They actually have 2 in the field, and a perfector being installed in the US and another S10 in Europe. They have been sending out releases on this stuff and if you go on their site you can see the one installed in Europe at Edelmann. I can't get into details but I have seen it running sellable product.
Is there any truth relating to the fact when their presses were running at drupa they were set to run in perfect mode, with 1 side already printed offsite and they weren’t actually running live jobs so they could then show the machine running at rated speed. I was told they were having a problem with physics and still working to control the issue of its dot rolling on itself as it lands from the spray at high speed = a special dot shape was having to be developed so that when it did fold on itself it somewhat resembles a dot. Which meant it could only run at a fraction of its rated speed when running live jobs Is there any truth in this?
I'm a Landa employee, part of the process and algorithms team, and was at Drupa for 3 weeks during the setup and the entire show, preparing the jobs and performing quality calibrations on all presses.
And sorry, nothing of that is true - it's certainly not a fact. All the presses were printing live on new sheets. We were also printing on the web press, and you could see the roll was unprinted. In addition, only one press was fitted with a perfecting mechanism, so even if that story were true it would apply only to one press.
As a former press operator, I will be the first to admit the quality then was very poor compared to what we print today, but we were printing live at rated speed.
I didn't quite understand the part about the special dot shape. You cannot develop a "special dot shape" - the drop lands and creates a round shape as in other inkjet technologies. The dots don't roll or fold on themselves, the physics of it doesn't work that way.
Referring to the dot it had been explained that at total rated speed the dot was no longer a round dot but slured Which reduced quality.
Nope, sorry, I've never seen that happen in all the years I've been working there - the dots were always round. You can see that under a microscope.
So can you provide us some rough cost per sheet or anything like that?
In my humble opinion this is a step too far. Printing was already fine without the Landa press and I think the development is running into a culdesac.
In my humble opinion this is a step too far. Printing was already fine without the Landa press and I think the development is running into a culdesac.
The Scribes probably would have made the same comment about the invention of the printing press.
In my humble opinion this is a step too far. Printing was already fine without the Landa press and I think the development is running into a culdesac.
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