I've worked with laser plates on a one-color hamada for a while. They work great for my purposes on 95% of the jobs I run. Recently I've added a Ryobi 3302 to my shop, and have been getting it up and running. One problem I'm having that I can't seem to figure out is that the image on the laser plates degrades very rapidly on the Ryobi, after only a couple hundred prints. This is especially true when working with halftones. I've kept most variables the same, I use plates from the very same box, I image them on the same HP5100 using the same settings, and the same fountain solution, and inks. Both presses have Crestline dampening as well.
My initial thought is that some roller or the blanket cylinder is exerting too much pressure on the plate and the excess pressure is making the toner flake off the plate surface. But I've checked every nip and everything is set to Ryobi's specs.
Does anyone run laser plates on a 3302? Is there a 3302-specific thing I should be doing to make the plates last as long on this press as they do on the Hamada? Maybe its the plate pressure? I have it set to .12mm right now. I use "Buckingham Laser plates" from stuff4print. The website says they are 5mil thick, which I believe would be around .127mm. But I just look at the box and it says the plates are 100 microns, which would be .1mm.
My initial thought is that some roller or the blanket cylinder is exerting too much pressure on the plate and the excess pressure is making the toner flake off the plate surface. But I've checked every nip and everything is set to Ryobi's specs.
Does anyone run laser plates on a 3302? Is there a 3302-specific thing I should be doing to make the plates last as long on this press as they do on the Hamada? Maybe its the plate pressure? I have it set to .12mm right now. I use "Buckingham Laser plates" from stuff4print. The website says they are 5mil thick, which I believe would be around .127mm. But I just look at the box and it says the plates are 100 microns, which would be .1mm.