This has actually been my biggest hesitation on buying the machine. I haven't been able to get anyone to demo the software for me (the sales guy keeps cancelling/delaying appointments). I'm hesitant to buy anything without knowing whether or not it's going to be easy to train my "non-graphic-designers" print team to use the machine. I'm not thrilled about ending up with a machine that only one person in our shop can setup and run. I want to see the software and actively use it first not just "run their preset demos". We have a pretty seamless operation with all of our other equipment.
As
@Eric Boucher mentioned, it's pretty straightforward to set up the cut files for projects. I can't say that Intec's documentation made it the easiest process in the world as of several years ago when I was learning, but the overall theory/workflow is the following:
* There are two flavors of their cut software: one that exists as an Illustrator (or CorelDraw) plugin on the "prepress" computer and one that exists as a standalone package on the computer attached to the Intec machine. Don't worry about the specs of the latter computer--i bought a refurbished Dell laptop from Microcenter for $200 that works perfectly fine for the task. Both flavors of the software work in unison with one another to accomplish unique tasks.
*** On the prepress side: ***
* The cut lines are added 100% to-scale as their own layer on your press sheet imposition file in Illustrator. You can use any primary or secondary color to designate different functions for these cutlines. The actual functions of those colors are determined on the machine's side of the software, not from the Illustrator plugin.
* Because it's important, I'll reiterate: the cutlines are based on your press sheet size, not your 1-out finished good size. If you're printing your project 12" x 18", your Illustrator artboard will be 12" x 18". If you have a step and repeat or n-up job, you will need to use software such as QuiteImposing to multi-up the cutlines and corresponding artwork at your press sheet size, and then isolate the cutlines to their own layer. Usually I select one of the cutlines, use Illustrator's Select Same Stroke Color command to grab all the cutlines on the press sheet, then cut and paste them to a new layer.
* To initiate the software, select the artboard and layer with your vector cutlines, then go to Illustrator's File menu and select the appropriate ColorCut Pro action. Generally, this is "Add Pagemarks and QR Code" but there are other functions and preferences available in this same menu.
* The software will ask you to create a seven-digit job number that will correspond with your cut data. It will generate a random one you're welcome to use, or you can type in your own number. You can overwrite an existing job number by typing it into this area as well.
* If all is well, a new layer will be added to your Illustrator file that creates your corner registration dots and/or your job number and QR code. You can also preview your cutlines to make sure the color coding, orientation, etc was accurately processed.
* So here's the part that stumped me early on: your job number files containing your cut data are stored locally on your PC in a ColorCut Data directory (I believe it's under Windows' AppData folder). This will NOT talk to the PC attached to the Intec cutter by default. To resolve this, if you have a central network file server, you can make a common directory that both PCs can access; you can add the local and network directories to your Windows Quick Access menu, and then you can copy+paste your local data to the network directory whenever you make a new job file.
*** On the Machine Side ***
* On the other PC attached to the Intec, you perform those file transfer steps in reverse, copying the files from your network directory to your local ColorCut Data folder on this device. If you're more tech savvy than me, you can also set up synchronization software that automatically performs these steps. If you're less tech savvy than me, you can bypass the network directory altogether and use a flash drive to transfer the data back and forth between both devices. Everyone's a winner!
* The cut software can recall your job number one of two ways: it can scan a QR code on your press sheet if it exists, or you can manually input the seven digit number generated from earlier. Honestly, I just manually enter the number. If the software detects your job number through the file you copied over, your cutlines will appear in the preview window.
* So now for the big ol' grand slam theory of operation: this machine works by reading the position of the corner dots with relation to the size of your press sheet. It doesn't care what the actual printed contents of your press sheet look like as long as it has its corner dots to reference. The cut/score/perforation/etc lines are interpreted by the data in your locally stored job file and the machine will adjust the position, stretch, and skew of those cutlines based on how it read the positioning of your corner dots. Since your printed artwork is printed in unison with those corner dots, it makes for a pretty darn accurate interpretation of the distortions found in each press sheet.
* As for parameters in the software: you can create presets for the device's Tool1 and Tool2 (generally a drag knife and creasing nub) and adjust their force, speed, perforation lengths, hang tags, and if you're performing a single pass versus a double pass. Those presets can be assigned to any colors detected inside your job file. For example, we have 20 or so presets for functions such as "Die Cut - Lightweight Cover" or "Kiss Cut Label" that have their own unique parameters.
* In the program as a whole, you can program your run lengths (one sheet to infinite), adjust the pickup strength of the feed vacuum, tell the machine how many times to scan each corner dot for accuracy, enable/disable QR code reading usage, calibrate the camera/sensor using a ballpoint pen tool, and a handful of other tasks.
* Pretty important however: you CANNOT edit the cutline shape or positioning from the machine's standalone software. That will need to go back to prepress for correcting. The great news however is that you will not need to reprint anything if only your cutlines are changing and as long as you printed those corner dots at the same time as your main artwork.
I know that's super long winded, but I hope that helps provide you a solid overview of the software!