I am not sure what really would happen to the screen patch. As I said in an earlier post, during a test of positive ink feed, the engineers (at Drent Goebel), did not measure a higher dot gain when there was a higher level of water. In that case, it was not an indicator of the water volumes.
I don't know if that was just a fluke measurement but with such a short test as this simulation, I don't think one can say much conclusively about the affect of extra water on the screen.
Have I used the term "print quality" improperly when discussing these screens?
My thinking has been that if a screen normally prints at one dot percentage but then later prints at a different dot percentage, that to me is a print quality issue. Am I not using the right term to describe this?
Print "quality" is a loaded descriptor - not a term that I would use in this context and is not what I was thinking about.
I'm just thinking about metrics that might give you data points to help understand what is happening when you run your test.
Dot gain at the 50% was one that you included. I would expect that given a constant SID but changing the water volume would not have much, if any effect on dot gain since the way that dot gain is calculated links them together. I.e. if SIDs change because they are being washed out by excess water then the dot gain reported by the instrument may not change - just because of how dot gain is calculated. Which is what seems to have happened at Drent Goebel. The same thing happens if you increase SIDs on press - dot gain as measured, may actually decrease. (That's a very complicated discussion though) Heck, it's even possible for a screened tone (e.g. 98% cyan) to measure as a higher SID than a solid (e.g. 100% cyan). (Another very complicated discussion though).
With print contrast (75% vs 100%) you are not really looking at dot gain, you are looking at the impact of water volume on the plate. So, given a constant SID, if you decrease the volume of water the SID may stay the same but the contrast will go down (as the screen fills in). Conversely, if you increase the volume of water and your theory proves out then the SID will be constant but the contrast may increase or decrease. If you increase the water and your theory fails, then the SID may shift and print contrast may also shift (higher or lower) and may help you to understand what happened.
So, theoretically, everything that is printed (solid patches or halftones) is printing solids - halftones are simply islands of solids surrounded by water. If you could measure the solid density of an isolated halftone dot it should be similar to the solid density of a large 100% patch. However, water volume potentially affects not only the density of the solid patch but the lack of ink film in the non printing areas. So, IMHO, it might be useful to have such a target in your test i.e. replace the 25% with a 75% tone.
That's why I thought adding a print contrast target might be useful.
best, gordon p