I do not speak for Presstek Corporate. I am merely offering my own opinion and some information.
Opinion: The Anthem Pro technology used by John Santangelo several years ago was upgraded and electro-grained 3 years ago. Anthem Pro is imaged on Presstek Dimension CTP systems, but may also be imaged on some Kodak CTP systems. I think it would be very helpful to those who read these posts if Mr. Santangelo would try moving on and discuss products he is now dealing with.
Mr Wehler,
You would do yourself and you company a great service if you were to thoroughly read a post before commenting.
Below is my original quote. The question asked was very specific and I answered it specifically. Stating 2x my lack of any knowledge about the Aurora. What I did answer, using my 9 months of experience, was a specific question by John Lind, which I re-quoted in my post.
Below is my post as it appeared.
"I do not know what the Aurora plate is or how it is imaged so I can't speak to that. But to answer your specific question :"Why would ablative be a negative, just heat blasting instead of chemical development."
We found that the ablative plates made it extremely difficult to get a consistent tint or solid across the plate.
With the Dimension we were running there were "16 zones" representing roughly a 1 inch vertical swatch from top to bottom of plate. With the ablative technology all lasers are not always firing at the same intensity so what happens is you start to get these one inch vertical bands running through tints. The solution to this was to "zone balance" which meant increasing or reducing laser power in each zone until you "visually" got a plate that did not have the bands. This process was far from perfect and used up a lot of plates.
It was also hard to do consistent reprints because you may have done 20 or 30 zone balances in the 6 months between reprints and your tint values are totally different because you have been driving lasers up and down to get a consistent value.
In a nut shell, you would expect you 50 % tint to at least be consistent from left to right on the plate. With the ablative system we were never able to achieve that.
Again, this was the Dimension Excel Running Anthem plates circa 2005. I have no experience or info on what the Aurora is or does.
Now if you have any questions about Azura or Azura TS those I can answer."
Trust me sir I "moved on" 4 1/2 years ago to the Azura plate along with over 1,000 other printers worldwide.