Discrimination Of Ink Cartridge Type; Ink Near-Empty/Ink Empty Detection - Brother DCP6690CW Service Manual

Hide thumbs Also See for DCP6690CW:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Air intake port
Air
Ink empty
sensor
Ink
Ink supply port

Discrimination of ink cartridge type

When the user is inserting an ink cartridge into the machine, a part of the cartridge interrupts the
light paths of the ink cartridge detection sensor and ink empty sensor (both are photosensors of
transparent type), which are mounted on the ink refill assembly as shown on the next page. The
interrupt timing allows the controller to discriminate between standard and large-volume ink
cartridges.

Ink near-empty/ink empty detection

The ink refill assembly has four ink empty sensors (photosensors of transparent type) that
monitor the ink levels with sensor actuators inside the ink cartridges.
Ink empty sensor
Attached to one end of the sensor actuator is a float. When there is ink in the cartridge,
buoyancy lifts the float, rotating the sensor actuator about a pivot near the center of the actuator
to block the light beam to the ink empty sensor, indicating that there is ink.
As the ink level in the ink cartridge drops, however, the float falls, eventually moving the sensor
actuator out of the beam.
Light hitting the sensor outputs the "ink near-empty" signal to the controller that shows the "Ink
low" message and activates a firmware counter tracking ink usage during ink-jet printing,
purges, and other operations. When this counter reaches a predetermined limit, the firmware
regards it as "ink empty" and shows the "Cannot Print" message to prompts the user to replace
it.
Disc valve S
Sensor actuator
Disc valve D
Sensor actuator
3-22
(InkBackflowPrevention)
Float
(InkEmptySensor_2)
Confidential

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Mfc6490cwMfc6890cdw

Table of Contents