Red_Right_Arm
Well-known member
Okay, so I've come to terms with the fact that my company will just always use a bunch of variables for every job. Each new job brings with it a new combination of press, substrate, ink density, anilox cell count, anilox BCM, plate line screen resolution, screen angles, dot gain, dot gain adjustment curves, and various RIP settings that effect the dots in some way. That's just the way it is (for now at least).
Today we had a job that was a nightmare on press. We tried everything to see if it'll work out. With all of the trial and error and changing things, in the RIP and on press, I overlooked to set the correct line screen on one set of plates. This caused press downtime as the plates were remade. If we are going to have to keep up changing all these variables to get a job to print looking correctly, it seems that variables ARE the job, and the Prepress department just needs to roll with it. That being said, does anyone have any suggestions for how to handle a constantly changing set of parameters reliably and accurately?
Today we had a job that was a nightmare on press. We tried everything to see if it'll work out. With all of the trial and error and changing things, in the RIP and on press, I overlooked to set the correct line screen on one set of plates. This caused press downtime as the plates were remade. If we are going to have to keep up changing all these variables to get a job to print looking correctly, it seems that variables ARE the job, and the Prepress department just needs to roll with it. That being said, does anyone have any suggestions for how to handle a constantly changing set of parameters reliably and accurately?