[0001] The present invention relates to document handling apparatus and methods for plurally
recirculating a set of simplex original documents to a copier to be copied onto both
sides of copy sheets to form pre-collated duplex copy sets, by circulating the documents
in reverse (descending) serial page (N to 1) order beginning with the last sheet (N)
in the document and ending with the first sheet (1) in the document set.
[0002] As xerographic and other copiers increase in speed, and become more automatic, it
is increasingly important to provide higher speed yet more reliable and more automatic
handling of both the copy sheets and the individual original documents being copied.
The providing of duplex copying capabilities and pre-collation copying capabilities
greatly complicates and increases the copier document and copy sheet handling complexities.
[0003] The term "duplex copying" may be more specifically defined into several different,
individually known, copying modes. In duplex/duplex copying, both sides of a duplex
document sheet (which has images on both sides) are copied onto both sides of a single
copy sheet. In duplex/simplex copying, both sides of a duplex document are copied
onto only one side of two successive copy sheets. In simplex/duplex copying, to which
the present invention particularly relates, the images of two successive simplex document
sheets, which have images on only one side, are copied onto opposite sides of a single
copy sheet. In the printing industry, as opposed to the copier industry, two-sided
copying may be referred to as "backing-up" rather than duplex copying.
[0004] In a set of duplex documents or copy sheets, odd pages 1, 3, 5, etc., will typically
appear on the first sides, with even pages 2, 4, 6, etc., on the second sides, respectively.
If there is an odd number of pages in the set of duplex sheets the reverse of the
last sheet will typically be blank (empty). In contrast, in a set of simplex document
or copy sheets, the number of the sheet will typically also correspond to the page
number. Thus, an odd number of simplex document sheets will normally have an odd number
of page images.
[0005] The duplex copying of the copy sheets (for either duplex/duplex or simplex/duplex
copying) may be done by first making in the copier processor a set of simplexed copy
sheets (printed only on their first sides) of only the odd or the even document pages
and temporarily storing those simplex copy sheets in a duplex buffer tray, and then
feeding them back through the same copying processor for a second pass printing of
the opposite order (even or odd page) document images on the opposite sides of the
copy sheets. Such systems may be referred to as sequential or dual pass duplexing
systems. Examples of such systems for handling the copy sheets being duplexed are
shown in U. S. Patents Nos. 3,615,129, issued October 26, 1971 to W. A. Drawe, et
al.; 3,645,615, issued February 29, 1972, to M. R. Spear, Jr.; and 3,851,754, issued
October 15, 1974, to E. E. Drexler et al. on duplex/duplex. Of particular interest
as disclosing a duplex copying system which is also a pre-collation copying system
are U. S. Patents Nos. 3,630,607, issued December 28, 1971, to H. Korn and 4,116,558,
issued September 26, 1978, by the same assignee in the name of J. A. Adamek et al..
[0006] The present invention is an improvement over said Adamek Patent No. 4,116,558 for
automatically achieving copying and storage of even page numbered copies of simplex
documents in the duplex buffer tray to avoid variable output inversion or copying
of a blank page when an odd number of simplex documents is being duplex copied, as
indicated in that patent to be desirable, and for achieving this feature under the
further difficulty of copying the documents in reverse (descending) serial page order
with a different type of document handling system. The description beginning with
the last paragraph of Column 8 of said Adamek U.S. Patent is particularly noted by
way of background for this application.
[0007] A desirable feature for a copier is to provide automatic document recirculation for
pre-collation copying. As discussed, for example, in detail in U. S. Patent No. 3,963,345,
issued June 15, 1976, to D. J. Stemmle, et al., at Columns 1-4, and the above-cited
Adamek patent, such pre- collation copying systems provide a number of important advantages.
The copies exit the copier in pre-collated sets, and do not require subsequent sorting
in a sorter or collator. Any desired number of such copy sets may be made by making
a corresponding number of recirculations of the document set in collated order past
a copying station and copying each document once each time it recirculates. On-line
finishing and/or removal of the completed copy sets may be provided while additional
copy sets are being made from the same document set.
[0008] However, a disadvantage of pre-collation copying systems is that the documents must
all be repeatedly circulated, and copied in a pre-determined order only once in each
circulation, by a number of circulations equivalent to the desired number of copy
sets. Thus, it may be seen that increased document handling is necessitated for a
pre-collation copying system, as compared to a conventional post-collation copying
system. Maximizing document handling automation and copying cycle efficiency is particularly
important in pre-collation copying. If the document handler cannot circulate and copy
documents in coordination with the copy sheets in the correct order, the total copying
time for each copy set will be increased.
[0009] In a post-collation copying system, all the desired copies are made at one time from
each document page and collated by being placed in separate sorter bins. The document
set need only be circulated once and multiply copied to fill bins of the copy sheet
sorter or collator with the corresponding number of copy sets desired. However, the
number of copy sets which can be made in one circulation is limited by the number
of available bins, and the sorter adds space and complexity and is not well suited
for on-line finishing.
[0010] Some examples of art relating to pre-collation document handling systems of the type
disclosed herein, in which each document sheet is withdrawn from the bottom of a document
set stack for copying once in each circulation and then returned to the top of the
document stack for repeated copying circulations include: German Patentschrift 1,128,295,
25 October 1962; and U. S. Patents Re. 27,976, (originally U. S. 3,499,710, issued
March 10, 1970) to L. W. Sahley; U.S. 3,536,320, issued October 27, 1970, to D. R.
Derby; U. S. 3,552,739, issued January 5, 1971, to R. R. Roberts, et al.; U. S. 3,556,511,
issued January 19, 1971, to A. Howard, et al.; U. S. 3,888,579, issued June 10, 1975,
to V. Rodek et al.; and U. S. 3,937,454, issued February 10, 1976, to R. H. Colwill.
A recent example of a pre-collation copying system of this type, with circuitry and
switches for counting the number of documents recirculated and for counting the completion
of each set circulation, and face-up loading of the document stack, is shown in U.
S. Patent No. 4,076,408, issued February 28, 1978, to M. G. Reid et al., and in the
U. S. Patent Office Defensive Publication T957,006 of April 5, 1977, based on application
Serial No. 671,865, also filed March 30, 1976, by M.G. Reid, et al.. Other examples
of document sheet sensors are disclosed in U. S. Patent 3,790,158, issued February
5, 1974, to J. E. Summers et al..
[0011] A recent example of an N to 1 order duplex or simplex pre-collation copying document
recirculation system is disclosed in article No. 16332, pp. 49 - 52 of the November
1977 issue of "Research Disclosure", published by Industrial Opportunities, Ltd.,
Homewell, Havant, Hampshire, U. K.. A corresponding U. S. application No. 813,041,
was filed July 5, 1977 and its equivalent U. K. application No. 2,000,749A was published
17 January 1979.
[0012] Further examples of copier systems with document and sheet handling control systems
are described in U. S. Patent Nos. 4,062,061, issued December 6, 1977, to P J. Batchelor
et al.; 4,078,787, issued March 14, 1978, to L. E. Burlew et al.; 4,099,150, issued
July 4, 1978, to J. L. Conin; 4,123,155, issued October 31, 1978, to W. L. Hubert;
4,125,325, issued November 14, 1978, to P. J. Batchelor et al.; and 4,144,550, issued
March 13, 1979, to J M. Donohue et al..
[0013] The present invention solves the problem of producing properly-collated duplex copies
from a copier supplied with simplex originals in reverse (i.e. descending) page number
order, irrespective of whether there is an odd or an even number of originals.
[0014] Accordingly the present invention provides a method of producing duplex copies from
simplex originals which is as claimed in the appended claim.
[0015] It is a preferred feature of the invention to place a set of simplex original document
sheets in a collated face-up stack of 1 to N page order which are individually circulated
from the bottom of the stack to the platen of a copier and back to the top of said
stack in N to 1 order, with N being the page number of the bottom page of said document
stack, wherein said odd/even determining means determines whether N is an odd or even
page number, and wherein if N is an odd number, the document sheets are copied in
the first copying circulation as controlled by said copying control means in the copying
order sequence N minus 1, N minus 3, N minus 5, etc., up to the total number of document
sheets in said document set, and in at least the second copying circulation all the
document pages are copied and the Nth document page is first copied on only one side
of a copy sheet as a simplex copy, and in the last copying circulation that same document
set is copied in the copying sequence N, N minus 2, N minus 4, etc., and wherein if
N is an even number, the documents are copied in the first copying circulation in
the order N, N minus 2, N minus 4, etc., and copied on the last copying circulation
in the order N minus 1, N minus 3, N minus 5, etc..
[0016] In order that the invention may be more readily understood reference will now be
made to the accompanying drawing in which the single figure is a partial side view
of an exemplary copier and a document feeder therefor incorporating the present invention.
[0017] Referring to the exemplary copier 10 shown in the Figure, and its exemplary automatic
document feeding unit 20, it will be appreciated that various other recirculating
document feeding units and copiers may be utilized with the present invention, including
various ones disclosed in the above-cited references.
[0018] In the recirculating document handler (RDH) 20 here, individual original documents
are sequentially fed from the bottom of a stack of documents (placed by the operator
face-up in the document storage area or stacking tray 24) to the imaging station 26,
which is the conventional platen of the copier 10, to be conventionally imaged onto
a photoreceptor 12 for the making of copies in a conventional xerographic manner.
The document handler 20 has conventional switches such as 29 for sensing and counting
the individual documents fed from the tray 24, i.e., counting the number of document
sheets circulated. A conventional resettable bail and its associated switch 31 indicates
the completion of each circulation of the complete document set and then is automatically
reset on the top of the stack before the next circulation. The document feeder 20
is selected or adapted to feed the documents serially and sequentially, which may
be conventional sizes and weights of sheets of paper or plastics bearing information
indicia to be copied, e.g., printed or typed letters, drawings, prints, photographs,
etc.. A bottom feeder 32 feeds the bottom document sheet, on demand, to a platen belt
30 which moves the document into registration over the copier platen. In this document
feeder 20 each document is inverted as it is fed from the tray 24 to the imaging station
26 around a first inverting path 40.
[0019] After the document has thus been turned over once at 40 and copied, there is a decision
gate 60 in the document path after the downstream end of the platen belt 30 here,
comprising pivotable deflector fingers, which determines the further recirculatory
movement of the documents through a selected one of two different return transport
paths back to the tray 24. These two paths are a first (simplex) transport path 54
and a second (duplex) transport path 58. The second or duplex transport path 58 returns
the documents to their storage area 24 for restacking with effectively only a single
inversion. In contrast, the first or simplex transport path 54 transports the documents
around a second inverting path 54 and returns them to the same restacking tray after
having been inverted twice. Therefore, the solenoid or other actuator of the selector
gate 60 determines whether the documents are recirculated with a total of one or two
inversions. With two inversions (the simplex path 54) the same sides of the documents
are exposed in each circulation and are restacked in the tray 24 in each circulation
in their original orientation. With one inversion (the duplex path 58) the documents
are restacked in the tray 24 inverted from their previous orientation, which provides
for copying of the opposite sides or faces of the documents on their next circulation.
This is only used for copying duplex documents. The exemplary duplex path transport
58 here is provided by a reversible three roller sheet inverter as shown.
[0020] Both the simplex transport 54 and duplex transport 58 continuously restack the sheets
after they are copied on the top of the stack of sheets in the tray 24. Thus, continuous
multiple recirculations for pre-collation copying can be provided.
[0021] The exemplary copier 10 processor and its controller 100 will be described in further
detail. It provides duplex or simplex pre-collated copy sets from either duplex or
simplex original documents copied by the RDH 20. Two separate copy sheet trays 106
and 107 are provided to feed clean copy sheets onto which the images of the documents
are to be printed. The control of sheet feeding is by the machine controller 100.
The controller 100 is preferably of the known programmable microprocessor type exemplified
by the patents cited in the introduction, which conventionally also controls all of
the other machine functions described herein including the operation of the document
feeder, the document and copy sheet gates, feeder drives, etc..
[0022] For pre-printed or blank covers or other non-copy inserts additional inserter trays
such as 108 can be provided, if desired, for direct output without printing, but interleaved
with the copies.
[0023] The copy sheets are fed from trays 106 or 107 to the conventional xerographic transfer
station 112 for imaging one side thereof, then to the conventional fusing station
114. From there, depending on the position of a duplex selector finger or gate 118,
the copy sheets will be deflected either into a duplex buffer intermediate storage
tray 116 for duplex copies, or into the copy output path of the copier via an output
transport 126. The copy sheets stacked into the duplex tray 116 are stacked image
face-up in the order in which they were copied. The duplex tray 116 here includes
a bounce reverser 120 and jogger/normal force wheels 122 for assisting the stacking
of copy sheets therein and assistance in bottom feeding from the duplex tray 116 by
a bottom feeder 124. For duplex copying the previously simplexed copy sheets in the
tray 116 are fed by the feeder 124 back to the transfer station 112 for the imaging
of their second or opposite side page image. Such now-duplexed copy sheets are then
fed out past the now-opened gate 118 into the same output transport 126. The output
transport 126 transports the finished copy sheets to an output tray, or, preferably,
to a finishing station 140 for the stapling, stitching, gluing, binding, and/or off-set
stacking of the completed, precollated, copy sets. The copy sheets may be stacked
in the finisher in a compiler tray in the order produced without an inverter with
the system disclosed here.
[0024] By way of further background, a known problem with reproducing machines which must
do both simplexing and duplexing is the maintaining of proper collation of the copy
sheets in the output tray. For example, for simplex copy sheets generated in reverse
serial order, the copy sheets would be properly collated if they were output stacked
in that order (N to 1), and stacked face-up in the output tray. Thus, when the operator
picks up the stacked set of completed copy sheets, it will be in the proper forward
serial page order (1 to N) from the top of the stack to the bottom. The same is true
for duplex copies, with the additional requirement that a lower document page number
be on the top of the copy sheet and the next higher document page number be on the
bottom of the same copy sheet, so that the completed duplex copy set is in the order
1/2; 3/4; 5/6; etc.. A difficulty is that most dual pass duplex copying systems inherently
have an inversion of a duplex copy sheet within the processor as the duplex copy sheet
is returned to the transfer station from the duplex tray for the printing of the second
side image onto the back of the duplex copy sheet. Thus, typically a duplexed copy
sheet receives one more inversion than a simplexed copy sheet. Accordingly, the output
path for a simplex copy sheet is typically different (i.e., contains one more or one
less inversions) from the output path for duplex copy sheets in order to maintain
the proper collation order of the output sheets.
[0025] It is known that this creates a particular problem when there is an odd number of
document pages to be copied onto a duplex copy set. In that case, the last page of
the set of duplexed copies is really a simplex copy, because with an odd number of
original document pages the last copy sheet page in the copy set will have an image
on only one side thereof, and the other side will be blank. It is known from the above-cited
Adamek patent, for example, to be undesirable to run this last duplex copy sheet page
through the transfer station for the pseudo-printing of a blank image on the reverse
thereof in order to obtain an additional inversion, since this wastes processing time
and also can cause undesirable background contamination of the blank reverse of this
last page sheet. This can be avoided by printing a last (odd) page of the duplex copy
set on only one side of a clean copy sheet fed from a copy sheet tray, rather than
from the duplex buffer tray, i.e., only running this particular copy sheet through
the processor once. However, this results in the last duplex copy sheet having a different
number of inversions, and, therefore, apparently requiring its inversion in order
to maintain its collation with the rest of the duplex copy sheets if copied in forward
serial order. This inversion adds an additional time delay and potential paper jam
site, as well as the additional expense of the inverter mechanism. Further, in order
to treat the last duplex page differently, it is necessary to know whether an odd
or even page number document is being copied. That is easy to know if the documents
are copied from page 1, in forward serial order, but not if the first document copied
is the last sheet of an unknown number of documents.
[0026] With the present system, these problems are overcome, and the last odd page of the
duplex document set can be copied on only one side of a clean sheet fed from a copy
sheet tray and fed out to the copier outlet without an additional inverter being required.
[0027] Assume, as one example here, a five page (five sheet) simplex document set, from
which 10 pre-collated copy sets are desired. This is accomplished here with 12 document
set circulations.
[0028] A first non-copying circulation of this document set determines, with a count of
the sheet sensor switch 29 in conjunction with bail switch 31, whether there is an
odd or even number of documents. Determining that the number of document pages is
odd in this example, i.e., that the last document N is 5, the copier controller 100
in the next (second) circulation of the document set skips the first and subsequent
alternate documents and copies only the even pages 4 and 2, in that order [i.e., copies
only pages N minus 1 and N minus 3] and places those even page copy sheets in the
duplex buffer tray 116. The other document sheets are circulated in this first copying
circulation, but their copying is inhibited and no corresponding copy sheet is fed
for them in this first copying circulation.
[0029] On the next 9 document circulations in this 10 set example (intermediate circulations
3 to 11) all the documents are copied in the N to 1 order, i.e., 5, 4, 3, 2, 1. However,
the copy sheets for page 5 are fed from the copy sheet tray 107 or 106 (not the duplex
buffer tray 116) and after receiving page 5 on only one side thereof are directly
output, as simplex copies. Page 5 is thus face-up in the outlet to the finisher 140,
and the first copy sheet out. Document page 4 is then copied on a sheet fed from the
copy tray 107 or 106 and fed into the duplex buffer tray 116. The next copy sheet
is fed from the bottom of the duplex tray 116. This is the copy sheet on which page
4 had been printed in the previous circulation. Document page 3 is printed on its
opposite face, and, because of the inherent inversion in the processor output path,
this second copy sheet out is placed in the output path with its page 3 side face-up
and its page 4 side face-down on top of the preceding page 5 copy sheet. The next
even document page, page 2, is also copied on a clean copy sheet from tray 106 or
107 and fed into the duplex tray 116 on top of the preceding page 4. The last copy
sheet in each set is fed from the duplex tray 116 and it receives the document page
1 image on the opposite side of the previous page 2 image and is likewise output.
Thus, in each of these nine document circulations a complete duplexed copy set is
provided stacked in the finisher 140 in the proper collated order 1/2; 3/4; 5/blank;
and meanwhile the duplex tray 116 has been refilled with another even-side buffer
set.
[0030] On the last (12th) document set circulation in this example the above copying sequence
is changed in that none of the even document pages, 2 and 4 in this example, is copied.
Thus, the duplex buffer tray 116 is emptied, and not refilled, on the last copying
circulation, and the final (10th) copy set is provided, as taught by the above-cited
Adamek patent.
[0031] If, in the above example, there had been an even number of documents, e.g. four,
the copier controller would change the copying sequence and
not skip the first and subsequent alternate documents being recirculated in the first
copying circulation. Rather, it would skip pages 3 and 1, the
second and alternate documents, to copy only the even pages 2 and 4 in the first circulation.
On the second copying circulation it would feed the first copy sheet (page 4) to the
duplex tray, not to the output, since it is an even page to be duplexed, as described
above.
[0032] If, in the above example, there had been only one copy set requested (punched into
the copy count selector switch) rather than 10, then only the first and second and
last document circulations described above would be utilized. There would be no intermediate
circulations in which all documents were copied.
[0033] It may be seen that by the combination here of reverse document page order copying
but with automatic feeding of only even page copies into the duplex tray, and the
feeding of those even page copies back to the processor in the order in which they
were copied on their first sides, that proper output collation is maintained even
though the last odd document page copy is effectively simplexed. To express it another
way, with this system, no separate or additional inverter is required for effectively
simplexing the last duplex copy sheet when there is an odd number of document pages.
Further, this same document handler and copier can be alternatively utilized to produce
fully simplexed copy sets from the same simplex documents if desired, and these simplex
copy sheets will also be in the proper collated output order, i.e., output stacked
in N to 1 order, but face-up, so as to form proper 1 to N page order copy sets.
[0034] It is important to note that with this system, the odd image page number which is
placed on the second side of the copy sheet being duplexed, is the preceding (lower)
page number, not the succeeding (higher) page number. That is, page 3 is printed on
the reverse of page 4 and not page 5. This is essential for maintaining proper collation,
where the copy sheet is output with the last printed side up. This would be true of
a straight-through paper path bottom transfer copier as well as the disclosed top
transfer copier with one inversion in the output path from the transfer station to
the finisher. The present system automatically accomplishes, with this particular
reverse serial order copying system, the placement of the next lower odd page number
on the back of each copy sheet bearing the immediately previous higher even page number.
[0035] It is also important to note that the present system properly and consistently handles
letterhead or other pre-printed or pre-punched copy sheet stock or forms for duplex
copying for either an odd or even number of duplex, or an even number of simplex,
originals. In printing onto letterhead paper, page one, the odd page, must be printed
on the front or letterhead side, not the reverse of the copy sheet. For pre-punched
sheets the binder holes must be on the left side of the odd pages. With the present
system these restricted copy sheets can desirably always be placed face-up in either
of the copy sheet trays, yet will always be properly duplexed, since the proper even
page sides are always printed on the back of the copy sheets first as they are fed
from the copy trays, and then the odd document pages are copied onto the front sides
of the copy sheets as they are fed from the duplex tray.
[0036] Briefly re-describing the disclosed simplex/duplex copying system, it will be seen
that it does not require a separate or variable copy output sheet inverter yet provides
proper page order collated output of all copies, even for those copiers like the "Xerox"
"4000" or "5400" (which designations are trademarks) which have an inherent inversion
in the paper path output after transfer (rather than a straight-through paper path).
Such a paper path is disclosed here. There is no feeding of a "blank" side copy sheet
through the processor for the back of a last odd copy page, or its inversion. The
documents are always circulated in N to 1 order (i.e., reverse serial page order)
in all circulations. For this purpose, the simplex document set is placed face-up
in the tray of a document handler which bottom-feeds the documents to the platen.
Before
copying is initiated, the document set is first initially circulated in one
non- copying circulation during which the number of documents is counted. If an
even number of simplex documents is counted on this first "pre-count" circulation, then
on the second (and first copying) circulation the documents are copied in the order
N, N minus 2, N minus 4, N minus 6, etc.. That is, when the "pre-count" circulation
determines that the
last document is an
even document, then all even documents (only) are copied in the second document circulation
by copying every other document in reverse order starting with the very last document
N. The odd document pages are circulated, but not copied. In contrast, if an
odd number of documents is counted in the pre-count cycle, then the last sheet N of the
document set and the alternate subsequent documents are
not copied on the second circulation and the copying sequence is N minus 1, N minus 3,
N minus 5, N minus 7, etc.. This
also causes only
even document pages to be copied in the second (first copying) circulation even though
the last document page is odd rather than even. Thus, an
even side buffer set is always placed in the duplex tray for
either odd or even numbers of documents. After the above-described first two document circulations,
all but the last subsequent circulations proceed with copying of
all document pages onto copy sheets fed alternately from the copy tray and duplex tray,
as disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,116,558. Then on the
last document set circulation, only the
odd document pages are copied, by reversing the copying sequence for odd and even numbers
of documents which was described above for the second circulation.
[0037] Referring now to the
duplex/duplex system which can be compatibly provided here, the duplex documents may also
be loaded face-up and copied in the same N to 1 (reversed serial) order from the same
single document tray. Here the document inverter for the duplex documents is downstream
of the platen rather than upstream. Thus, the duplex documents are also first run
through a single dummy (non-copying) circulation, but with inversion to restack the
documents inverted in the DH tray from their initial orientation. Thus, the even sides
of the duplex documents are copied on the second (first copying) circulation and placed
in the duplex tray so that the proper page order sequence can be provided in the output
of the duplex copy sheets without an inverter. On all subsequent circulations (up
to the final one) every duplex document sheet is copied on one side and then inverted
before restacking (but in reverse serial order). That is, all the odd sides are copied
on the third (second copying) circulation onto the opposite sides of the buffer set
fed from the duplex tray, then all the even sides are copied in the fourth circulation
and placed in the duplex tray, etc., etc.. The duplex documents are inverted during
all but the last circulation. On the last duplex document copying pass the documents
are all copied but are not inverted. Therefore, they are automatically re-collated
in the document handler tray during this last copying circulation.
[0038] To improve copying efficiency, an additional feature may be provided if there are
only two simplex documents in the document set. With only two simplex documents, there
is only one copy sheet in each duplex copy set, so collation is not required. If only
two document sheets are counted in the document set during the non-copying first circulation,
the copying control 100 causes the copier 10 to make multiple rather than single copies
of these first and second document sheets in the first copying circulation. That is,
the copier automatically switches to a nonprecollation duplex copying mode in which
the selected number of copies, (but limited to the duplex tray 116 capacity) is made
from each document while it is held on the platen without circulation, and all these
copy sheets are stored into the duplex tray and then the next document is multiply
copied onto their opposite sides. If the number of "copy counter" selected copies
exceeds the duplex tray capacity, the two documents are re-circulated for copying,
e.g., for 60 duplex copies of two documents with a 25 sheet capacity duplex tray,
25 copies are made in the first circulation, 25 in the second and ten in the third.
[0039] While conventional integral software incorporation into the copier's general microprocessor
logic circuitry and software of the functions and logic defined herein as taught by
the above is preferred, it will be appreciated that the functions and systems disclosed
herein may be alternatively conventionally incorporated into a copier utilizing any
other suitable or known copier software or hard wired logic systems, cam-bank switch
controllers, etc.. The output control of the exemplary sheet handling systems disclosed
herein may be accomplished by activating known electrical solenoid controlled sheet
deflector fingers and drive motors or their clutches in the indicated sequences, and
conventional sheet path sensors or switches may be utilized for counting and keeping
track of the positions of documents and copy sheets.
[0040] Certain aspects of the duplex copying exemplary system here are disclosed in U. S.
4,166,614.