paper 50X to be rolled up and the next
thin paper 50Y and the aforementioned reaction force g₀, a frictional force f₂ = µ₂
× g₀ which is determined by a frictional coefficient µ₂ between the next thin paper
50Y and the cover 50Z and the aforesaid reaction force g₀, and a buckling resistance
P₂. These forces must satisfy the reaction of f₁ - f₂ ≦ P₂. If this relation is not
satisfied, the next thin paper 50Y will also be rolled up together with the thin paper
50X to be rolled up. In the above relation, the difference between the frictional
forces inevitably corresponds to the difference between the frictional forces, i.e.
f₁ - f₂ = (µ₁ - µ₂) × g₀.
[0028] Fig. 24 shows the relation of reaction force (g) - deformation (x) obtained when
the frictional contact portion 112 of the page turning roller 10 shown in Fig. 5 is
compressed. In Fig. 24, a curved line 201 is a reaction force - deformation curve
of a conventional solid, page turning roller, while a reaction force - deformation
curve 202 is of the structure having the hollow part 113 in the frictional contact
portion 112 like the page turning roller 10. The curve 202 has a non-linear point
of inflexion as shown in the same figure, including an area 210 which is very insensible
to the deformation
x. The deformation
x corresponds to a value obtained by subtracting a central height of the rotary shaft
which supports the page turning roller 10 shown in Fig. 5 and the thickness of the
passbook which is determined by the number of pages, from the maximum outside diameter
of the roller 10. The reference mark g₁ represents a force which one roller is required
to generate for rolling up a thin paper of the passbook, while g₂ represents a force
which one roller is required to generate for rolling up the cover of the passbook.
It is a first conversion curve 203 that is obtained by integrating the reaction force
g₀ with the frictional coefficient µ₀ between the frictional contact portion 112 and
the paper surface. And it is a conversion curve 204 that is obtained by integrating
variations in the frictional coefficient between papers with the curve 202. When the
curve 203 is in the region exceeding the reaction force g₁, it is possible to generate
a reaction force for rolling up a paper. On the other hand, if the curve 204 is in
the region exceeding g₁, there will occur an error. In other words, a wide optimal
deformation range indicates a wide margin for assembly, etc. The reason why a margin
211 is wide in this figure is because the curve 202 includes the area 210 which is
insensible to deformation.
[0029] It is apparent that even if the margin is obtained from the reaction force - deformation
curve of the conventional page turning roller, it is smaller than that in this embodiment.
[0030] Fig. 25 shows another example of a page turning roller employable in the present
invention. In this example, the page turning roller 10 is provided with a frictional
contact portion 112 having a curved profile surface constituted by a single profile
curve. So constituting the frictional contact portion 112 of the page turning roller
10 is advantageous in that it becomes easier to make a mold and produce the roller.
[0031] Fig. 26 shows a further example of a page turning roller employable in the present
invention. A characteristic feature of this page turning roller resides in picker
means 117. More specifically, this page turning roller 10 comprises a boss 111, a
frictional contact portion 112 having a hollow part 113, and a picker means 117. In
the picker means 117 there is a stepped portion between the boss 111 and the frictional
contact portion 112, and a maximum outside radius r₂ of a picker part 121 of the boss
111 is larger than a maximum outside radius r₃ of a picker part 122 of the frictional
contact portion 112. Consequently, the boss 111 is in a projecting form in its shoulder
portion. Such a positional relation is advantageous in that the frictional contact
portion 112 prevents the page which was rolled up by said frictional contact portion
112 from falling and never touch another pages.
[0032] Therefore, said frictional contact portion 112 never produce jam.
[0033] According to this embodiment, as set forth above, there can be provided a page turning
apparatus capable of turning a page of a front-to-rear opening type passbook and of
a side-to-side opening type passbook positively in a simple structure without using
a complicated mechanism such as an oblique moving means for the page turning roller
or a pressing means.
[0034] Fig. 27 is an explanatory view of a passbook printer according to an embodiment of
the present invention. The printer basically comprises a transfer system consisting
of a transfer path having a passbook inlet 36 and a guide plate 5 and transfer rollers
8, 27, 9, 26, 22, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35 which are driven by a transfer motor
42; sensors 15, 37 and 40 for detecting whether the passbook 1 for example is present
or not; a printing unit 41; an optical character sensor 39 and an optical character
reader 45 both for reading information such as bar code; a magnetic information sensor
38 such as a magnetic head and a magnetic information reader 44 both for reading information
such as a magnetic stripe; a page turning unit comprising a page turning roller 10
driven by a page turning motor 11 and a paper guide 7; an interface 47; a computation
unit 48; an information controller 49; and an information input/output controller
for the exchange of information for a power source, external computers, etc.
[0035] Figs. 28 and 29 show respectively a front-to-rear opening type passbook 57 having
a magnetic stripe 54 in a direction substantially parallel to a transfer direction
A of the passbook and a front-to-rear opening type passbook 58 having a magnetic stripe
55 in a direction substantially orthogonal to the passbook transfer direction A.
[0036] The following description is now provided about reading magnetic information recorded
on the front-to-rear opening type passbook, etc. with reference to Figs. 27, 28 and
29.
[0037] Explanation will first be made about how to read magnetic information recorded on
the front-to-rear opening type passbook 57 having the magnetic stripe 54 in a direction
substantially parallel to the passbook transfer direction A, with reference to Figs.
27 and 28. In this case, when the passbook 57 is stopped in a predetermined position,
the magnetic information sensor 38 shown in Fig. 27 moved in an arrowed direction
56 in Fig. 28 with respect to the magnetic stripe 54 to detect the position of the
stripe 54 and the direction of the magnetic information, and stops in that position.
In this state, the passbook 57 is moved in the direction A, whereby the magnetic information
written in the magnetic stripe 54 is read.
[0038] On the other hand, for reading magnetic information written in the front-to-rear
opening type passbook 58 having the magnetic stripe 55 in a direction substantially
orthogonal to the passbook transfer direction, the sensor 38 is scanned in the arrowed
direction 56 in Fig. 29 while the passbook 58 is stopped in a predetermined position,
to read the magnetic information written in the magnetic stripe 55.
[0039] Now, the following description is provided about how to read magnetic information
written in a side-to-side opening type passbook, etc. with reference to Figs. 27,
30 and 31.
[0040] In Fig. 30 there is illustrated a side-to-side opening type passbook 59 having a
magnetic stripe 60 in a direction substantially orthogonal to a passbook transfer
direction B. In this case, the passbook 59 is stopped in a predetermined position
and in this state the magnetic sensor 38 is scanned in the arrowed direction 56 to
read magnetic information.
[0041] In Fig. 31 there is illustrated a side-to-side opening type passbook 61 having a
magnetic stripe 62 in a direction substantially parallel to the transfer direction
B. In this case, the magnetic sensor 38 is scanned in the arrowed direction 56 while
the passbook 61 is stopped in a predetermined position, to detect the position of
the magnetic stripe 62 and the direction of magnetic information. Then, a position
of the magnetic sensor 38 is determined on the basis of the results obtained and the
sensor 38 is shifted to that position to read the magnetic information written in
the magnetic stripe 62 while the passbook 61 is moved in the transfer direction B.
[0042] Fig. 32 shows a flow of handling of a passbook to be subjected to the page turning
operation in the printer illustrated in Fig. 32. The passbook is stopped in a predetermined
position by controlling the rotation of each roller of the transfer system (step 63);
the magnetic information sensor 38 is scanned to judge the type of the passbook as
well as magnetic information reading direction and reading method (step 64); and the
magnetic information is read (step 65). On the basis of the information thus read,
a stop position of the passbook in the printing unit 41 and a printing method are
determined by calculation in a central computation unit (step 66), then in accordance
with the results obtained the passbook is stopped in that position and printing is
performed by the printing unit 41 (step 67). Next, whether the turning of page is
necessary or not is judged (step 68), and if the answer is affirmative, the passbook
is shifted to a predetermined stop position in the page turning unit in accordance
with the information such as the type of the pass book already detected (step 69).
The said stop position indicates a position in which the passbook can be detected
by the sensor 15. Since the passbook length in the direction orthogonal to the passbook
transfer direction differs, depending on each passbook, it is necessary to change
the amount of shift toward the frame 13 shown in Fig. 1. Subsequently, the page turning
roller 10 is operated to perform the page turning operation (step 70), and after turning
over of the page to be turned, the passbook is transferred to the printing unit. Where
it is not necessary to turn a page, predetermined information is written in the magnetic
stripe of the passbook and thereafter the passbook is discharged (step 71).
[0043] Although in the above page turning method, the position of the page turning roller
10 is fixed and the passbook is shifted in the direction orthogonal to the transfer
direction and disposed in an appropriate position, there may be adoped a construction
in which the page turning roller 10 is made movable in the direction orthogonal to
the passbook transfer direction and the shift of the passbook is not performed.
[0044] Fig. 33 shows an automated teller machine embodying the present invention. The automated
teller machine, indicated at 72, basically comprises a bill/coin handling device 73,
an operating unit 74 comprising a display and a keyboard, a card/slip handling mechanism
76 for subjecting a card inserted from an insertion/discharge slit 75 to predetermined
processings and then discharging both a slip and the card through the slit 75, and
a passbook handling device 78 for subjecting a passbook such as a bankbook inserted
from an insertion opening 77 to predetermined processings.
[0045] As described above in connection with Figs. 27 to 32, once the passbook is inserted
from the insertion opening 77, the type of the passbook, that is, whether the passbook
is a front-to-rear opening type or a side-to-side opening type, the stuck position
of a magnetic stripe, and read/write method, are detected and suitable printing method
and page turning method for the passbook are selected in accordance with the information
obtained.
[0046] In such automated teller machine, also when the user inserts a side-to-side or front-to-rear
opening type passbook from the passbook insertion opening 77, predetermined processings
can be performed for the passbook.
[0047] According to the present invention, as set forth hereinabove, turning of a page can
be done by a simple structure for both front-to-rear and side-to-side opening type
passbooks, and printing to both types of passbooks can be done in a short time by
a simple mechanism.
1. A passbook printing apparatus including:
a first guide (5) for guiding the transfer of a passbook;
a second guide (7) forming a transfer path in cooperation with said first guide (5);
page turning means (10) being disposed in the vicinity of said second guide (7) for
coming into frictional contact with a predetermined page (1a, 4a) of the passbook
(1, 4) and turning the page; and
transfer means (8, 9, 22) for transferring the passbook (1,4) along said transfer
path,
said page turning means (10) and said second guide (7) being disposed so as to obliquely
intersect a passbook transfer direction.
2. A passbook printing apparatus according to claim 1, including:
a third guide (6) disposed in opposed relation to said page turning means (10) with
respect to the center in the passbook transfer direction of said transfer path at
a predetermined distance to form a transfer path in cooperation with said first guide
(5).
3. A passbook printing apparatus according to claim 2, wherein the frictional contact
portion (112) of said page turning means (10) has at least one point of inflection
in a deformation-reaction force curve thereof.
4. A passbook printing apparatus according to claim 1, including:
said second guide (7) having an end face portion po sitioned so as to obliquely intersect
the passbook transfer direction in the vicinity of said page turning means and being
disposed in opposed relation to said first guide (5).
5. A passbook printing apparatus according to claim 3 or claim 4, wherein
said page turning means (10) have a frictional contact portion (112) of a structure
which absorbs changes in thickness of the passbook through elastic deformations.
6. A passbook printing apparatus according to claim 5, wherein the frictional contact
portion (112) of said page turning means (10) has a hollow elastic structure.
7. A passbook printing apparatus according to claim 5 or claim 6, wherein the frictional
contact portion (112) of said page turning means (10) is attached to a rotatable
boss (111) of a low frictional coefficient, and a stepped portion capable of engaging
the front end of the paper to be rolled up is formed at the boundary of said boss
(111) and said frictional contact portion (112) to thereby constitute picker means
(117).
8. A passbook printing apparatus according to claim 5 or claim 6, wherein said page
turning means (10) has a rotatable boss (111), said frictional contact portion (112)
being attached to said boss and having a structure capable of absorbing changes in
thickness of the passbook (1, 4) through elastic deformations, picker means (117)
formed at the boundary of said boss (111) and said frictional contact portion (112)
for engagement with the front end of the paper to be rolled up, and a projecting
portion projecting from said boss for engagement with a guide member, said guide member
being provided on its lower end side with a first contact portion and a second contact
portion both for selective engagement with said projecting portion of said boss (111)
with rotation of said page turning means (10).
9. In a page turning method for a passbook wherein a predetermined page (1a, 4a)
of the passbook (1, 4) located on a passbook transfer path defined by a first guide
(5) for guiding the transfer of the passbook and a second guide (7) having an end
face positioned so as to obliquely intersect a passbook transfer direction is turned
by page turning means (10) disposed in an obliquely intersecting relation to the passbook
transfer direction, the improvement comprising bringing said page turning means (10)
into frictional contact with a corner portion of the page (1a, 4a) to be turned, rotating
said page turning means (10) to roll up the page, transferring the passbook (1, 4)
toward said second guide (7) while the page thus rolled up is in contact with the
end face of the second guide (7), allowing the rolled-up page to generate a tangential
force and a perpendicular force with respect to the end face of the rolled-up page,
and imparting a rotating motion with a sewing part as a central line to the page
(1a, 4a) of the passbook (1, 4) by virtue of said tangential force to turn the page.
10. A passbook printer for printing a predetermined page of a passbook, including:
page turning means (10) for turning the predetermined page of the passbook;
printing means for printing the thus-turned page;
detecting means for detecting the type of the passbook which has been inserted into
a body of the printer;
reading means for reading information which the passbook possesses;
transfer means for transferring the passbook; and
computation means for determining by calculation a passbook stop position and a printing
method in accordance with signals provided from said detecting means and said reading
means and outputting an operation signal.