The UV cut option will cut all the light come from 400nm below,and in other words,this will help making the result more accuracy
Hi Blood,
Not sure I agree with you there. Whether or not UV exclusion will make the results more accurate depends on other factors, namely the OBA content of the press paper, the OBA content of the proof paper, the UV content of the illuminant viewing conditions and liekwise illuminant of the spectrophotometer. UV cut/ exclusion only addresses the excitation of the OBA by the spectro illuminant, without taking into account the light source's UV content. This "correction" could be hit or miss. IMO, there are more intelligent ways of correcting for OBA issues out there, but all are pretty specific to the viewing conditions and overall a visual analysis is required. However, with better definitions in the standards ISO 3664 (viewing conditions) and ISO 13655 (measurement conditions), the issue of OBA content is better addressed ...maybe not perfect, but better.
Moreover, if the goal is to match industry published data sets (Fogra39, TR003/5/6, etc), these were obtained from devices that did not exclude UV, and to blindly omit the effects of UV when targeting these data sets could be hit or miss as well . I use the term UV exclusion rather than "cut" because the Isis doesn't actually use a UV cut filter, but rather it has an LED illuminant that emits no UV, so there's nothing to cut.
Bill's original question addressed combining UV included and UV excluded data within the same data set. Perhaps this could be successful, but I'm a bit leery if its done for the sole purpose of instrument agreement. Frankendata could be harmless, or even beneficial, but could also lead to torch-bearing villagers.