lantz_xvx
Well-known member
Hi all,
I'm trying to run a job at the moment under a pretty brutal deadline, and I'm having a couple of issues, one with the Crestlines and one in general on the Ryobi. FYI, it's a Ryobi 3302 with Crestlines. I'm running poly plates and 60# uncoated text weight paper. The job is a pamphlet, 4up on 11.5 x 17.5 so it requires a good amount of coverage on all sides.
1) I recently re-checked my roller settings and adjusted as necessary; because of the change in temperature, the rollers had of course gone out of adjustment. I set all the Crestline rollers to the spec as outlined in the manual. What's happening now is that I'm picking up too much ink on the non-operator side and it's scumming into the image area. If I adjust the knurled knob to let a little more water to the plate, it ends up being too much and starts dumping water everywhere. All of the form rollers, including the dampener form, are set to spec.
The problem actually started on the operator side, and after opening up the metering to pan roller gap a little bit, I got it to the point where it runs clean and doesn't flood the plate with water. Should I just try to find that sweet spot on the non-operator and keep an eye on it? I'd hate to have to babysit it, it's around 2,000 impressions each on 7 plates. I'd like to be able to just set it and forget it, and give all my attention to what the pages are like on the delivery end in regards to ink density.
It's possible that I put in too much ink from the getgo, but I figured it would have run off by now after around 200 sheets, and gotten in balance. Right now I'm worried that I'm not running minimum water and that the density will be way light, for which I will compensate by adding more ink when that will only exacerbate the problem.
2) The other problem I'm having is on the feeder end. After the sheet is registered and is transferred into the press, I hear a "knocking" sound on each sheet. I'm running 60# uncoated stock, 11.5 x 17.5 and I didn't hear the sound when I had it crawling to set up the registration. I'm running the press pretty slow, 4500iph and I just can't figure out what's making the sound. It's only when the sheet is transferred from the conveyor that I hear the sound, not when the machine is just on impression. I backed off the impression, thinking maybe it was too heavy (that could certainly affect the above problem as well) but that didn't solve the problem, and anyway, the impression really wasn't set very heavy to begin with.
I know it's a longshot but I'm hoping someone can help me out today so I can knock this job out (before it knocks me out).
Thanks,
- Lantz
I'm trying to run a job at the moment under a pretty brutal deadline, and I'm having a couple of issues, one with the Crestlines and one in general on the Ryobi. FYI, it's a Ryobi 3302 with Crestlines. I'm running poly plates and 60# uncoated text weight paper. The job is a pamphlet, 4up on 11.5 x 17.5 so it requires a good amount of coverage on all sides.
1) I recently re-checked my roller settings and adjusted as necessary; because of the change in temperature, the rollers had of course gone out of adjustment. I set all the Crestline rollers to the spec as outlined in the manual. What's happening now is that I'm picking up too much ink on the non-operator side and it's scumming into the image area. If I adjust the knurled knob to let a little more water to the plate, it ends up being too much and starts dumping water everywhere. All of the form rollers, including the dampener form, are set to spec.
The problem actually started on the operator side, and after opening up the metering to pan roller gap a little bit, I got it to the point where it runs clean and doesn't flood the plate with water. Should I just try to find that sweet spot on the non-operator and keep an eye on it? I'd hate to have to babysit it, it's around 2,000 impressions each on 7 plates. I'd like to be able to just set it and forget it, and give all my attention to what the pages are like on the delivery end in regards to ink density.
It's possible that I put in too much ink from the getgo, but I figured it would have run off by now after around 200 sheets, and gotten in balance. Right now I'm worried that I'm not running minimum water and that the density will be way light, for which I will compensate by adding more ink when that will only exacerbate the problem.
2) The other problem I'm having is on the feeder end. After the sheet is registered and is transferred into the press, I hear a "knocking" sound on each sheet. I'm running 60# uncoated stock, 11.5 x 17.5 and I didn't hear the sound when I had it crawling to set up the registration. I'm running the press pretty slow, 4500iph and I just can't figure out what's making the sound. It's only when the sheet is transferred from the conveyor that I hear the sound, not when the machine is just on impression. I backed off the impression, thinking maybe it was too heavy (that could certainly affect the above problem as well) but that didn't solve the problem, and anyway, the impression really wasn't set very heavy to begin with.
I know it's a longshot but I'm hoping someone can help me out today so I can knock this job out (before it knocks me out).
Thanks,
- Lantz