D
Deleted member 16349
Guest
Now at the trade shows, we see some fantastically quick makereadies where a press goes from one job to another in minutes. This is impressive but it can also be staged to look a lot better than what the real everyday performance would be.
I think it would be very interesting to have the printout of the ink key positions for these demonstrated jobs. It could be quite easily set up to show great performance when in fact not much was done. As an example, if the ink key plots for say three different jobs tend to look very similar, well then that is like printing the same job three times. Not much of a test.
I think it would be interesting if the industry had some standard test jobs for testing the performance of colour makeready. These jobs could be designed so that it tests the full range of performance of the press. There would be high coverage and low coverage in the same plate of the same job and coverage could go from high to low to high in the same ink key position. Screens could be mixed with solids and high and low solids next to each other to test for starvation ghosting.
Basically with some knowledge of what are the most difficult conditions to print in an offset press and the sequential combinations that are difficult, this could be used to develop a set of plates for Standard Press Colour Makeready Performance Test jobs.
Then the test could be to get the solid density patches into a range of +/- 0.05 pts of the target density. This could be tested for fully automated systems, where an operator does not adjust or for a manual adjustment.
The test would then measure time and set up sheets to get to in tolerance for a total of say three jobs. Also the cost of technology can be in the evaluation.
Some kind of standard test like this could give printers an independent way to evaluate different presses and related technologies.
It would also give the press manufacturers a target to pressure them to build better presses.
It would also help to inform the industry how the design of the technology affects performance. Hey, they might even have to start to understand the physics.
Just a thought.
I think it would be very interesting to have the printout of the ink key positions for these demonstrated jobs. It could be quite easily set up to show great performance when in fact not much was done. As an example, if the ink key plots for say three different jobs tend to look very similar, well then that is like printing the same job three times. Not much of a test.
I think it would be interesting if the industry had some standard test jobs for testing the performance of colour makeready. These jobs could be designed so that it tests the full range of performance of the press. There would be high coverage and low coverage in the same plate of the same job and coverage could go from high to low to high in the same ink key position. Screens could be mixed with solids and high and low solids next to each other to test for starvation ghosting.
Basically with some knowledge of what are the most difficult conditions to print in an offset press and the sequential combinations that are difficult, this could be used to develop a set of plates for Standard Press Colour Makeready Performance Test jobs.
Then the test could be to get the solid density patches into a range of +/- 0.05 pts of the target density. This could be tested for fully automated systems, where an operator does not adjust or for a manual adjustment.
The test would then measure time and set up sheets to get to in tolerance for a total of say three jobs. Also the cost of technology can be in the evaluation.
Some kind of standard test like this could give printers an independent way to evaluate different presses and related technologies.
It would also give the press manufacturers a target to pressure them to build better presses.
It would also help to inform the industry how the design of the technology affects performance. Hey, they might even have to start to understand the physics.
Just a thought.