We have always took the press time to print a set of targets, cut them up and measure, drop into Curve2 and then apply adjustments in the rip. The targets are printed by arranging P2P targets, 4 across a 25" sheet, flipping them top to bottom, and we have large take-off bars across the gripper and tail of 50% of each color CMYK to help even out and distribute the coverage.
I see there's software out there now that will let you take measurements from live jobs and average as many of those as you like, export curve adjustments from that data and import those directly into your plate rip.
We've tried it and it works.
My question is, do you think we get more accurate curves from targets arranged the same way each time with the same coverage on the sheet than averaging measurements from live jobs with varying degrees of coverage on them? Some may be heavy, some may be light, and what about where the patches you're measuring are in relationship to the coverage in line with them? Would the variation not be enough to worry about for adjusting curves?
This same software has pointed out the TVI variations that show up during our press runs, differences from light to heavy coverage, from morning to afternoon, from Thursday night to Monday morning, and started me asking this question, whether live jobs are a good average condition to update curves with or a standard targets sheet that's printing the same every time?
I believe the press is stable, but inconsistent thru a degree of variation due to physical characteristics of an offset press, but the coverage varies all the time also, from run to run, which has quite an effect on TVI from what I'm seeing here.
Thanks for any input
I see there's software out there now that will let you take measurements from live jobs and average as many of those as you like, export curve adjustments from that data and import those directly into your plate rip.
We've tried it and it works.
My question is, do you think we get more accurate curves from targets arranged the same way each time with the same coverage on the sheet than averaging measurements from live jobs with varying degrees of coverage on them? Some may be heavy, some may be light, and what about where the patches you're measuring are in relationship to the coverage in line with them? Would the variation not be enough to worry about for adjusting curves?
This same software has pointed out the TVI variations that show up during our press runs, differences from light to heavy coverage, from morning to afternoon, from Thursday night to Monday morning, and started me asking this question, whether live jobs are a good average condition to update curves with or a standard targets sheet that's printing the same every time?
I believe the press is stable, but inconsistent thru a degree of variation due to physical characteristics of an offset press, but the coverage varies all the time also, from run to run, which has quite an effect on TVI from what I'm seeing here.
Thanks for any input