Here is a screenshot of the RIP interface...thought it might help to visualise the process!
Good idea to post a screenshot: I notice by viewing it that my memory fools me!:
I have mistaken left and right concerning the Buttons "Edit from calibrated target" and "Edit from uncalibrated target" in my postings above...
I understand very good that you are not willing at once to throw overboard your usually handling with the Harlequin-RIP, just because someone in a forum told you to do it...
...but on the other hand: You stated that you haven´t achieved a satisfying fine tuning till today.
So again 1.:
it might be really helpfull to have a look to the ESKO hompage (the flexo perfection tool), it is an investion about 0,5 - 1 hour of your time:
If that is the tool i remember - in doubt ask their support by phone or mail - you are able with to check the effects of a modified Page Setup whithout exposuring a plate.
Just create a new Input with Device Tiff (if possible with also 2540 dpi - the same resolution as your platesetter...) and configure that with the Page Setup you have created for your platesetter you want to check. Notice or define it where the Folder the new started (Tiff-) Input-Channel is saving or should save the ripped tiffs (I mean you need "configure Device" for doing this?). Open the One-Bit ripped Tiff with the tool and you can measure the with all defined curves ripped 5- or 10- stepping patches from your testchart with a pipette (a tool the Harlequin doesn´t offer!), so you will know that your manipulation effects go in the right direction and dimension before exposuring or printing a plate.
So again 2.:
Even though of working myself with linearized plates till today, meanwhile i totally agree with Gordo that this way in the very most (if not all) cases is not necesary anymore. Shortly: This method is a relict from Ct
F (Computer to
Film, a gone time in which the User Interface of the Harlequin RIP was developed and nearby said not changed till today-looking...) and if a changed parameter like plate-fabrication or a new press forces you to recalibrate your process you can adapt the changed prozess by modifying only one curve: Ct
P (Computer to
Plate) is much more stable - above all with processless plates - than film which works with more sensible chemistry...
On the other hand it does not really hurt either to work with a linearized plate (except some time and power the RIP need more for respecting that curve in the process of generating the One-Bit-Tiffs...). So if you are used to work with and feel save with and your mainboards have fun and energy is not in focus: keep it, but it is not necessary...
Rethinking and reading your issue again
1. print: with linearized plate (only curve 1)
Here i want to ask: The 50-patch shows in print which value?
2. print: with curve 1 and curve 3 and curve 4(#
1), last curve edited by typing the measured values from the 1. print via left button "Edit from uncalibrated target =
+5-8% (little bit to high for a standardized production)
3. print: with curve 1 and curve 3 and curve 4(#
2), last curve edited by typing the measured values from the 2. print via right button "Edit from calibrated target =
-15-20 (much to less to work with!)
I see this options for you to go on, in this sequence:
1. option:
Give a try to the tone-curve (curve 2) method. Because you have printed the linearized plate in this case you must keep the curve 1 in the page Setup, but deactivate curve 3+4. Next step: Edit a new tone curve via left button "Edit from uncalibrated target", by opening this dialogue you will read 50 in the 50-patch.
Your 1. print with only the linearized plate is measured there with in example 68% in Cyan (increase 18). You know the target 64% (increase 14) from a table in a documentation about FOGRA39. You are +4 (to much), so edit the 50-patch with 46 for coming down about 4. As i said before, this will probably not hit exactly in the next print at all patches, but you should earn not even a worse 2. print as with your method which leads you +5-8 away from the respective patch. Save this curve 2#1
May be with measured 61% as a possible example you are still "out" of a standard in the next, a "new" 2. print (with curve 1 and curve 2#1, edited with 46 in the 50 patch). So open again the existing tone curve 2#1 as a copy
with the same button (left Button "Edit from uncalibrated target"), when you find again the former edited 46 there in the 50 patch everything is going right: Now start the fine tuning by sensible correcting the affected patch with maybe 47,3 instead the former edited 46 there for getting again a little bit more than 61, because the target is 64...
You will probably need a (now totally counted) third print (but the linearized plate you have already is included in this counting) i guess, but not a fourth, now you have expirienced the dimension in the effect of your manipulation and should there be left after measuring the 3. print a very few single patches to optimize, you can do it "blind" without another final print.
With this method i myself had worked about 14 years succsesfully and satisfying for AM coated and uncoated and FM, a spread very close or less 2% between cmy and only 1 or 2% away from the respective target is possible with!
Remember the opportunity with the Esko tool for checking a ripped file before exposuring to go for sure that all involved curves, page-setups and input channels partizipate from your actual modifications ...
2. option:
Try the above (in 1. option) described method via left Button "Edit from
uncalibrated target" with curve 4 in that way, that you did not enter there - after the 2. print and before the 3. print - the measured values, but a "corrected" version of them.
E.g.: your 2. print leads you to printed +8 (too much) in the 50-patch, for example you edit it with 8 less than you read there by opening the dialogue (there is to read the value from the just linearized plate, right?).
Why?
The 2. print (curve 1, 3 + 4#1) leads you still to +5-8 (too much), if you now manipulate the values taken from this second print a little bit (around 5-8 less as measured) and make the RIP thinking these (5-8 less than mesuared) are the values you have got from the first print (only with curve 1), it should not generate a curve which leads you to a print with 5-8 more as targeted and hoped...
By the way, now i myself working with Fuji XMF it is the same thing at that point, that in the respective dialogue i have to type less than mesuared, when i will come down with the increase...
3.other options:
The pity with the 2. option is, that it is not documented or hardly to find in which way the curve 3 + 4 are working together. Forces higher values as targeted in curve 4 (actual) a weaker or a stronger compensation-curve together with curve 3 (Intended)
Of course it is possible to do more experiments, for example to manipulate the taken values from print 2 as suggested in the 2. option for editing via the right button "Edit from calibrated target" in curve 4.
I suspect the User Interface of the Harlequin RIP in that way, that the two buttons (Calibrated and Uncalibrated) only to find as an opportunity for editing each of all four curves, because the programming Creator was to lazy to kill one of them by entering the dialogue for a chosen curve, where a "Editing from calibrated target" does not make sense, for example the tone-curve. But may be I´m wrong and just too stupid for this stuff...
At least:
I am wondering about less resonance here, because i thought, the Harlequin is very much in use in the world.
So it is up to you Andy, when you go on and find the right editing and use of curve 4 for fine tuning, you can earn a lot of glory and honour and can help all the poor pigs out in the world they have to work with the Harlequin and will come to this planet looking for help...
;-)
Best
Ulrich