Perhaps a compromise solution can be found?
Perhaps a compromise solution can be found?
In my experience, cover-weight stocks produced more debris on the bevel edge side of the blade than did book weight stocks. C1S cover-weight stocks were worse than C2S.
Perhaps you could take photos of the bevel-edge side of the cut and the behind the knife side of the cut for the range of stocks that you typically use? This would help to demonstrate and clarify the differences between the bevel side of the cut and the behind the knife side of the cut in general. It would also help to document which stocks would benefit the most from being trimmed on all four sides behind the knife.
Another consideration would be "How prone is the job to show hickeys". Jobs with large solids and significant total coverage vs. jobs with minimal coverage.
A further test might be to trim half the stock for a hickey prone job on all four sides behind the knife and then trim the second half of the stock without regard to the bevel edge. Be sure to run the trimmed four sides stock firstly, being that it should be the cleanest and therefore should not pollute the ink train with paper debris. Running the dirtier stock first could pollute the ink train with debris and therefore hide any benefits of trimming on all four sides. Ideally, this test should be run after a press wash-up. Running the test on a press that hasn't been washed up for one or more shifts, may reveal more about the current state of the ink train than it does about the differences in trimming methodology.
After running the test job, ask the pressman if they noticed a difference in the amount of hickeys they encountered or any other differences they may have noted.
The quantity of stock to be cut should figure into the equation somewhere. A few extra cuts for a lift or two is negligible. A few extra cuts for a skid or two is not.
One final delineation might be price/quality expectations for a job. In other words, you might trim 4 sides for high quality jobs, but not for quick-and-dirty jobs.
In the end, you should be able to document when 4 side trimming is justified and cost effective, and when it is not.
Best Regards
OT