Hi Ben,
as inline measurement system developer and producer we often meet the request you mentioned regarding colorbarless measurement. We handle it as follows:
Color Key Pro has a brand new development, which ensures colour measurements with a ISO 13655 compliancing INLINE spectrodensitometer and a closed loop process control.
For fulfilling ISO standard's requirements we normally apply 3 mm aperture size, where a patch size of W=3mm x H=4mm is needed.
In case of customer's special need we can provide also smaller aperture sizes, on request.
Of course smaller apertures under a certain sizes can not fulfill ISO 13655 requirements measured with the spectrodensitometer, but the TVI% (dot gain) should be measured with a camera on proprietary way.
For jobs where is absolutely no place for colorbars we provide an option for an additional high quality image sensor (camera) - all this in one unit with the inline spectro.
The highlight of the solution is, that the image sensor is
continuosly and automatically (during the production) calibrated by the high resolution spectrodensitometer ensuring the exact colour values.
That way you don't have to give up printing according ISO standards (13655 and 12647-2), but you have possibility for printing without colorbars in emergency case.
While other manufacturers requires calibration days wasting many tons of paper, Color Key Pro's process calibration is based on measurements during the production, so n
o extra time and paper is required for calibration (including calibration of the ink key opening curves) at all: the jobs with colorbar supply measurement data for the
self-learning process calibration.
Based on my best knowledge no one else provides at this moment inline measurement system with ISO-13655 compliance for web offset presses, although this standard is since 2009 alive. As all the spectrophotometers used widely for quality control (like X-Rite i1PRO-II, eXact, Techkon SpectroJet, Barbieri) have been released with ISO-13655 compliance in the past years, the minimum requirement should be, the such an inline measurement device is applied on the web offset press as well. In other case EVEN SPECTRAL MEASUREMENTS CAN RESULT DIFFERENT VALUES ON THE SAME SAMPLE and valid comparisons are impossible. That was the reason for creating the standard ISO-13655...
For more informations don't hesitate to contact me (
[email protected]).
Peter
Thank you all for your input.
I don't see the way forward. Our graphics change on a monthly basis so including so measurable area within the graphics is out of the question. The idea of printing a test image sounds good although we also use the presses for spot colour work where we change ink densities all the time. It is possible to run a test print before every print run to bring the press into line but the setup time and plate cost would never get approval.
I guess none of you see the target proof solution as a good solution. Am I right ?
I feel that there are too many variable in the mix. All I need is some blue sky thinking here. The work we do is not colour critical but it does need to be within reasonable limits. This is why target proofs to me sound acceptable. I would consider proofing on the same media used in the actual print run and simulating the offset profile via the rip. The printer has a lighting booth - D50. In our case a visual assessment is better than nothing.
Please say this idea IS better than nothing.
Awaiting your wisdom PrintPlanet.
Ben