One thing you can be sure of is that the waste allowance will USUALLY be borderline ridiculous. All pressroom employees know the standard reasoning behind these low waste allowances, but it seems that the bean counters haven't yet caught on to what happens when you don't allow for enough paper. So hear it is... Most Pressman would much prefer to make every sheet that the customer gets in as perfect register and perfect color, and as free of defects, as the process allows. When you don't allow enough waste for a job, you are in effect often FORCING a pressman to start counting sheets prematurely, and including marginal quality impressions to make it into the job. This results is at times, bad sheets being delivered to the customer. This only becomes a problem when a customer complains. As a result of customer dissatisfaction, someone has to be blamed. Ill give you one guess where that blame usually falls??? This is a management dynamic I've seen many times. It happens when instead of management dictating the companies standards, they allow their customers to dictate the companies standards. I don't think ive been to a single job interview in my almost 40 years in the printing industry where I wasn't told "we are a quality shop". So every company THINKS they are quality printers, but we all know there a bunch of not so great printers out there. Instead of management setting their standards and finding a customer base that's looking for that particular product, the quality control is allowed to be determined by the customer. They in effect roll the dice and hope that everything goes well and every sheet is sellable. This will often have good results but when the inevitable defective sheet or sheets eventually gets noticed then there's hell to pay. This same dynamic applies to production expectations. In order to fit 10 lbs of dung into that 5 lb bag compromises need to be made. Once again we have a situation where "the fish stinks from the head!!!" I would not expect for this post to get many likes as as many who are not anonymous will be fearful for their job, but I can assure you bean counters this... many of your employees are fully aware of this and talking about it.
Deming recognized that waste and lack of quality was 90% a management responsibility and not an operator one.
For all the time I have been interested in offset printing, it was my aim to solve these types of problems in a rational, predictable and low cost way. I have never found management types to be interested in any of what potential I had to offer. Managers are not leaders.
Waste in sheetfed offset is calculated as fixed overs + running percentage.
We don't run packaging, but our allowance for sheetfed offset general printing 4 colour process 2 sides is 400 sheets fixed + 2% running waste
Deming recognized that waste and lack of quality was 90% a management responsibility and not an operator one.
For all the time I have been interested in offset printing, it was my aim to solve these types of problems in a rational, predictable and low cost way. I have never found management types to be interested in any of what potential I had to offer. Managers are not leaders.
I will add here that my target allowance, with respect to getting to density targets and based on the theoretical and experimental work I have done, would have been about 50 impressions. This would have been independent of coverage.
The reason for choosing 50 impressions as the target was based on the results of computer simulations of our Chambon offset press back in 1990 or 1991 at Tetra Pak Canada. Several things were tested with this simple simulation program. One was how the print density would react when going from low to high coverage or from high to low coverage and both runs started with an uninked plate. With high to low coverage, the density over shot a small amount but then trended to its steady state target value.
We also investigated density variation in the machine direction due to printing intermittent patches on the plate. We also compared this to how an ideal press roller train would reduce this variation. Interesting results.
50 impressions might seem too low and unrealistic but it can be improved even more. As a real world example, the Anicolor press is said to be able to get to colour in 20 impressions and it is a lithographic press. I don't think it is the right direction for press design but it shows what is possible.
The problem with these numbers are that they are theoretical. These numbers come from printing under laboratory conditions, with tight controls on every conceivable variable. The control of such variables are OFTEN beyond the willingness of the average printing company.
Hello Erik,
What about the Water(F.S.) that ...... Trespass onto the Image Areas ?
Regards, Alois
Explain why it should? I have tested positive ink feed on four presses and in all cases, the solid ink density is quite consistent and independent of the amount of F.S. being applied. One can flood the plate so much that it is soaking wet but that does not affect the amount of ink that gets printed. One can not wash out the print. And surprisingly for those tests it has not affected the print much at all. This maybe due to the specific inks. When running a UV ink, between normal F.S. levels and very high F.S. levels, the dot gain did not change which was actually a surprise to me. Only in one case, when printing on plastic coated substrate, the quality of the print was affected by high levels of FS. But one would not normally print at those test levels.
I have said this so many times over the years but you don't believe it. You can't understand it. Trying to explain this to you is like trying to describe a sunset to a blind person. Almost pointless. You will not believe it until you finally see the result of a positive ink feed. Your past experience is no help with this situation.
A 30-day Fix for Managed Chaos
As any print professional knows, printing can be managed chaos. Software that solves multiple problems and provides measurable and monetizable value has a direct impact on the bottom-line. “We reduced order entry costs by about 40%.” Significant savings in a shop that turns about 500 jobs a month. Learn how……. |