duct maestro
Well-known member
I'm looking for people who are familiar with this system. I'd like to hear what you think to it?
I'm looking for people who are familiar with this system. I'd like to hear what you think to it?
We installed ours two weeks ago, it's the NG version.... a luxury to have. our pressmen love it. In addition to the high quality, you get reduced makeready times....
We installed ours two weeks ago, it's the NG version.... a luxury to have. our pressmen love it. In addition to the high quality, you get reduced makeready times....
Can you be more specific why the operators love it?
Just curious. Thanks.
NG(new generation; there is one previous model) is the new model released in 2011 for presscenter and 2012 for CP2000.
Our pressmen love it because the machine helps them get up to color much faster than a densitometer. It is like an axis control, but it can also read color inside the print and do the adjustments based on the colorbar AND the image; hence image control. It also reads color bars inside the image in order to adjust colors and help adjust prepress curves, and create ICC profiles. A lot of times you can't fit a color bar on the top especially in packaging. So you just add small color bars everywhere in the dead areas of the paper to help with color.
Quality monitor also helps you create reports for customers to validate that you printed correctly. This options helps us when we get plates outside of our prepress.
This machine also uses xrite's netprofiler technology to make sure it's always calibrated.
What I am looking forward to is an option called Inspection Control, which is a planned option. Using this option Image control will compare sheets to an OK sheet and detect hickies.
You can connect up to 4 machines to it. We have 3. For us it made sense to buy it instead of buying axis control for each machine.
As long as the press has a stable ink/water balance it works really well. It's a tool just like any other tool you have to set up to work for you. You still need to be a good pressman to get the most out of it.
Mike
One quirk I experienced with the 2000 version (at GATF HQ in Pittsburgh), is that it had a difficult time making effective ink key adjustments if you were using FM screening or very high lpi AM/XM (240 lpi+). This was due to the greater stability of high resolution screening - the presswork does not respond the SID moves as the image control system was expecting. The same thing might happen if you use heavy GCR.
I don't know if the latest models have corrected this issue.
best, gordo
Mike, good comments.
Question. If you had very very stable ink/water balance, would there still be a great need for this Image Control system?
Just curious. Thanks.
I'm looking for people who are familiar with this system. I'd like to hear what you think to it?
In this case the inking of FM screens on the plate is the process and is more consistent and independent of the ink film on the form rollers. So changing the ink film has little effect. Water content in that ink film might cause a change in the inking of the FM screen. Maybe adjusting water might have an impact on the printing of the FM screens. Do you know if it does?
A 30-day Fix for Managed Chaos
As any print professional knows, printing can be managed chaos. Software that solves multiple problems and provides measurable and monetizable value has a direct impact on the bottom-line. “We reduced order entry costs by about 40%.” Significant savings in a shop that turns about 500 jobs a month. Learn how……. |