Patents by Inventor Gregory D. Raskin

Gregory D. Raskin 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: 5561449
    Abstract: In bidirectional printing, ink-drop time-of-flight effects undesirably operate in opposite senses, during operation in the two different printing directions respectively, to offset the actually printed ink position in opposite directions from any nominal ink-firing point. When a common firing point is used for marks that should be aligned, during bidirectional scanning, the two resulting sets of image features are misaligned. To compensate for this adverse phenomenon, the firing points, in the two directions respectively, are made to bracket each common, desired mark location; the bidirectionally flying drops thus "lead" or approach each desired common mark location from opposite directions and can be made to align precisely. This can be done by addressing each position based on an earlier-arriving encoder-signal pulse and passing the signal through a delay line--during pen movement in just one of the two directions.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 31, 1995
    Date of Patent: October 1, 1996
    Assignee: Hewlett-Packard Company
    Inventors: Gregory D. Raskin, William C. Hilliard
  • Patent number: 5519415
    Abstract: In bidirectional inkjet printing, in certain situations the printer uses relatively large amounts of ink--in relation to the amount of liquid carrier that can be absorbed by or evaporated from the printing medium that is in use. For example, this occurs when a printer does double-ink-drop printing on transparency stock, particularly for particular colors (e.g., cyan). In such situations an undesirable, unesthetic mottling effect can arise. It has been discovered that, in this case, print quality can be improved by deliberately selecting a relatively large amount of jitter or random variation in firing time within each pixel column--actually the equivalent of about one eighth of a column width.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 30, 1993
    Date of Patent: May 21, 1996
    Assignee: Hewlett-Packard Company
    Inventor: Gregory D. Raskin
  • Patent number: 5426457
    Abstract: Inversion of the encoder signal--during pen-carriage operation in just one of two printing directions--advantageously causes development of the position-signal pulse at each encoder bar to be generated from the same edge of each bar, even though the pulse-using circuit is always triggered from the same apparent waveform feature (e. g., a so-called "falling edge"). As a result, the position at which ink is fired from a pen on the carriage is independent of tolerances in bar width. Further asymmetry of timing, provided by addressing each position based on an earlier-arriving encoder-signal pulse and passing that pulse through a delay line, is preferably used to compensate for the fact that ink-drop time-of-flight acts in opposite senses, during pen scanning in the two different printing directions respectively. This time-of-flight effect, for the bidirectionally flying ink drops, produces undesirable offset of the actually printed ink position in opposite directions from the nominal ink-firing point.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 30, 1993
    Date of Patent: June 20, 1995
    Assignee: Hewlett-Packard Company
    Inventor: Gregory D. Raskin
  • Patent number: 4418599
    Abstract: An electrical sound output signal from an acoustical-electrical or piezo electric transducer instrument is made available at selectively switched high and low signal levels by level control apparatus utilizing bistable switching of first and second attenuated electrical sound output signals. A flip-flop circuit toggles between first and second states in response to an input signal pulse generated by actuation of a footswitch. Oppositely-phased output signals produced by the flip-flop are applied to first and second switching FETs controlled thereby so as to be alternately conducting. The FETs are connected between respective first and second attenuators providing high and low level-controlled sound output signals and common output terminals. Accordingly, upon selective actuation of the footswitch, either high or low level controlled sound output signals can be made available at the output terminals.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 8, 1982
    Date of Patent: December 6, 1983
    Inventor: Gregory D. Raskin