gordo
Well-known member
Some scans of the press test I did on a Goss Colorliner coldset newspaper press to see (among other things) the impact of a solid ink density shift on the 3/C grey balance patch vs the live image area.
The page setup was Double Truck so everything was on the same plate and units.
The left side had seps done using PShop's default settings which uses medium GCR and represents, in my experience, the majority of separations going out to printers.
The right page had those same files run through ink optimization software which uses intelligent maximum GCR. This is pretty typical of most newspaper workflows today.
(The grey balance patches on the optimized side have had GCR applied to them - we couldn't prevent the software from doing its thing on that page).
The photo of the football player is a greyscale image converted to CMYK.
Start point.
The press operator was instructed to ignore the images and just run SIDs to SNAP standards - even across the form.
Then he was instructed to increase only the Magenta to .07 over the SNAP standard.
That increase in SID would be the absolute maximum that SNAP would allow - the normal acceptable variation is +/- .05.
There is an obvious shift in color in the 3/C grey balance patch but no noticeable shift in the live image area of either the standard or optimized pages.
Then he was instructed to increase the density of the Magenta to the max - which in this case was plus .20 points. This is a density that would never happen in actual production.
The 3/C grey patch became seriously biased. The live image area with standard separations took on a noticeable shift in color, however the optimized images were virtually unchanged.
My conclusion.
The 3/C grey balance patch has no value in production presswork vs just measuring solid ink density. The 3/C grey patch reports shifts that do not reflect what is happening in the live image area. The disconnect is even greater if images have gone through an ink optimization process.
The press operators were amazed in that they could actually see how little impact their SID moves had on the final presswork - as long as they hit the nominal SID standards within the accepted tolerance.
This exercise is one that I strongly recommend you do if you are at all interested in understanding QC targets such as the 3/C grey patch in production presswork.
best, gordo
The page setup was Double Truck so everything was on the same plate and units.
The left side had seps done using PShop's default settings which uses medium GCR and represents, in my experience, the majority of separations going out to printers.
The right page had those same files run through ink optimization software which uses intelligent maximum GCR. This is pretty typical of most newspaper workflows today.
(The grey balance patches on the optimized side have had GCR applied to them - we couldn't prevent the software from doing its thing on that page).
The photo of the football player is a greyscale image converted to CMYK.
Start point.
The press operator was instructed to ignore the images and just run SIDs to SNAP standards - even across the form.
Then he was instructed to increase only the Magenta to .07 over the SNAP standard.
That increase in SID would be the absolute maximum that SNAP would allow - the normal acceptable variation is +/- .05.
There is an obvious shift in color in the 3/C grey balance patch but no noticeable shift in the live image area of either the standard or optimized pages.
Then he was instructed to increase the density of the Magenta to the max - which in this case was plus .20 points. This is a density that would never happen in actual production.
The 3/C grey patch became seriously biased. The live image area with standard separations took on a noticeable shift in color, however the optimized images were virtually unchanged.
My conclusion.
The 3/C grey balance patch has no value in production presswork vs just measuring solid ink density. The 3/C grey patch reports shifts that do not reflect what is happening in the live image area. The disconnect is even greater if images have gone through an ink optimization process.
The press operators were amazed in that they could actually see how little impact their SID moves had on the final presswork - as long as they hit the nominal SID standards within the accepted tolerance.
This exercise is one that I strongly recommend you do if you are at all interested in understanding QC targets such as the 3/C grey patch in production presswork.
best, gordo