An apparatus for the production of printed images according to electrostatic printing techniques comprising guide means for the electrode arrangement and/or the aforesaid carrier or the counter electrode serving as its support, and means cooperating with the guide means for carrying out a change in the spacing between the electrode arrangement serving to produce the latent charge image and the carrier for the reception of the latent charge image or its counterelectrode.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED CASE
This is a divisional application of our commonly assigned copending United States application Ser. No. 272,047, filed July 14, 1972 and entitled "Method for Electrostatic Printing, Apparatus for Performance of the Aforesaid Method, Products Produced Thereby, and Use of These Products".
An electrostatic recording apparatus for recording an image represented by a series of binary signals delivered by an image signal source on a recording medium which is moved relative to the apparatus comprises a recording head including a multiplicity of thin strip-shaped recording electrodes having end surfaces substantially aligned on a line substantially perpendicular to a direction of the relative movement of the recording medium, each of the end surfaces having a thickness measured in a direction substantially perpendicular to the line which is smaller than its width measured in a direction parallel to the line, and image signal applying device for sequentially applying a series of binary signals delivered by the image signal source and representative of the image, to the multiplicity of recording electrodes to form the image on the recording medium by dots produced thereon corresponding to the binary signal in such a manner that each of the binary signals is applied equally at a plurality of times to one of the recording electrodes while moving the recording medium relative to the recording head thereby forming one dot corresponding to that binary signal.
A visual tire valve is adapted for mounting over a tire valve stem and includes a stem housing at one end mounted upon said valve stem, has an elongated bore intermediate its ends and an exteriorly threaded barrel at its other end having a counter bore. An axially apertured bolt is slidably nested within said bore and has three annular bands of different colors upon its exterior for indicating over inflation, proper inflation and under inflation with respect to a window in said stem housing. A second housing having an internally threaded bore is adjustably mounted upon and along said barrel and supports therein a stem having a normally closed longitudinal bore whose inner end extends into the second housing bore and partly into said counter bore and whose outer end projects from the second housing. A spring is interposed in compression between said bolt and stem. A normally seated spring-biased air flow control rod is disposed within said stem closing off air communication therethrough. A normally seated valve within said bolt is adapted to prevent passage of air therethrough in one direction. Once calibrated for a preset tire pressure, the visual tire valve automatically indicates the condition of air pressure within the tire.
4347525 - Electrostatic label printing system - Owned by Markem Corporation (Keene, NH) [*] Notice:The portion of the term of this patent subsequent to July 28, 1998 has been disclaimed.
In the label printing system of the present invention, a strip of adhesive-backed label stock capable of receiving a latent charge image and having a releasable backing layer is drawn continuously from a supply reel and passed successively through an electrostatic print head, a developer, a pressure fixer, and a rotary die or butt cutter for separating the printed stock into individual labels on the uncut releasable backing layer. The latent imaging of each label at the electrostatic print head is carried out at defined discrete locations on the label stock. These locations may be defined in response to a synchronization signal produced by an angular position detector cooperating with the rotary cutter. The synchronization signal is indicative of a predetermined instantaneous rotational orientation of the cutting elements on the rotary cutting member, thereby insuring that the printed label indicia are properly centered within the label edges after die or butt cutting. When die cutting is used, separate takeup reels are provided for the waste cuttings and for the finished labels on the uncut releasable backing layer.
A strip of adhesive-backed label stock capable of receiving a latent charge image and having a releasable backing layer is drawn continuously from a supply reel and passed successively through an electrostatic print head, a developer, a pressure fixer, and a rotary die or butt cutter for separating the printed stock into individual labels on the uncut releasable backing layer. The latent imaging of each label at the electrostatic print head is commenced in response to a synchronization signal produced by an angular position detector cooperating with the rotary cutter. The synchronization signal is indicative of a predetermined instantaneous rotational orientation of the cutting elements on the rotary cutting member, thereby insuring that the printed label indicia are properly centered within the label edges after die or butt cutting. When die cutting is used, separate takeup reels are provided for the waste cuttings and for the finished labels on the uncut releasable backing layer.