Al Ferrari
Well-known member
Well, we seldom bother (at least I don't) to mention that the plate and blanket cylinders are geared either, but I supposed it is a good clarification.
Al
Al
I take it by your not answering the first two questions that your not a pressman Erik, which is fine, but please don't insult my intelligence by stating your opinion when I know it to be fact.
In regards to your "not so good as to produce predictable performance", Heidelberg is the top printing press manufacturer, always have been, probably always will be. Heidelberg's engineers are like most engineers IMO, all theory, no practical experience..
Tim
Maybe they would be so big and heavy for say a 50" wide printing press, wouldnt the dampener have to be the same size also?
agree
imagine changing a roller that big!
I was thinking of a more conventional offset press - just with full-sized forms. Wouldn't some oscillators even out the ink distribution? Why is an anilox roller used in the pan on these devices? Why not a normal ductor roller?
By adding more rollers into the train, do you introduce too much ink into the ink train - more than can be pulled out?
I was thinking of a more conventional offset press - just with full-sized forms. Wouldn't some oscillators even out the ink distribution? Why is an anilox roller used in the pan on these devices? Why not a normal ductor roller?
By adding more rollers into the train, do you introduce too much ink into the ink train - more than can be pulled out?
I was thinking of a more conventional offset press - just with full-sized forms. Wouldn't some oscillators even out the ink distribution? Why is an anilox roller used in the pan on these devices? Why not a normal ductor roller?
By adding more rollers into the train, do you introduce too much ink into the ink train - more than can be pulled out?
if by anilox roller you mean a roller that has been engraved by laser to various cell sizesNot true Erik, the Anilox roller and the inking form roller have a 100% uniform ink film thinkness on them BEFORE the hit the plate. Therefore, the mechanical ghosting theory, is not possible.
Tim
if by anilox roller you mean a roller that has been engraved by laser to various cell sizes
than,yes, by virture of design the anilox is 100 % uniform
the bridge roller or registter forme smooths out voids that develop over time due to wear and tear on components other than the anilox
I m agreeing with the Heidey Guy on this
If you are right, explain why the form roller MUST be the same size as the plate cylinder and run in register to it?
because the the plate needs to recover from consumption on each revolution or impression
to keep densities consistent
anilox rollers are typically metal or ceramics so they cant go directly on to the pate cylinder
if you were running a rubber or cyrel plate than there would be no need for the form roller
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