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US3635334A - Cartridge for sheet-feeding arrangements - Google Patents

Cartridge for sheet-feeding arrangements Download PDF

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Publication number
US3635334A
US3635334A US872275A US3635334DA US3635334A US 3635334 A US3635334 A US 3635334A US 872275 A US872275 A US 872275A US 3635334D A US3635334D A US 3635334DA US 3635334 A US3635334 A US 3635334A
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Prior art keywords
stack
container
sheet
cartridge
sheets
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Expired - Lifetime
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US872275A
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Reginald Collins
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Omal Group Ltd
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Omal Group Ltd
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65HHANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL, e.g. SHEETS, WEBS, CABLES
    • B65H1/00Supports or magazines for piles from which articles are to be separated
    • B65H1/26Supports or magazines for piles from which articles are to be separated with auxiliary supports to facilitate introduction or renewal of the pile
    • B65H1/266Support fully or partially removable from the handling machine, e.g. cassette, drawer
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65HHANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL, e.g. SHEETS, WEBS, CABLES
    • B65H1/00Supports or magazines for piles from which articles are to be separated
    • B65H1/04Supports or magazines for piles from which articles are to be separated adapted to support articles substantially horizontally, e.g. for separation from top of pile
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65HHANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL, e.g. SHEETS, WEBS, CABLES
    • B65H1/00Supports or magazines for piles from which articles are to be separated
    • B65H1/08Supports or magazines for piles from which articles are to be separated with means for advancing the articles to present the articles to the separating device

Definitions

  • This invention comprises improvements in sheet-feeding arrangements for feeding sheets from a stack thereof. Such an arrangement is required, for example, for feeding a sheet of copy paper from a stack of such paper sheets in a copying machine.
  • An object of this invention is to facilitate the handling of the paper stack from which copy paper is fed, in the machine, whereby a stack may be readily inserted in, and withdrawn from, the machine.
  • an interchangeable cartridge comprising a container and a stack of sheets contained in the container, the container having a bottom wall presenting a platform surface and a top wall which is adapted to overlie a portion of the stack while leaving a portion thereof exposed for feeding the top sheet thereof;
  • a sheet-feed means positioned on the side of the pivot axis remote from the center of gravity of the stack, the weight of the stack being arranged to urge the exposed surface of the top sheet of the stack into frictional engagement with said sheet feed means.
  • center of gravity of the stack lies to one side of said pivot axis whereby the weight of the stack urges the exposed surface of the top sheet of the stack into engagement with a sheet-feed means, and the sheet-feed means is operated to feed the top sheet from the stack.
  • a method is referred to hereinafter as a sheet-feeding arrangement as defined herein.
  • an interchangeable cartridge for use in a sheet-feeding arrangement comprising: a container for containing a stack of sheets therein, said container having a bottom wall including a platform surface and a top wall which is adapted to overlie only a portion of said stack while leaving a portion of said stack exposed for feeding the top sheet thereof, said bottom wall having pivoting means adapted to cooperate with said sheet-feeding arrangement to positively locate said container against translational movement thereof relative to said sheet-feeding arrangement, said pivoting means being located on that side of the center of gravity of the stack of sheets remote from the transverse end wall of the cartridge.
  • FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a sheet-feeding arrangement including a cartridge embodying this invention and,
  • FIG. 2 is a side view of the arrangement shown in FIG. 1.
  • the cartridge generally indicated at 8, comprises a container 9 having a bottom wall 10, a top wall 11 parallel with the bottom wall 10, an opposite pair of parallel sidewalls 12 joining the top and bottom walls and 11, and an end wall 13.
  • the end wall 13 is formed integrally with the bottom wall 10 and attached to the corresponding edge of the top wall 11 with a strip of adhesive tape 14 uniting the adjacent edges of the top and end walls respectively.
  • the adjacent edges of the side and end walls may also be united in similar fashion if desired.
  • any known or convenient arrangement of flaps on the end of the container may be provided to compose the end wall 13, the flaps being adapted to interlock with one another to hold the container in itsfully erected condition as illustrated in the drawings.
  • the container being described is constructed from a onepiece blank of stout cardboard, having a glue flap 16 along one edgewhich is glued to the inside of a sidewall panel 12 along its opposite edge in order to hold the container erect.
  • the blank is creased along the intended fold lines of the blank to facilitate the erection of the blank into a substantially rigid rectangular sided and sectioned boxlike structure having one open end opposite the wall 13.
  • the container holds a stack 20 of sheets of copy paper.
  • the sheets of the stack 20 are a loose fit between the sidewall 12 of the container, the sidewalls l2 transverselylocating the sheets in the container.
  • the stack of sheets is a loose fit between the top and bottom walls 10 and 11 of the container.
  • the sheets of paper composing the stack 20 are of a length between the sidewalls 12, such that they may locate in one longitudinal direction on the end wall 13 of the container and extend nearly to the edge 24 of the bottom wall 10 remote from the end wall 13, as shown in the drawings.
  • the corresponding edge 25 of the top wall 11 of the container is set back relative to the edge 24 to expose the upper surface of the top sheet 26 of paper in the stack.
  • the container provides an opening 26a defined in part by the edge 25 and which exposes an end face 26b of the stack 20.
  • the cartridge 8 In the use of the cartridge 8 in a copying machine by a sheet-feeding method as defined herein, the cartridge is placed in the copying machine with the container bottom wall 10 resting on a fulcrum edge 30 extending transversely of the container and of the intended direction of feed indicated by the arrow S in the drawings, such that the center of gravity (CG) of the paper stack 20 is disposed to the side of the fulcrum edge 30 remote from the exposed portion of the top sheet 26 of the stack.
  • CG center of gravity
  • the weight W of paper in the paper stack then urges the top surface of the top sheet 26 upwardly into frictional engagement with a sheet-feed means 32 in the form of a pair of rollers having a common axis 31 parallel with the fulcrum edge 30, the means 32 being positioned above the paper stack on the side of the fulcrum edge 30 remote from the CG of the paper stack.
  • the sheet-feed means 32 is then operated i.e., rotated in the direction of arrows 33 to feed the top sheet of paper from off the paper stack and to the left as seen in FIG. 2 into the copier section of the copying machine.
  • Tongue-and-slot means is provided to locate the cartridge 8 against translational movement relative to the fulcrum edge 30.
  • tongue means in the form of a pair of spaced-apart tongues 41 is provided upstanding from the fulcrum edge and these tongues engage in slot means in the form of a pair of elongated slots 42 in the bottom wall 10 of the container, the slot 42 extending parallel with the end wall 13 of the container on that side of the center of gravity CG of the paper stack remote from the wall 13.
  • the cartridge 8 may be readily interchanged with a cartridge having a larger or smaller size of paper since it is resting freely in position in the machine between the sheet-feed means 32 and the fulcrum edge 30.
  • the paper stack 20 is readily handled and stored when not in use, sine it is not removed from its container 9. This is of particular advantage when using a specially coated paper, coated in accordance with the requirements of the copying process.
  • the paper may be sold in its container, the container being wrapped in an outer wrapping which may be suited to the needs of the copy paper to preserve it in proper condition.
  • the feed arrangement described utilizes the bottom wall 10 of the container as a platform or feed board. lnasfar as the paper stack is positioned in the container before the container is pivoted on the fulcrum edge, the method comprises positioning the stack of sheets on the platform and then removably pivoting the platform on a pivot axis. The platform or feed board is pivoted to support the paper stack on a pivot axis represented by the fulcrum edge 30.
  • platform formed by the bottom wall has to be substantially rigid to ensure that the paper stack is unable to bend about the fulcrum edge but instead is operated as a first order lever under the action of its own weight.
  • the necessary rigidity may be imparted to the bottom wall 10 of the container in any convenient way. If the container is constructed of sufiiciently stout cardboard, however, the bottom wall 10 maybe sufficiently rigid regardless of the additional support afforded to it by the sidewalls 12 of the container.
  • the sidewalls 12 may be extended to form triangular bracket portions between the edges 24 and 25 of the bottom and top walls respectively of the container to give extra support to the cantilevered portion of the bottom wall 10.
  • the bottom wall could be reinforced with additional strips of material, for example, glued to its underside so as to extend longitudinally of the container from the edge 24 and the slots 42 could be formed in such strips.
  • the sidewalls 12 of the container could be additionally reinforced to act as webs lending substantial rigidity to the bottom wall 10 of the container.
  • the container could be provided with a reclosable flap or flaps for protecting the exposed end portion of the paper stack when the cartridge is not in use.
  • the container may have a tear-off portion to expose the end portion of the paper stack to be engaged by the sheet feed means.
  • the container is not necessarily made of cardboard but may be constructed of any convenient material or materials.
  • a light-sensitive paper since it remains in the container, is substantially protected against light.
  • the container may be open-ended and supplied in a throwaway envelope e.g., of black synthetic resin film which prevents access of light and moisture to the paper stack during storage.
  • a throwaway envelope e.g., of black synthetic resin film which prevents access of light and moisture to the paper stack during storage.
  • the position of the slots 42 in the container bottom wall is critical inasfar as the force F is in direct proportion to the weight W which decreases as the paper is used up. On the other hand, when the container is full of paper the force F must not be too great and yet must be great enough that it remains sufficient to feed the last sheet from the container when the weight W is at its lowest.
  • the position of the slots 42 must be determined empirically in each particular case.
  • the stack of sheets should be a loose fit between the top and bottom walls such that a clearance is maintained between the inner surface of the top wall 11 and the top surface of the top sheet 26 even when the container is full. If the top wall 11 sags onto the top sheet, proper feeding of the top sheet out of the container by the feed means may be prevented. To this end it is of advantage if the top wall is stiff and does not sag noticeably so as to maintain a substantially uniform clearance with the top sheet.
  • An interchangeable cartridge for use in a sheet-feeding arrangement as defined herein comprising:
  • a container for containing a stack of sheets therein said container having a bottom wall including a platform surface, a transverse end wall adapted to locate the sheets of said stack in a longitudinal direction of said sheets, and a top wall which is adapted to overlie only a portion of said stack while leaving a portion of said stack exposed for feeding the top sheet thereof, said bottom wall having pivoting means adapted to cooperate with said sheetfeeding arrangement to positively locate said container against translational movement thereof relative to said sheet-feeding arrangement, said pivoting means being located on that side of the center of gravity of the stack of sheets remote from said transverse end wall.
  • a cartridge according to claim 1 wherein said pivoting means is adapted to cooperate with a tongue means on said sheet-feeding arrangement and wherein said pivoting means includes slot means formed on the bottom wall of said container for enga ement with said tongue means, said slot means extending para lel with said transverse end wall of said container.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Sheets, Magazines, And Separation Thereof (AREA)

Abstract

For feeding sheets from a stack a cartridge presents a platform supporting the stack and is removably pivoted on a fulcrum edge so that the weight of the stack urges the top sheet against a sheet feed means positioned above the stack towards one end. The stack is permanently housed in the cartridge, thus facilitating handling of the stack.

Description

ited States Patent @ollins [451 Jan. 18, 1972 [54] CARTRIDGE FOR SHEET-FEEDING [56] References Cited A RANGEMENTS R UNITED STATES PATENTS P Reg'nald England 390,277 10/1888 Allen ..271/39 [73] Assignee: Omal Group Limited, London, England 1,071,679 8/1913 Silvertrust.... ....206/57 UX 1,714,314 5/1929 Neidich ....206/57 UK [22] 1969 2,452,705 11/1948 Welford... ....206/57 ux [21] Appl. No.: 872,275 2,765,909 10/1956 Graham.... ..206/57 3,360,258 12/1967 Nix ..271/61 UK Related US. Application Data Primary Examiner-Joseph Wegbreit [62] DIVISION of Ser. No. 713,806, Mar. 18, 1968, Pat. No. Anomey Flynn& Frishauf 7 AC [30] Foreign Application Priority Data [5 1 ABSTR T For feeding sheets from a stack a cartridge presents a platform Mar. 29, 1967 Great Br ta n ..l4,l86/67 Supporting the stack and is removably pivoted on a fulcrum June 13, 1967 Great Bl'ltaln g so that the weight of the stack urges the p Sheet against a sheet feed means positioned above the stack towards one [52] 271/61 end. The stack is permanently housed in the cartridge, thus [51 Int. Cl ..B65d 83/08 facilitating handling of the stack [58] Field of Search ..271/61, 39; 206/57 3 Claims, 2 Drawing Figures PATENTEU JAN 1 a 1972 CARTRIDGE FOR SHEET-FEEDING ARRANGEMENTS This application is divided from our copending application Ser. No. 713,806 now US. Pat. No. 3,533,617 filed Mar. 18, 1968.
This invention comprises improvements in sheet-feeding arrangements for feeding sheets from a stack thereof. Such an arrangement is required, for example, for feeding a sheet of copy paper from a stack of such paper sheets in a copying machine.
ln copying machines, it is often desired to change the size of paper on which copies are to be made.
An object of this invention is to facilitate the handling of the paper stack from which copy paper is fed, in the machine, whereby a stack may be readily inserted in, and withdrawn from, the machine.
Our copending application No. 713,806 (now US. Pat. No. 3,533,617) is concerned with a sheet from a stack of sheets comprising: a
a. an interchangeable cartridge comprising a container and a stack of sheets contained in the container, the container having a bottom wall presenting a platform surface and a top wall which is adapted to overlie a portion of the stack while leaving a portion thereof exposed for feeding the top sheet thereof;
b. means removably pivoting the platform surface on a pivot axis transverse to the direction of feed, the stack being positioned on the surface with the center of gravity of the stack to one side of said pivot axis, and interengaging means being provided on the bottom wall of the container and on the pivoting means to locate the container against translational movement relative to the pivoting means, and
c. a sheet-feed means positioned on the side of the pivot axis remote from the center of gravity of the stack, the weight of the stack being arranged to urge the exposed surface of the top sheet of the stack into frictional engagement with said sheet feed means. Such an arrangement is referred center of gravity of the stack lies to one side of said pivot axis whereby the weight of the stack urges the exposed surface of the top sheet of the stack into engagement with a sheet-feed means, and the sheet-feed means is operated to feed the top sheet from the stack. Such a method is referred to hereinafter as a sheet-feeding arrangement as defined herein.
According to this invention, there is provided an interchangeable cartridge for use in a sheet-feeding arrangement as defined herein comprising: a container for containing a stack of sheets therein, said container having a bottom wall including a platform surface and a top wall which is adapted to overlie only a portion of said stack while leaving a portion of said stack exposed for feeding the top sheet thereof, said bottom wall having pivoting means adapted to cooperate with said sheet-feeding arrangement to positively locate said container against translational movement thereof relative to said sheet-feeding arrangement, said pivoting means being located on that side of the center of gravity of the stack of sheets remote from the transverse end wall of the cartridge.
A specific sheet-feeding arrangement employing a cartridge embodying this invention will now be described by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a sheet-feeding arrangement including a cartridge embodying this invention and,
FIG. 2 is a side view of the arrangement shown in FIG. 1.
Referring to the drawings, the cartridge generally indicated at 8, comprises a container 9 having a bottom wall 10, a top wall 11 parallel with the bottom wall 10, an opposite pair of parallel sidewalls 12 joining the top and bottom walls and 11, and an end wall 13.
The end wall 13 is formed integrally with the bottom wall 10 and attached to the corresponding edge of the top wall 11 with a strip of adhesive tape 14 uniting the adjacent edges of the top and end walls respectively. The adjacent edges of the side and end walls may also be united in similar fashion if desired. Alternatively, any known or convenient arrangement of flaps on the end of the container may be provided to compose the end wall 13, the flaps being adapted to interlock with one another to hold the container in itsfully erected condition as illustrated in the drawings.
The container being described is constructed from a onepiece blank of stout cardboard, having a glue flap 16 along one edgewhich is glued to the inside of a sidewall panel 12 along its opposite edge in order to hold the container erect. The blank is creased along the intended fold lines of the blank to facilitate the erection of the blank into a substantially rigid rectangular sided and sectioned boxlike structure having one open end opposite the wall 13. The container holds a stack 20 of sheets of copy paper. The sheets of the stack 20 are a loose fit between the sidewall 12 of the container, the sidewalls l2 transverselylocating the sheets in the container.
Similarly, the stack of sheets is a loose fit between the top and bottom walls 10 and 11 of the container.
The sheets of paper composing the stack 20 are of a length between the sidewalls 12, such that they may locate in one longitudinal direction on the end wall 13 of the container and extend nearly to the edge 24 of the bottom wall 10 remote from the end wall 13, as shown in the drawings. The corresponding edge 25 of the top wall 11 of the container is set back relative to the edge 24 to expose the upper surface of the top sheet 26 of paper in the stack.
It will be noted that the container provides an opening 26a defined in part by the edge 25 and which exposes an end face 26b of the stack 20.
In the use of the cartridge 8 in a copying machine by a sheet-feeding method as defined herein, the cartridge is placed in the copying machine with the container bottom wall 10 resting on a fulcrum edge 30 extending transversely of the container and of the intended direction of feed indicated by the arrow S in the drawings, such that the center of gravity (CG) of the paper stack 20 is disposed to the side of the fulcrum edge 30 remote from the exposed portion of the top sheet 26 of the stack. The weight W of paper in the paper stack then urges the top surface of the top sheet 26 upwardly into frictional engagement with a sheet-feed means 32 in the form of a pair of rollers having a common axis 31 parallel with the fulcrum edge 30, the means 32 being positioned above the paper stack on the side of the fulcrum edge 30 remote from the CG of the paper stack. The sheet-feed means 32 is then operated i.e., rotated in the direction of arrows 33 to feed the top sheet of paper from off the paper stack and to the left as seen in FIG. 2 into the copier section of the copying machine.
Tongue-and-slot means is provided to locate the cartridge 8 against translational movement relative to the fulcrum edge 30. Thus tongue means in the form of a pair of spaced-apart tongues 41 is provided upstanding from the fulcrum edge and these tongues engage in slot means in the form of a pair of elongated slots 42 in the bottom wall 10 of the container, the slot 42 extending parallel with the end wall 13 of the container on that side of the center of gravity CG of the paper stack remote from the wall 13.
With the paper-feed arrangement described, the cartridge 8 may be readily interchanged with a cartridge having a larger or smaller size of paper since it is resting freely in position in the machine between the sheet-feed means 32 and the fulcrum edge 30. The paper stack 20 is readily handled and stored when not in use, sine it is not removed from its container 9. This is of particular advantage when using a specially coated paper, coated in accordance with the requirements of the copying process.
The paper may be sold in its container, the container being wrapped in an outer wrapping which may be suited to the needs of the copy paper to preserve it in proper condition.
It will be appreciated that the feed arrangement described utilizes the bottom wall 10 of the container as a platform or feed board. lnasfar as the paper stack is positioned in the container before the container is pivoted on the fulcrum edge, the method comprises positioning the stack of sheets on the platform and then removably pivoting the platform on a pivot axis. The platform or feed board is pivoted to support the paper stack on a pivot axis represented by the fulcrum edge 30. The
platform formed by the bottom wall has to be substantially rigid to ensure that the paper stack is unable to bend about the fulcrum edge but instead is operated as a first order lever under the action of its own weight.
The necessary rigidity may be imparted to the bottom wall 10 of the container in any convenient way. If the container is constructed of sufiiciently stout cardboard, however, the bottom wall 10 maybe sufficiently rigid regardless of the additional support afforded to it by the sidewalls 12 of the container.
The sidewalls 12 may be extended to form triangular bracket portions between the edges 24 and 25 of the bottom and top walls respectively of the container to give extra support to the cantilevered portion of the bottom wall 10. Alternatively, the bottom wall could be reinforced with additional strips of material, for example, glued to its underside so as to extend longitudinally of the container from the edge 24 and the slots 42 could be formed in such strips. Alternatively, the sidewalls 12 of the container could be additionally reinforced to act as webs lending substantial rigidity to the bottom wall 10 of the container.
The container could be provided with a reclosable flap or flaps for protecting the exposed end portion of the paper stack when the cartridge is not in use. Alternatively, the container may have a tear-off portion to expose the end portion of the paper stack to be engaged by the sheet feed means.
The container is not necessarily made of cardboard but may be constructed of any convenient material or materials.
A light-sensitive paper, since it remains in the container, is substantially protected against light.
Instead of a container having a tear-off portion or a reclosable flap or flaps, the container may be open-ended and supplied in a throwaway envelope e.g., of black synthetic resin film which prevents access of light and moisture to the paper stack during storage.
The position of the slots 42 in the container bottom wall is critical inasfar as the force F is in direct proportion to the weight W which decreases as the paper is used up. On the other hand, when the container is full of paper the force F must not be too great and yet must be great enough that it remains sufficient to feed the last sheet from the container when the weight W is at its lowest. The position of the slots 42 must be determined empirically in each particular case.
The stack of sheets should be a loose fit between the top and bottom walls such that a clearance is maintained between the inner surface of the top wall 11 and the top surface of the top sheet 26 even when the container is full. If the top wall 11 sags onto the top sheet, proper feeding of the top sheet out of the container by the feed means may be prevented. To this end it is of advantage if the top wall is stiff and does not sag noticeably so as to maintain a substantially uniform clearance with the top sheet.
lclaim:
1. An interchangeable cartridge for use in a sheet-feeding arrangement as defined herein comprising:
a container for containing a stack of sheets therein, said container having a bottom wall including a platform surface, a transverse end wall adapted to locate the sheets of said stack in a longitudinal direction of said sheets, and a top wall which is adapted to overlie only a portion of said stack while leaving a portion of said stack exposed for feeding the top sheet thereof, said bottom wall having pivoting means adapted to cooperate with said sheetfeeding arrangement to positively locate said container against translational movement thereof relative to said sheet-feeding arrangement, said pivoting means being located on that side of the center of gravity of the stack of sheets remote from said transverse end wall.
2. A cartridge according to claim 1 wherein said pivoting means is adapted to cooperate with a tongue means on said sheet-feeding arrangement and wherein said pivoting means includes slot means formed on the bottom wall of said container for enga ement with said tongue means, said slot means extending para lel with said transverse end wall of said container.
3. A cartridge as claimed in claim 1 wherein the sheets comprise copy paper.

Claims (3)

1. An interchangeable cartridge for use in a sheet-feeding arrangement as defined herein comprising: a container for containing a stack of sheets therein, said container having a bottom wall including a platform surface, a transverse end wall adapted to locate the sheets of said stack in a longitudinal direction of said sheets, and a top wall which is adapted to overlie only a portion of said stack while leaving a portion of said stack exposed for feeding the top sheet thereof, said bottom wall having pivoting means adapted to cooperate with said sheet-feeding arrangement to positively locate said container against translational movement thereof relative to said sheet-feeding arrangement, said pivoting means being located on that side of the center of gravity of the stack of sheets remote from said transverse end wall.
2. A cartridge according to claim 1 wherein said pivoting means is adapted to cooperate with a tongue means on said sheet-feeding arrangement and wherein said pivoting means includes slot means formed on the bottom wall of said container for engagement with said tongue means, said slot means extending parallel with said transverse end wall of said container.
3. A cartridge as claimed in claim 1 wherein the sheets comprise copy paper.
US872275A 1968-03-18 1969-10-29 Cartridge for sheet-feeding arrangements Expired - Lifetime US3635334A (en)

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US71380668A 1968-03-18 1968-03-18
US87227569A 1969-10-29 1969-10-29

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Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE3430843A1 (en) * 1984-08-22 1985-03-21 Horst Günter Julius 4100 Duisburg Stoschek Dispenser for business/visiting cards
FR2610898A1 (en) * 1987-02-12 1988-08-19 Garnier Ponsonnet Vuillard Sa Package for envelopes which can be used as a feed cartridge in mechanical insertion or printing devices
US4952297A (en) * 1988-07-15 1990-08-28 The Dow Chemical Company Storage, transportation and installation container for ion-exchange membranes
US5013025A (en) * 1987-03-02 1991-05-07 Mita Industrial Co., Ltd. Paper feeding device
US6651975B2 (en) * 1997-06-27 2003-11-25 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Sheet pack and printer

Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US390277A (en) * 1888-10-02 allen
US1071679A (en) * 1912-04-15 1913-08-26 Neely And Peacock Receptacle for carbon or other thin paper.
US1714314A (en) * 1927-05-05 1929-05-21 Neidich George Garwood Carbon-sheet carton
US2452705A (en) * 1944-03-03 1948-11-02 Ilford Ltd Package of photographic lightsensitive papers
US2765909A (en) * 1954-12-30 1956-10-09 Graham Mfg Company Inc Method and apparatus for dispensing
US3360258A (en) * 1966-11-25 1967-12-26 George F Nix Photocopy paper package

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US390277A (en) * 1888-10-02 allen
US1071679A (en) * 1912-04-15 1913-08-26 Neely And Peacock Receptacle for carbon or other thin paper.
US1714314A (en) * 1927-05-05 1929-05-21 Neidich George Garwood Carbon-sheet carton
US2452705A (en) * 1944-03-03 1948-11-02 Ilford Ltd Package of photographic lightsensitive papers
US2765909A (en) * 1954-12-30 1956-10-09 Graham Mfg Company Inc Method and apparatus for dispensing
US3360258A (en) * 1966-11-25 1967-12-26 George F Nix Photocopy paper package

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE3430843A1 (en) * 1984-08-22 1985-03-21 Horst Günter Julius 4100 Duisburg Stoschek Dispenser for business/visiting cards
FR2610898A1 (en) * 1987-02-12 1988-08-19 Garnier Ponsonnet Vuillard Sa Package for envelopes which can be used as a feed cartridge in mechanical insertion or printing devices
US5013025A (en) * 1987-03-02 1991-05-07 Mita Industrial Co., Ltd. Paper feeding device
US4952297A (en) * 1988-07-15 1990-08-28 The Dow Chemical Company Storage, transportation and installation container for ion-exchange membranes
US6651975B2 (en) * 1997-06-27 2003-11-25 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Sheet pack and printer

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