Patents by Inventor Fred F. Hubble, III
Fred F. Hubble, III has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).
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Patent number: 7471385Abstract: To determine the spectra of objects that have different degrees of fluorescence, a plurality of reference databases are provided, each reference database being suited to a different degree of fluorescence. A most appropriate one of the reference databases is selected based on a predicted degree of fluorescence of an object for which a reflectance spectrum is to be determined. The prediction of the degree of fluorescence may be based on user input, or may be predicted by using a priori information, such as a priori knowledge of media types.Type: GrantFiled: January 13, 2005Date of Patent: December 30, 2008Assignee: Xerox CorporationInventors: Lalit K. Mestha, Fred F. Hubble, III, Kenneth Mihalyov, Tonya L. Love, Gary W. Skinner
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Patent number: 7259853Abstract: An LED spectrophtometer device for determining an aspect of the color of an object may include: a visible spectrophotometer comprising a plurality of light emitting diodes that emit light in the visible spectrum onto the object; at least one detector for detecting said light after being directed onto the object and for generating an output; and a UV light emitting diode assembly that emits light in the near ultraviolet spectrum and communicates with at least one detector for generating an output. The device may further include a processor that combines the outputs of the at least one detector of the visible spectrophotometer and the at least one detector in communication with the UV light emitting diode assembly.Type: GrantFiled: December 22, 2004Date of Patent: August 21, 2007Assignee: Xerox CorporationInventors: Fred F. Hubble, III, Lalit K. Mestha, Daniel A. Robbins, Tonya L. Love
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Patent number: 6809855Abstract: An improved and lower cost color spectrophotometer, especially suitable for an on-line color printer color control system, in which plural different spectra LEDs sequentially perpendicularly illuminate a common and substantially circularly illuminated color test area, which may be variably spaced and variably oriented relative to the spectrophotometer, through a common central lens system, and also the reflected illumination therefrom may be measured at 45 degrees thereto by averaging the outputs of photodetectors spaced around that circularly illuminated color test area, to provide reduced sensitivity to the variable angular or azimuthal orientation of the color test area relative to the spectrophotometer, and which photodetectors may be so illuminated by 1:1 optics for spatial insensitivity.Type: GrantFiled: March 7, 2003Date of Patent: October 26, 2004Assignee: Xerox CorporationInventors: Fred F. Hubble, III, Tonya L. Love, Daniel A. Robbins
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Patent number: 6806717Abstract: An electrostatic type voltmeter for measuring the potential on a surface, the voltmeter including a probe; a support for supporting the probe in spaced relationship with the surface, the probe having a plurality of spacing element sites thereon for measuring a distance between each of the plurality of spacing element sites and a corresponding area on the surface opposite of each of the plurality of spacing element sites; a plurality of electrostatic element sites, intermixed and adjacent to the plurality of spacing element sites on the probe, for measuring a voltage between each of the plurality of spacing element sites and an area on the surface adjacent to the corresponding area opposite of each of the plurality of spacing element sites. A processor for compensating an output signal of the probe in response to the measurements received from the plurality of spacing element sites and the plurality of electrostatic element sites.Type: GrantFiled: August 21, 2002Date of Patent: October 19, 2004Assignee: Xerox CorporationInventors: Alan J. Werner, Jr., Fred F. Hubble, III, Stanley J. Wallace, R. Enrique Viturro, Eric Peeters, Joel A. Kubby
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Patent number: 6757076Abstract: A device independent color control server and control methods provide color consistency services and improve consistent color document appearance between any number of connected color image forming devices and/or color display monitors on a distributed network.Type: GrantFiled: December 15, 1999Date of Patent: June 29, 2004Assignee: Xerox CorporationInventors: Lingappa K. Mestha, Fred F. Hubble, III, Michael R. Furst
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Patent number: 6668155Abstract: A sheet curl measurement system and method and an automatic sheet decurling system controlled thereby for the printed paper sheets output of printer. The sheet curl may be remotely sensed without contacting or interfering with the motion of the sheets in their normal sheet path, using a simple but accurate optical sheet curl sensor operating on a portion of the moving sheet at an angle thereto and perpendicularly thereto, with displacement insensitive optics, in both an angular direction substantially parallel to the sheet movement direction and an angular direction substantially transverse to the sheet movement direction, with ratioing of the two output signals.Type: GrantFiled: July 23, 2002Date of Patent: December 23, 2003Assignee: Xerox CorporationInventors: Fred F. Hubble, III, Tonya L. Love, Daniel A. Robbins, Stanley J. Wallace
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Patent number: 6650416Abstract: A color spectrophotometer incorporating a low cost commercial imaging chip, which normally forms part of a document imaging bar used for imaging documents in scanners, etc., having multiple photo-sites with three different rows of color filters. Each chip is mounted on the optical axis of an imaging lens system, in the image plane of that lens system, to image the reflected illumination from an illuminated color test target area on the chip. The optical axis of the imaging lens system is oriented at 45° to the illuminated color test patches, and the photodetector chip is physically mounted perpendicular to the plane of the illuminated color test patches. Respective photo-sensor chips and associated 1:1 optics may be mounted on opposing sides of the spectrophotometer physically oriented at 90° to the test target area plane receiving the reflected light from the test target optically oriented at 45° to the illuminated test target.Type: GrantFiled: December 4, 2002Date of Patent: November 18, 2003Assignee: Xerox CorporationInventors: Jagdish C. Tandon, Lingappa K. Mestha, Fred F. Hubble, III
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Patent number: 6639669Abstract: In a color analysis method in which sheets with multiple different color printed test patches are moved relative to a color analyzing spectrophotometer, and in which fiducial marks are printed adjacent to respective test patches and optically detected by a fiducial mark detector to provide a triggering system for the respective test patch analysis, there is provided automatic diagnostic testing of the spectrophotometer and the fiducial mark triggering system, including automatically generating special test sheets, some of which may include test areas of varying density black.Type: GrantFiled: September 10, 2001Date of Patent: October 28, 2003Assignee: Xerox CorporationInventors: Fred F. Hubble, III, Tonya L. Love, Lalit K. Mestha, Gary W. Skinner, Dennis M. Diehl, Robert E. Grace, Eric Jackson, Yao Rong Wang
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Patent number: 6633382Abstract: An improved and lower cost color spectrophotometer, especially suitable for an on-line color printer color control system, in which plural different spectra LEDs sequentially perpendicularly illuminate a common and substantially circularly illuminated color test area, which may be variably spaced and variably oriented relative to the spectrophotometer, through a common central lens system, and also the reflected illumination therefrom may be measured at 45 degrees thereto by averaging the outputs of photodetectors spaced around that circularly illuminated color test area, to provide reduced sensitivity to the variable angular or azimuthal orientation of the color test area relative to the spectrophotometer, and which photodetectors may be so illuminated by 1:1 optics for spatial insensitivity.Type: GrantFiled: May 22, 2001Date of Patent: October 14, 2003Assignee: Xerox CorporationInventors: Fred F. Hubble, III, Tonya L. Love, Daniel A. Robbins
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Patent number: 6608643Abstract: An apparatus for correcting beam-to-beam spacing error on an image plane of a photoreceptor includes a controller which generates beam-to-beam spacing error corrections signals, a plurality of optical elements, each of which is adjustable and responsive to beam-to-beam spacing error correction signal and a gray level measurement device. The controller performs the beam-to-beam spacing error correction analysis, determining whether or not a correction is necessary, and if so, which optical element to adjust and the magnitude of adjustment. Enhanced toner area coverage sensors are used to detect the gray level of a toned area of raster scan line patterns at various locations across the photoreceptor image plane. By repeatedly evaluating the beam-to-beam spacing error during operation, the apparatus of the invention is able to correct beam-to-beam spacing errors that may develop during operation and does not permit residual errors to persist even after an initial correction has been implemented.Type: GrantFiled: January 16, 2002Date of Patent: August 19, 2003Assignee: Xerox CorporationInventors: Robert M. Lofthus, Patrick Y. Maeda, Daniel W. Costanza, Kristine A. German, Fred F. Hubble, III, Robert P. Loce
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Patent number: 6603551Abstract: A method is provided for measuring the color of irregular surface materials, including textiles which may provide dissimilar color measurements from different viewing angles, by illuminating a sampling area of the irregular surface material approximately perpendicularly thereto and measuring the color reflected from that area at a substantial angle, preferably about 45 degrees, with a plurality of separate photodetectors arrayed circularly around the illuminated sampling area of irregular surface material to receive the reflected illumination from substantially opposing directions and at a substantial angle to the illuminated area, for providing a more accurate yet lower cost color measurement system for textiles that can be used easily, quickly, and uncritically in terms of the handling, positioning and orientation of the textile material being tested.Type: GrantFiled: November 28, 2001Date of Patent: August 5, 2003Assignee: Xerox CorporationInventors: Lalit K. Mestha, Fred F. Hubble, III, Tonya L. Love, Daniel A. Robbins, Gary W. Skinner
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Patent number: 6556932Abstract: By using a reconstruction algorithm, based on the spectral characteristics of the illumination source and a color sensing system, a spectral curve reconstruction device converts measurements from a non-fully illuminant populated color sensor into a fully populated spectral curve. This is done using a spectral measurement system model, which may use basis vectors.Type: GrantFiled: July 21, 2000Date of Patent: April 29, 2003Assignee: Xerox CorporationInventors: Lingappa K. Mestha, Yao Wang, Fred F. Hubble, III, Tonya L. Love
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Patent number: 6556300Abstract: A color spectrophotometer incorporating a low cost commercial imaging chip, which normally forms part of a document imaging bar used for imaging documents in scanners, etc., having multiple photo-sites with three different rows of color filters. Each chip is mounted on the optical axis of an imaging lens system, in the image plane of that lens system, to image the reflected illumination from an illuminated color test target area on the chip. The optical axis of the imaging lens system is oriented at 45° to the illuminated color test patches, and the photodetector chip is physically mounted perpendicular to the plane of the illuminated color test patches. Respective photo-sensor chips and associated 1:1 optics may be mounted on opposing sides of the spectrophotometer physically oriented at 90° to the test target area plane receiving the reflected light from the test target optically oriented at 45° to the illuminated test target.Type: GrantFiled: May 22, 2001Date of Patent: April 29, 2003Assignee: Xerox CorporationInventors: Jagdish C. Tandon, Lingappa K. Mestha, Fred F. Hubble, III
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Patent number: 6462821Abstract: A developability sensing system with an optical sensor for measuring the density of imaging material samples on an imaging surface of a printer, with an illumination source and photosensor system for measuring the amount of reflected illumination from the imaging materials. A first lens system and its first photosensor may receive both specularly and diffusely reflected illumination from certain imaging materials. A separate lenslet system is positioned outside of the first lens system. It may comprise one to four spaced apart generally cylindrical lenslets with a central axis generally perpendicular to the imaging material sample and an end surface facing the imaging material sample defined by a segment of a hyperbolic curved surface to form a rotationally symmetrical lens with a hyperbolic cross-section.Type: GrantFiled: April 20, 2000Date of Patent: October 8, 2002Assignee: Xerox CorporationInventors: Michael D. Borton, Fred F. Hubble, III
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Patent number: 6409302Abstract: A low ink sensing system is combined with an ink cartridge detection system to enable a more efficient ink jet printer. An ink container which supplies ink to an associated printhead is modified by the incorporation of two light directing elements, in the preferred embodiment, a faceted prism and a roof mirror, into a transparent wall of the container housing. The cartridge, comprising the ink container and associated printhead, is mounted on a scan carriage. Periodically, the carriage is conveyed to a sensing station comprising a pair of light sources and a commonly used photosensor. A first light source is energized and a beam of light is directed to a location where the roof mirror, would be positioned if the cartridge is present. If the cartridge is absent, lack of a reflected return signal is sensed, indicating a cartridge has not been inserted. Print operation is halted until a cartridge is inserted.Type: GrantFiled: February 26, 2001Date of Patent: June 25, 2002Assignee: Xerox CorporationInventors: Kenneth W. Altfather, Michael Carlotta, Steven J. Dietl, Donald M. Stevens, Fred F. Hubble, III
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Patent number: 6384918Abstract: An improved spectrophotometer for non-contact measuring of the colors of colored target areas, especially, test patches on moving printed test sheets in an unrestrained normal output path of a color printer, which test patches may be sequentially angularly illuminated with multiple different colors, with a photosensor providing electrical signals in response, the spectrophotometer having a lens system for transmitting that reflected illumination from the test patch to the photosensor with a lens magnification ratio of approximately one to one. The exemplary spectrophotometer provides noncontact color measurements of moving color target areas variably displaced therefrom within normal paper path baffle spacings, with a displacement insensitivity of at least 6 millimeters about a nominal target to spectrophotometer separation.Type: GrantFiled: March 23, 2000Date of Patent: May 7, 2002Assignee: Xerox CorporationInventors: Fred F. Hubble, III, Joel A. Kubby
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Patent number: 6355926Abstract: An apparatus for rapidly determining and correcting the position of a scanning light beam. The apparatus includes a linear position sensor that senses the position of the scan line and a circuit that produces a position signal from the sensed scan line position. A closed loop scan line control system further includes a scan line correction mechanism that adjusts the position of the scan line such that the position of the scan line is corrected for each individual polygon facet. Beneficially, the closed loop scan line correction mechanism includes a mover that moves an optical element, such as a mirror or lens, that adjusts the scan line position.Type: GrantFiled: August 13, 1999Date of Patent: March 12, 2002Assignee: Xerox CorporationInventors: Fred F. Hubble, III, William J. Nowak, Robert M. Lofthus, Thomas R. Scheib
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Patent number: 6320182Abstract: A light collector for directing light to a concentrated area on a target surface such as for use with a linear LED array used as an erase lamp in an electrophotographic printer. The collector includes a compound cylinder lens supported by a pair of reflecting members. The reflecting members reflect light rays from the LED array to the cylinder lens. The cylinder lens includes a lower surface for capturing the reflected light rays and a tongue extending from the lower surface for capturing light rays directly from the LED array. The cylinder lens directs and concentrates the captured light rays in a narrow line on a target surface. A plurality of cross-ribs extend between the first and second reflecting members to specularly reflect light beams from the LED array.Type: GrantFiled: November 30, 1999Date of Patent: November 20, 2001Assignee: Xerox CorporationInventors: Fred F. Hubble, III, Mark A. Scheuer, Nicholas M. Soures, G. Peter Floridio, Moritz P. Wagner, Steven L. Aurand
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Patent number: 6234603Abstract: A low ink sensing system is combined with an ink cartridge detection system to enable a more efficient ink jet printer. An ink container which supplies ink to an associated printhead is modified by the incorporation of two light directing elements, in the preferred embodiment, a faceted prism and a roof mirror, into a transparent wall of the container housing. The cartridge, comprising the ink container and associated printhead, is mounted on a scan carriage. Periodically, the carriage is conveyed to a sensing station comprising a pair of light sources and a commonly used photosensor. A first light source is energized and a beam of light is directed to a location where the roof mirror, would be positioned if the cartridge is present. If the cartridge is absent, lack of a reflected return signal is sensed, indicating a cartridge has not been inserted. Print operation is halted until a cartridge is inserted.Type: GrantFiled: May 6, 1999Date of Patent: May 22, 2001Assignee: Xerox CorporationInventors: Kenneth W. Altfather, Michael Carlotta, Steven J. Dietl, Donald M. Stevens, Fred F. Hubble, III
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Patent number: 6177800Abstract: A windowed shutter on a micro-electro-mechanical system improves output current of a non-contacting electrostatic voltmeter. The output current is increased by increasing the area modulated by the micro-electro-mechanical shutter system and by increasing the speed of that modulation. The increase in the area modulated by the windowed shutter is in direct proportion to the number of windows used. Moreover, the speed of the modulation is increased by increasing the resonant frequency of the system. Less shutter mass increases the frequency thus increasing shutter movement over time.Type: GrantFiled: November 10, 1998Date of Patent: January 23, 2001Assignee: Xerox CorporationInventors: Joel A. Kubby, Eric Peeters, R. Enrique Viturro, Fred F. Hubble, III, Stanley J. Wallace, Alan J. Werner, Jr.