I'm sorry that I made some mistakes (calling Spekta as cross-modulated).
Using FM techniques in AM grid would be cross modulation: FM uses same dot size for all tones same as you stated for XM. FM puts/removes dots of same size to achieve ink coverage on the plate.
Quote: "The only difference is that the smallest highlight and shadow dots are constrained to the smallest dot size that the imaging system can reliably reproduce. To achieve lighter tones, instead of getting smaller,
dots at the smallest reproducible size are removed from the area. Fewer dots means a lighter tone." Bold text is FM by definition, right?
My statement is a simplified answer to what it really is. And no hard feelings please, I mentioned something to a guy that says he was out of printing industry for some time. In order to introduce third possible type of screening (pure AM, pure FM, combination AM/FM) I skipped some details. We would eventually come to that if it interests him, right?
Anyway, I'm grateful for pointing out my mistake and putting more detail about this for all. Thanks, Gordo!
BTW, screening transfer from film is a real issue. If your imaging equipment does not meet required level of being clean AND you don't use high quality plates, film and consumables AND you did not calibrate the whole chain (film -> plate -> press) AND you.... There are too many variables to achieve nice transfer from film of fine screens which would allow controlled reproduction of fine highlight/shadows. Imaging by laser directly on plate allows better control of these BUT... somehow most people do not care for reproduction quality (I'm talking about people I work with). CtP became just a cheaper and easier way to start printing. Probably it is the same in the world in most cases. I work with Screen 4300 capable of 4.000 DPI resolution - never used (extra imaging time would have to be paid more). XM and FM screens are installed (meaning invested by us to be able to work with these when the reproduction required) - never used. Plates that were capable of holding 250+ LPI AM screens and 10 micron FM - tested, never actually used. There is less art in printing then before and therefore probably there is less demand for enhancement. Without sufficient requests, AGFA, Kodak, Fuji, etc. would not allocate resources on improvement of plates, imaging devices, software, etc. I'm probably wrong on this one but this is just my perspective of the whole matter. Any thoughts would be most welcome.