[0002] The present invention relates to systems for integrating a printer with accessory
equipment, and, more particularly, to a system for integrating a printer with a sheet
handling device, such as a mailpiece inserter and, still more particularly, a system
and method for developing an integrated print interface to perform special print operations,
such as duplex or dual-sided printing.
[0003] A mail insertion system or a "mailpiece inserter" is commonly employed for producing
mailpieces intended for mass mail communications. Such mailpiece inserters are typically
used by organizations such as banks, insurance companies and utility companies for
producing a large volume of specific mail communications where the contents of each
mailpiece are directed to a particular addressee. Also, other organizations, such
as direct mailers, use mailpiece inserters for producing mass mailings where the contents
of each mailpiece are substantially identical with respect to each addressee.
[0004] In many respects, a typical inserter system resembles a manufacturing assembly line.
Sheets and other raw materials (i.e., a web of paper stock, enclosures, and envelopes)
enter the inserter system as inputs. Various modules or workstations in the inserter
system work cooperatively to process the sheets until a finished mail piece is produced.
Typically, inserter systems prepare mail pieces by arranging preprinted sheets of
material into a collation, i.e., the content material of the mail piece, on a transport
deck. The collation of preprinted sheets may continue to a chassis module where additional
sheets or inserts may be added based upon predefined criteria, e.g., an insert being
sent to addressees in a particular geographic region. Subsequently, the collation
may be folded and placed into envelopes. Once filled, the envelopes are closed, sealed,
weighed, and sorted. A postage meter may then be used to apply postage indicia based
upon the weight and/or size of the mail piece.
[0005] These inserters typically require the use of "preprinted" sheets which are presented
to the various downstream devices by a feed module for subsequent processing. That
is, a mailpiece job run is printed to produce an "ordered" stack of mailpiece content
material which may be fed to the mailpiece inserter. Scan codes disposed in the margin
of the first or last sheet of each mailpiece document provide the instructions necessary
to process the mailpiece, i.e., whether additional inserts will be added, how the
content material is to be folded (C-fold, Z-fold, etc.) and/or what size envelop will
the content material be contained. To facilitate communication of these instructions,
a user computer and a printing device are typically network-connected to the mailpiece
inserter such that scan codes can be easily printed and interpreted.
[0006] More recently, printers have been integrated with mailpiece inserters so that mailpiece
content material may be supplied "on-demand", and/or "just-in-time". Examples of inserters
having integrated printers include the DI 900 and DI 950 mailpiece inserters manufactured
by Pitney Bowes Inc., located in Stamford, Connecticut, U.S.A. While such integration
facilitates the flow and handling of mailpiece content material, it is often desirable,
if not essential, that the printers used in such mailpiece inserters be repairable,
replaceable or interchangeable with other printers. For example, while the DI 900
and DI 950 inserters employ HP 4350 B&W and HP 4700 color printers, it may, over the
course of many years of service, be desirable to substitute these printers with updated
versions of the same or to replace these printers with those of other Original Equipment
Manufactures (OEMs).
[0007] Inasmuch as the internal program code employed to control such printers is often
proprietary/confidential to the OEM, or time consuming to modify, it has become increasingly
important to develop an electro-mechanical interface between the printer and inserter
which allows the printer to operate independently, while at the same time, operate
harmoniously with the mailpiece inserter. That is, the printer must be operative to
perform its various functions, including those required by the inserter, without modifying
the internal program code of the base printer.
[0008] Examples of such program functions include the requirement to duplex print (dual-sided
printing) and conventional printing to an upper stacking tray. With respect to the
former, duplex printing produces unique requirements inasmuch as a diverter mechanism,
typically used in conjunction with printer accessories (such as a stapler or collator),
must be controlled to divert sheet material to the mailpiece inserter. That is, while
the diverter is typically controlled by the internal printer program code, i.e., when
an accessory is added, the diverter must now be controlled in accordance with a different
set of algorithms to cooperate with the inserter. With respect to the latter, the
printer must be controlled to send sheet material to a stacking tray when being operated
as a conventional printing apparatus and to a downstream module of the inserter (typically
referred to as the buffer/accumulator or input module) when being used to generate
mailpieces.
[0009] A need, therefore, exists for a print interface system for a sheet handling system
to facilitate various operating modes, including conventional printing, duplex printing,
and mailpiece creation modes.
[0010] A print interface system is disclosed, including a printer integrated in combination
with a sheet handling system such as a mail piece inserter. The print interface system
facilitates the handling of sheet material in various operating modes, including conventional
printing, duplex printing, and mailpiece creation modes. The system includes a printer
having multiple feed paths for printing on opposing face surfaces of a sheet material.
One of the feed paths directs sheet material to a staging tray and another feed path
directs sheet material to a downstream module of the sheet handling system. The system
further includes a positionable diverter for directing sheet material to one of the
feed paths and a sheet sensor for determining when a sheet of material has been directed
along the feed path leading to the output tray. A controller is operative to alternately
repositioning the diverter from one of two positions. A first position directs sheet
material to the staging tray following a first print operation, and a second position
directs sheet material to the downstream module of the sheet handling system. The
controller, furthermore, repositions the diverter following a threshold period of
time X from receipt of the staging signal issued by the sheet sensor.
[0011] The accompanying drawings illustrate a presently preferred embodiment of the invention,
and together with the general description given above and the detailed description
given below, serve to explain the principles of the invention. As shown throughout
the drawings, like reference numerals designate like or corresponding parts. Figure
1 is a schematic diagram of a mailpiece inserter having a printer integrated upstream
of the various mailpiece handling/processing modules, i.e., a mechanical page buffer/accumulator,
folder, inserter, and sealer.
[0012] Figure 2 is an enlarged schematic diagram of a mechanical printed-page buffer which
senses the throughput status of mailpiece content material prior to downstream processing
by the inserter.
[0013] Fig. 3 is a broken-away side view of a print interface system in accordance with
the teachings of the present invention, including a diverter and control mechanism
for directing the feed path of duplex-printed content material.
[0014] Fig. 4a is an enlarged view of the diverter in a first position for directing sheet
material to an upper staging tray.
[0015] Fig. 4b is an enlarged view of the diverter in a second position for directing sheet
material to the page buffer of the mailpiece inserter.
[0016] The inventive print interface system and control algorithms therefor are described
in the context of a mailpiece inserter system, though the inventive interface system
may be used in combination with any sheet handling device which requires printing
"on-demand" or "on request". Further, the invention is described in the context of
a DI 900 Model Mailpiece Inserter, i.e., a mailpiece creation system produced by Pitney
Bowes Inc., located in Stamford, State of Connecticut, USA, though, the inventive
subject matter may be employed in any mailpiece inserter and/or with any print manager
software used in the printing/creation of mail pieces such as PBFirst ®. PBFirst is
a registered trademark of Pitney Bowes Inc. and is a software product for printing/producing
mailpieces processed by a mailpiece inserter system. Moreover, while the print interface
system and control algorithms thereof are intended for use in combination with printers
of various makes and models, the printers described herein include the HP 4350 BW
and HP 4700 Color printers manufactured by Hewlett Packard Company, located in Palo
Alto, State of California, U.S.A.
[0017] Before discussing the invention in greater detail, it will be useful to understand
the basic system architecture and operation of the mailpiece inserter, including the
cooperation of various system components and elements. In Figure 1, a dedicated printer
8 is integrated with the mailpiece inserter 10 and is disposed upstream of various
inserter devices (also referred to as downstream devices relative to the printer 8)
which handle and process the mailpiece content material 12. Throughout the description,
the terms "mailpiece content material", "printed material", "sheets" and /or "sheet
material" will used interchangeably. In the described embodiment, an HP 4350 and HP
4700 model printer, manufactured by Hewlett Packard (HP), is integrated with the mailpiece
inserter 10. The HP 4350 printer system is a black & white printer having an output
rate of approximately fifty-five (55) pages per minute. The HP 4700 is a color printer
having an output rate of approximately thirty (30) pages per minute.
[0018] In Figs. 1 and 2, a mechanical buffer or page buffer 16 is disposed downstream of
the printer 8 and, inter alia, functions to monitor/track the throughput of printed
pages 12 being processed by the inserter 10. More specifically, the page buffer 16
receives printed pages 12 from the printer 8 and includes a plurality of sequential
page stations 18a, 18b, 18c, 18d, 18e disposed along a serial feed path. Position
sensing devices 20 are located at or along each of the page stations 18a, 18b, 18c,
18d, 18e and monitor the rate that printed pages enter or leave the page buffer 16.
Furthermore, the sensing devices 20 are operative to issue position signals 22 to
a system controller 24 such that the inserter 10 may determine whether a page or sheet
12 is positioned at a particular one of the page stations 18a, 18b,18c, 18d, 18e.
In the described embodiment, the sensing devices 20 are photocells, though any position
sensor 20 may be employed.
[0019] The rate of change of the position signals 22 (i.e., the signals issued by the page
buffer 16) may be used by the controller 24 to determine the throughput that content
material is processed. Fundamentally, the "throughput" or "throughput rate" is the
magnitude at which sheet material is processed, whether in terms of a steady number
of "sheets per unit time", bundles of sheets (e.g., bundles of five (5) sheets requested
every several seconds) or a non-steady flow of sheets. Generally, it is the objective
of the system controller 24 to drive the printer 8 to generate content material 12
at a rate consistent, or commensurate, with the rate of processing by other downstream
devices of the mailpiece creation system 10. While in the described embodiment the
initial/first downstream device is a page buffer 16, it should be appreciated that
any downstream device may be adapted to issue a throughput signal indicative of the
rate that content material 12 or mailpieces are processed by the inserter 10. In Figure
1, such downstream devices may additionally, or alternatively, include an accumulator
25, a pre-fold accumulator 26, a folder 27, an envelop inserter 28, and/or a sealer
29.
[0020] The system controller 24 monitors the throughput data and issues command signals
30 indicative of the number of pages 12 to be printed by the integrated printer 8.
More specifically, the command signals 30 are indicative of a specific page number
to begin printing along with the number of pages 12 to follow. For example, the controller
24 may issue command signals 30 requesting the printer 8 to generate page number thirty
(Page # 30) plus five (5) additional pages of data. Before this request is issued
to the printer (in the more conventional sense), the controller 24 issues the command
through a page-based language monitor 34. In the preferred embodiment, the system
controller 24 generally issues a command signal 30 to print between three (3) to seven
(7) pages with each request, though several command signals 30 may be generated within
a very short period of time.
[0021] The mailpiece inserter 10 further includes a User Interface Module (UIM) 36 interposing
the mechanical page buffer 16 and the system controller 24. The UIM 36 is responsive
to the position signals 22 of the mechanical page buffer 16 for determining when additional
pages, sheets or content material 12 can be accepted by the page buffer 16. Furthermore,
the UIM 36 is operative to issue a request signal 38 to the system controller 24,
which request signal 38 is indicative of the number of mailpiece content pages 12
to be printed. Hence, conversion of the position signals 22 to a command signal 30
may be performed by either the system controller 24 or by the UIM 36, depending upon
where the program logic/intelligence is located. It should be further appreciated
that while a request may be made by the UIM 36, the controller 24 may have received
a message that the print job, i.e., determined at the User PC 14, is complete. Consequently,
in this instance, the controller 24 will not forward a command signal 30 to the language
monitor 34 for issuance to the printer 8.
[0022] The page-based language monitor 34 (hereinafter the "language monitor" or "LM") receives
print stream data from a page-based print processor 40 and is interposed between the
system controller 24 and the dedicated printer 8. In the broadest sense, the LM 34
is the gate-keeper of data communicated to the printer 8 from the controller 24. More
specifically, the LM 34 retains material content data, including an object-data dictionary,
for each page of material content and triggers the printer 8 to generate a particular
page (i.e., page number) along with N number of additional pages. While this request
to print is made by the controller 24, the LM 34 contains the active program code
which intercepts the print stream data, i.e., the print control language (PCL), from
the printer driver to throttle the rate at which content material 12 is generated
by the printer 8.
[0023] More specifically, the page-based LM 34 is operative to vary the flow of print stream
data to the printer 8 and vary the production rate of mailpiece content material.
Additionally, the LM 34 includes a buffer file capable of storing 300 MB (300,000,000
bytes) of data and, accordingly, the buffer file is capable of storing multiple pages
of data, including duplex pages. Hence, in the context used herein, a "page" of data
includes all data which may be found on a one- or two-sided sheet of paper.
[0024] In operation, the language monitor 34 and print processor 40 issue a print command
signal 44 to throttle/control the output of the printer in order to be consistent
with or match the throughput of the mailpiece inserter 10. As more pages are processed
by the inserter 10, additional or more frequent requests for additional printed pages
can be made. Should the inserter 10 require additional processing time to collate
and/or combine a complex variety of inserts, requests can be made for a fewer number
of printed pages or at less frequent intervals to prevent an overload condition or
too many sheets from being printed over a prescribed period of time.
[0025] When integrating a printer with a sheet handling device such as a mailpiece creation
system/inserter, several requirements and objectives should be met/obtained. First,
to ensure maximum throughput, the system should minimize time gaps between a request
for printing and the generation of printed content material. Secondly, to the extent
that various application software may be employed to generate print jobs, it is desirable
to affect integration of the printer without modifying its underlying print program
code. As mentioned in the Background of the Invention, aside from the cost associated
with program code modification, such program code is oftentimes proprietary to the
original equipment manufacturer (OEM). Consequently, it may be difficult to obtain
access to or overwrite the original program code.
[0026] Additionally, the printer throughput and/or operation should not be adversely impacted
when performing specialized functions such as duplex printing. As will be discussed
hereinafter, some printers feed duplex-printed pages to an upper output tray rather
than to an accessory feed path. Inasmuch as certain sheet handling equipment, such
as certain mailpiece inserters, receive printed pages from an accessory feed path,
various control and/or feed path modifications must be performed without impacting
throughput or creating new/additional modes of failure. Finally, inasmuch such high-output
printers are costly pieces of capital equipment, it is oftentimes necessary that the
printer be used in multiple modes to justify/amortize the original investment. Consequently,
the printer may necessarily include a suitable interface to operate both independently
and in conjunction with the sheet handling device. These requirements/objectives are
discussed and met in the subsequent description.
[0027] To accommodate duplex printing, certain printers, such as the HP 4350 BW printer,
feed duplex-printed pages to an output tray rather than to an accessory feed path.
That is, these printers are preprogrammed by the OEM to feed duplex-printed pages
to an upper output tray. In Fig. 3, an inventive print interface system 50 is shown
including various structural/control modifications to address the challenges associated
with duplex printing. More specifically, the print interface system 50 is disposed
between a printer 52 and a mailpiece inserter 10. The printer 52 includes multiple
feed paths FFP, SFP for feeding sheet material 12 to an upper output/staging tray
54 or to a page buffer 16 similar to that described in the preceding paragraphs. A
first feed path FFP manipulates sheet material 12 internally of the printer 52 such
that, following a first operation (denoted by dashed lines in Fig. 3), the sheets
12 are passed or staged to the upper staging tray 54. The first operation involves
passing the sheet material 12 past a print head 55 for printing on a first face surface
of the sheet material 12.
[0028] Following a brief period (typically a fraction of a second) in the staging tray 54,
the sheet material 12 reverses direction and re-enters the printer 52 such that a
second face of the sheet 12 may pass the print head 55 for printing on the reverse
face of the sheet material 12 (i.e., an operation denoted by the dotted line in the
Fig. 3), Even during the first print operation, other pages 12 are being handled/conveyed
within the printer 52 such that several pages may pass the print head 55 to print
on one face or an opposite face of the sheet 12. That is, to maximize throughput in
the duplex printing mode, several sheets 12 may simultaneously be conveyed or handled
internally of the printer 52. Furthermore, depending upon the sequence of print operations,
two or more sheets may be printed on one face sheet before one of these same sheets
is printed on its opposite face.
[0029] In view of the various print operations being performed while printing in the duplex
mode, several difficulties must be understood and challenges overcome to ensure proper
handling of the printed content material 12 at the print interface 50. For example,
when the print interface system 50 is operative to feed sheets 12 to the mailpiece
inserter 10, a second feed path SFP is established to forward printed content material
to the page buffer 16. As a result, a controller or control algorithm must be employed
to divert duplex pages to the page buffer 16 rather than to the upper tray 54. It
will be recalled that the normal or preprogrammed print operation of the printer 52
calls for duplex-printed pages to be fed to the upper output tray.
[0030] Inasmuch as such duplex printed sheets 12 must be diverted to the mailpiece inserter
10 when producing mailpieces, the print interface system 50 includes a controllable/positionable
diverter 56 having at least two positions. In a first position shown in Fig. 4a, sheets
of material 12 are fed to the upper staging tray 54 in much the same manner as previously
performed to reverse the direction of the sheets 12. That is, after printing on one
face, the diverter 56 sends sheets 12, i.e., sheets which have now been printed on
a single side, along the first feed path FFP to the upper staging tray 54. Following
a second print operation associated with printing on the opposite face, the diverter
56 sends the sheets 12, i.e., sheets which have now been printed on both sides, along
the second feed path SFP to the page buffer 16.
[0031] To acquire data/information concerning when a sheet 12 has passed various locations
along the feed paths FFP, SFP, sheet sensors 60, 62 are located adjacent each of the
paths FFP, SFP and orthogonal thereto to detect the presence or passage of a sheet
12. A first sheet sensor 60 is disposed proximal to a first printer opening 63, which
outputs sheets 12 to the staging tray 54, and a second sheet sensor 60 is disposed
immediately upstream of the diverter 56. More specifically, the first sheet sensor
60 optically detects the passage of the leading edge of a sheet 12 as it momentarily
enters the staging tray 54 and subsequently reverses direction to re-enter the printer
52. The second sheet sensor 62 optically detects the passage of the trailing edge
of a sheet 12 as it passes the diverter 56 into the page buffer 16 of the mailpiece
inserter 10.
[0032] In operation, sheets of material 12 are printed on one side and are diverted to the
upper staging tray 54. At this moment, the diverter 56 is spring-biased in a first
direction, or to a position causing the sheets to follow the first feed path FFP,
through the first printer opening 63 and past the first sensor 60. When the leading
edge of each of the staged sheets 12 passes the optical beam 60B of the sensor 60,
a staging signal 60S is issued to a controller 66 and an internal timer or clock 68
therein is set/started. Inasmuch as a plurality of sheets 12 may be staged into the
tray 54 over the course of several seconds, many staging signals 64 may be issued,
thereby setting several timers 68 within the controller 66. Inasmuch as the second
print operation, i.e., the operation which prints on the opposing face of the duplex-printed
sheet, consumes a fixed period of time X (in seconds), it can be concluded that any
identified sheet 12 which was first detected X seconds prior, i.e., by the first sensor
60, has now been printed on both face surfaces. Accordingly, the identified sheet
12 is ready to be passed to the page buffer 16 of the mailpiece inserter 10.
[0033] In Figs. 4a and 4b, the controller 66 is responsive to the staging signal 60S issued
by the first sensor to reposition the diverter 56 from a first position to a second
position for directing sheets to the mailpiece inserter 10. Specifically, however,
the controller 66 is operative to reposition the diverter 56 following a threshold
period of time X from receipt of the staging signal. In the described embodiment,
the threshold period X is between 3.0 to 4.0 seconds, and, more precisely, between
about 3.3 to about 3.7 seconds.
[0034] To ensure that the diverter 56 remains in its second position for a period of time
sufficient to permit passage of a duplex-printed sheet 12, the second sensor 62 issues
a position signal 62P to the controller 66. That is, when the trailing edge of a sheet
12 passes the optical beam 62B of the second sensor 62, the controller 66 is responsive
to the position signal 62P to rapidly reposition the diverter 56 from the second position
to its original or first position. Accordingly, the first and second sensors 60, 62
communicate with the controller 66 to ensure that a duplex-printed page 12 is ready
to be diverted to the page buffer 16 and has safely past the mechanism of the diverter
56.
[0035] Referring to Figs. 3 and 4b, the print interface system 50 includes a mechanism 70
for actuating the diverter 56. Furthermore, the mechanism 70 is adapted to permit
separation and/or disengagement of the printer 12 relative to the page buffer 16 of
the mailpiece inserter 10. In the described embodiment, the mechanism 70 includes
a linear actuator 72, a bell crank 74, a lever arm 76 and a plunger 78. More specifically,
the linear actuator 72 and bell crank 74 are mounted to a housing structure 16H (see
Fig. 3) of the page buffer 16 while the lever arm 76 and plunger 78 are affixed to
a bridge structure 52H (Fig. 3), i.e., a structure bridging the output openings (i.e.,
staging and accessory output areas) of the printer 52.
[0036] Inasmuch as the diverter 56 is rotationally spring-biased to a first position, the
mechanism 70 is adapted to overcome the spring bias force, thereby repositioning the
diverter 56 to its second position, i.e., for directing sheet material 12 to the page
buffer 16 of the mailpiece inserter 10. Upon receiving a command signal from the controller
66, the actuator 72 retracts linearly to pivot the bell crank 74 in a counterclockwise
direction about a pivot point 74P. As the bell crank 74 pivots, a displacement device
74D, e.g., a cylindrical pin, follows an arcuate path to engage a cam surface 76CS
at a first end 76
E1 of the lever arm 76. Inasmuch as the lever arm 76 is pivot mounted to the bridge
structure 74 about a central fulcrum 76CF, the upward vertical motion of the pin 74P
effects a downward vertical displacement of the lever arm 76 at its opposing second
end 76
E2.
[0037] The downward displacement of the lever arm 76 is transferred to the plunger 78 by
means of a slotted yoke/pin coupling 80 formed at the juncture of the second end 76
E2 of the lever arm 76 and the upper end of the plunger 78. Additionally, the downward
motion of the plunger 78 is, in turn, transferred to an actuation pin 82 which engages
the diverter 56. Finally, the actuation pin 82 engages a surface of the diverter 56
to effect a force couple or moment M about the pivot mount 56P of the diverter 56.
The moment force M, therefore, alternately repositions the diverter 56 between its
actuating or sheet diverting positions.
[0038] Inasmuch as the bell crank 74 and lever arms 76 are not positively coupled (i.e.,
the coupling-free interface defined by the interaction of a pin 74D and a cam surface
76
cs), these elements may be freely separated by the horizontal displacement of the printer
52 relative to the page buffer 16. That is, by separating the printer 52 and page
buffer 16 horizontally, in the direction of arrows HL, HR, the print interface system
10 facilitates removal, replacement or repair of the printer 52 and/or printer components
which may be accessible only by separating the components.
[0039] It is to be understood that the present invention is not to be considered as limited
to the specific embodiments described above and shown in the accompanying drawings.
The illustrations merely show the best mode presently contemplated for carrying out
the invention, and which is susceptible to such changes as may be obvious to one skilled
in the art. The invention is intended to cover all such variations, modifications
and equivalents thereof as may be deemed to be within the scope of the claims appended
hereto.
1. A print interface system (50) for a sheet handling system, comprising:
a printer (52) having multiple feed paths (FFP,SFP) for printing on opposing surfaces
of a sheet material (12), a first feed path (FFP) directing sheet material (12) to
a staging tray (54) and a second feed path (SFP) directing sheet material (12) to
a downstream module (10) of the sheet handling system;
a positionable diverter (56) for directing sheet material (12) to one of the first
and second feed paths (FFP,SFP),
a sheet sensor (60) for determining when a sheet of material (12) has been directed
along the first feed path (FFP) and issuing a staging signal (605) indicative thereof;
and
a controller (66), responsive to the staging signal (605), for alternately repositioning
the diverter (56) from one of two positions, a first position for directing sheet
material (12) to the first feed path (FFP), and a second position for directing sheet
material (12) to the second feed path (SFP), the controller (66), furthermore, operative
to reposition the diverter (56) from the first to the second position following a
threshold period of time from receipt of the staging signal (605).
2. The print interface system (50) according to Claim 1 further comprising a timer (68),
and wherein the sheet sensor (60) starts the timer (68) upon sensing a leading edge
of the sheet material (12) and wherein the controller (66) determines the threshold
period of time based upon input from the timer (68).
3. The print interface system (50) according to Claim 1 or 2 further comprising multiple
timers (68), each timer associated with individual sheets of the sheet material (12)
which are conveyed internally of the printer (52).
4. The print interface system (50) according to any precedingclaim wherein the threshold
period of time is between about 3.0 to about 4.0 seconds.
5. The print interface system (50) according to any of Claims 1 to 3 wherein the threshold
period of time is between about 3.3 to about 3.7 seconds.
6. The print interface system (50) according to any preceding claim wherein the second
feed (SFP) defines a downstream position beyond the diverter (56) and further comprises:
a sensor (62) for determining when the sheet of material (12) has passed the downstream
position and issuing a position signal (62P) indicative thereof; and
wherein the controller (66) is responsive to the position signal (62P) to prevent
repositioning of the diverter (56) to the first position until the sheet of material
(12) has passed the downstream position.
7. The print interface system (50) according to any preceding claim wherein the staging
tray (54) is dually operative to stage sheet material (12) for printing on opposing
surfaces thereof and as an output tray (54) for stacking sheet material (12).
8. The print interface system (50) according to any preceding claim wherein the downstream
module is a page buffer (16) of a mailpiece inserter (10).
9. The print interface system (50) according to any preceding claim wherein the sheet
sensor (60) optically senses a leading edge of the sheet material (12) as each sheet
of sheet material (12) exits the printer (52) from an output opening (63) to the staging
tray (54).
10. The print interface system (50) according to any preceding claim further comprising
a mechanism (70) for actuating the diverter (56) and defining a coupling-free interface
adapted to permit separation of the printer (52) relative to the sheet handling system.
11. The print interface system (50) according to any preceding claim wherein the mechanism
(70) includes an actuator (72) associated with the downstream module of the sheet
handling device, a pivotable actuation lever (76) disposed proximal to the diverter
(56), the actuation lever having a cam surface (76CS) at one end thereof and connecting
to the diverter (56) at the other end, and a displacement pin (74D) connecting to
the actuator (72) at one end and engaging the cam surface at the other end, wherein
the cam surface (76CS) and displacement pin (74D) define a separable interface to
facilitate separation of the printer (52) relative to the sheet handling system.