This is my first post but I have been down this road. We started with the Kodak no process plates. Problems they scratch real easy and are very sensitive to light. We had to have black paper slip sheets in dark envelopes for plates that sat for more then 10 minutes. Image is light to non existant and press operators kept hanging plates on the wrong units. Can not proof very well and a plate reader for these plates is very expensive. The advantage was that the plates rolled up clean on press and ran well.
Fuji thermals were real problematic. They would not clean up on press very well and the coating on the plates contaminated the ink and water system real bad. Chiller had much higher foaming issues and the yellow ink fountain would turn gray after the second plate was hung. Also impossible to read with a plate reader. Only advantage was they did not scratch as easy as the kodak.
We finally went with the Agfa Azura. Has a good image and we were able to do a linear plate using a $2200 dollar plate reader. These plates must have a clean up unit which uses a water/ corn starch solution which is quite expensive. 5 gallons is $150. This lasts for about 3 weeks and gets so dirty it needs to be tossed. We have completed G7 certificataion on these plates with our Speedmaster and have been using the plates now for over a year. If you go this route try and get your plate vendor to throw in the plate clean up unit for free. You will also have to investigate if your CTP devise can be bridged to the cleanup unit.
I just heard from my Fuji rep they have modified the finish on the plates and supposedly they are more user friendly. Good luck
Fuji thermals were real problematic. They would not clean up on press very well and the coating on the plates contaminated the ink and water system real bad. Chiller had much higher foaming issues and the yellow ink fountain would turn gray after the second plate was hung. Also impossible to read with a plate reader. Only advantage was they did not scratch as easy as the kodak.
We finally went with the Agfa Azura. Has a good image and we were able to do a linear plate using a $2200 dollar plate reader. These plates must have a clean up unit which uses a water/ corn starch solution which is quite expensive. 5 gallons is $150. This lasts for about 3 weeks and gets so dirty it needs to be tossed. We have completed G7 certificataion on these plates with our Speedmaster and have been using the plates now for over a year. If you go this route try and get your plate vendor to throw in the plate clean up unit for free. You will also have to investigate if your CTP devise can be bridged to the cleanup unit.
I just heard from my Fuji rep they have modified the finish on the plates and supposedly they are more user friendly. Good luck