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).

  • Patent number: 5272493
    Abstract: A precision belt hole sensor and associated conditioning circuitry provides precise trigger signals that enable synchronous printing in a color printer. An image bar recording system, which, in a preferred embodiment, utilizes a plurality of LED image bars, forms a plurality of latent images on a moving photoreceptor which may subsequently be developed in different colors. A pair of sensors associated with each printbar views illuminated pixels at the end of a printbar, through a pair of oppositely aligned photoreceptor holes. The signals detected by the sensor are amplified and processed to provide inputs to a comparitor circuit which generates an output signal at a time which precisely defines the passage of the trailing edge of the hole, past the sensors. The signal from the comparitor is used to accomplish skew registration of the printbar and to provide sync signals to enable precise formation of the leading edge of the associated image frame.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 2, 1992
    Date of Patent: December 21, 1993
    Assignee: Xerox Corporation
    Inventors: Fred F. Hubble, III, Thomas J. Hammond, James P. Martin
  • Patent number: 5184011
    Abstract: The invention comprises a sensor system in a printhead scanner which is capable of achieving accurate pixel to pixel registration. A plastic film strip with alternating fiducial bars and spaces is scanned. A voltage pattern is triggered by the zero slope points of the voltage induced by a sensing mechanism being moved along the plastic film strip.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 3, 1991
    Date of Patent: February 2, 1993
    Assignee: Xerox Corporation
    Inventors: Fred F. Hubble, III, John M. Mitchell, Jr., James P. Martin
  • Patent number: 5139339
    Abstract: A media discriminating and presence sensor that can detect and discriminate between paper and transparency uses a light emitting diode and two defectors configured so as to measure both diffuse and specular reflectivity of the media, and a media support surface that suppresses unwanted reflections.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 26, 1989
    Date of Patent: August 18, 1992
    Assignee: Xerox Corporation
    Inventors: John E. Courtney, Fred F. Hubble, III., Kenneth I. Chan
  • Patent number: 5083161
    Abstract: An infrared densitometer which measures the reflectivity of a selected region on a moving photoconductive belt covered at least partially with marking particles. Collimated light rays are projected onto the selected region of the moving photoconductive member with or without marking particles thereon. The light rays reflected from the selected region of the moving photoconductive member are collected and directed onto a photodiode array. A photodiode array generates electrical signals proportional to the diffuse component of the total reflectivity of the selected region of the photoconductive member with and without marking particles thereon. Circuitry determines a control signal as a function of the difference in electrical signals.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 25, 1989
    Date of Patent: January 21, 1992
    Assignee: Xerox Corporation
    Inventors: Michael D. Borton, Fred F. Hubble, III, James P. Martin, Theresa K. Mattioli, Ralph A. Shoemaker
  • Patent number: 5078497
    Abstract: A densitometer which measures the reduction in the specular component of the reflectivity of a portion of a surface having a liquid deposited thereon. Collimated light rays, in the visible spectrum, are projected onto the portion of the surface having the liquid thereon. The light rays reflected from the portion of the surface having the liquid deposited thereon are collected and directed onto a photodiode array. The photodiode array generates electrical signals proportional to the total flux and the diffuse component of the total flux of the reflected light rays. Circuitry compares the electrical signals and determines the difference therebetween to generate an electrical signal proportional to the specular component of the total flux of the reflected light rays.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 25, 1989
    Date of Patent: January 7, 1992
    Assignee: Xerox Corporation
    Inventors: Michael D. Borton, Fred F. Hubble, III, James P. Martin, Theresa K. Mattioli, Ralph A. Shoemaker
  • Patent number: 4989985
    Abstract: An infrared densitometer which measures the reduction in the specular component of reflectivity as marking particles are progressively deposited on a moving photoconductive belt. Collimated light rays are projected onto the marking particles. The light rays reflected from at least the marking particles are collected and directed onto a photodiode array. The photodiode array generates electricl signals proportional to the total flux and the diffuse component of the total flux of the reflected light rays. Circuitry compares the electrical signals and determines the difference therebetween to generate an electrical signal proportional to the specular component of the total flux of the reflected light rays.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 19, 1988
    Date of Patent: February 5, 1991
    Assignee: Xerox Corporation
    Inventors: Fred F. Hubble, III, Theresa K. Mattioli
  • Patent number: 4831410
    Abstract: A flash exposure photocopier provides a mechanism for automatically controlling photoreceptor exposure levels to compensate for the effects of documents having backgrounds of different densities. A photosensor and lens assembly is located within a flash housing in a position whereby a large portion of the document is imaged by the lens onto the surface of a chip having a plurality of individual photosensors contained thereon. The outputs of each photosensor are integrated and applied to a comparator set at a particular reference level. The comparator output controls the duration of the flash source so as to quench lamp operation when an input level is reached corresponding to the particular reference level set. The integrated photosensor outputs are also summed and a signal representing their average value is compared to the signal which triggers the comparator. The ratio of these signals is used to identify documents with high area coverage and hence high toner usage.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 21, 1988
    Date of Patent: May 16, 1989
    Assignee: Xerox Corporation
    Inventors: Jerry F. Adams, Michael D. Borton, Fred F. Hubble, III, James P. Martin, Ralph A. Shoemaker, Alan J. Werner, Virginia N. MacDonald
  • Patent number: 4767172
    Abstract: A light collector for an LED array for efficiently collecting and collimating light emitting from the LEDs and projecting the light into an optical wave guide which directs that light onto a photoreceptor surface. Each LED is centered in a hemispherical cavity in the collector array in order that radiation from the LED enters the collector essentially unrefracted. The collector array provides a convex lens portion and a parabolic reflecting surface portion. Light that exits from the LED that is substantially perpendicular to the substrate supporting the LED is applied to the convex lens and is collimated. Light exiting substantially parallel to the substrate strikes a parabolic reflecting surface at greater than the critical angle and is also collimated. The two concentric collimated beams are combined and applied to the photoreceptor surface via a light pipe or optical wave guide secured to the collector.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 11, 1985
    Date of Patent: August 30, 1988
    Assignee: Xerox Corporation
    Inventors: Virginia R. Nichols, Fred F. Hubble, III, James P. Martin
  • Patent number: 4670647
    Abstract: The present invention is concerned with a self-adjusting document sensor compensating for degradation of the sensor system. A suitable light source and a detector are provided, the output of the detector being fed into an amplifier whose gain depends upon a feedback signal. Periodically, the output of the amplifier is compared to a reference. If the output of the amplifier falls below the reference, a pulse is sent to a ripple counter whose digital output is fed back to the amplifier to change the gain of the amplifier. If the detector is an unbiased photodiode operating in the transconductance mode, the leakage currents and their subsequent effect on output with amplifier gain changes will be minimized.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 27, 1984
    Date of Patent: June 2, 1987
    Assignee: Xerox Corporation
    Inventors: Fred F. Hubble, III, Randolph H. Bullock, Li-Fung Cheung, Robert E. Crumrine, James P. Martin, Peter P. White, Mehrdad Zomorrodi
  • Patent number: 4553033
    Abstract: An integral, compact infrared reflectance densitometer including a substrate supporting an LED, a control photodiode to compensate for component degradation, a background photodiode to compensate for background radiation, and a large area photodiode to provide an electrical signal representative of the amount of toner particles on the photosensitive surface. Also carried on the substrate is a field lens to focus light rays reflected from the photosensitive surface onto the signal photodiode. The substrate is precisely secured to a molded housing having integral collector and collimating lenses. Four extending pins on the housing engage four apertures on the substrate to locate the substrate with respect to the housing and align the LED and field lens carried on the substrate with the collector and collimating lenses of the housing.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 24, 1983
    Date of Patent: November 12, 1985
    Assignee: Xerox Corporation
    Inventors: Fred F. Hubble, III, James P. Martin
  • Patent number: 4258258
    Abstract: A corona generating device having a corona electrode supported between a pair of endblock assemblies, each endblock assembly defining a space for the passage of the electrode, and non-conductive inserts seated in the spaces in the endblock assemblies and surrounding the electrode. The non-conductive inserts are made of a material with high dielectric strength and resistent to corrosive atmosphere. The inserts can be easily and inexpensively replaced and they protect the endblock assemblies from effects of applying high voltages to the corona electrode.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 28, 1979
    Date of Patent: March 24, 1981
    Assignee: Xerox Corporation
    Inventors: Jean W. Laing, Fred F. Hubble, III
  • Patent number: 4118751
    Abstract: A corona discharge device having a coronode of the type including a wire electrode coated with a fractureable dielectric sleeve for example, glass. Electrical contact is made to the wire via a conductive member forcibly attached or crimped to the sleeve to fracture it sufficiently to permit direct contact between the wire and the member.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 31, 1977
    Date of Patent: October 3, 1978
    Assignee: Xerox Corporation
    Inventors: Fred F. Hubble, III, John B. Tasseff, II
  • Patent number: 4110811
    Abstract: A corona generating device including a coronode in the form of a wire supported between insulating end block assemblies. Each assembly is constructed of mating half-sections which jointly define a substantially closed and insulated cavity lined with a conductive insert. The insert on the high voltage side of the coronode serves to couple electrically the high voltage terminal to the coronode via a first conductive bead carried by the coronode. The coronode is held taut by means of a loaded compression spring carried within the insert on the half-section removed from the high voltage supply, the spring bearing against the conductive insert on one end and against a second conductive bean carried by the other end of the coronode.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 31, 1977
    Date of Patent: August 29, 1978
    Assignee: Xerox Corporation
    Inventors: Fred F. Hubble, III, John B. Tasseff, II