hi interested to know your v700 is going?
as its a strong contender for us also
Well, it took a while to turn up, very much expected in these topsy-turvy times. But Canon stepped-up by providing an office machine so we could at least print some emails. When the machine finally arrived, the delivery company smashed up the POD deck and it was determined that they should pay for a replacement - 3 months later, hoping it will happen this week. We could have used the POD deck for a few long runs, but persevered with loading tray 3 multiple times.
The printer itself....The V700 is impressive for sure and has produced some excellent work - not without issues, but these are more to do with the Fiery. Initially we could only print jobs in duplex (long edge binding) - it took a week or so after installation to realise that this was about print drivers and how Adobe Indesign prints. I have since upgraded our aging iMac to a new M2 Mac mini - which was a huge improvement and set up hot folders - this bypasses the need to print directly to the Fiery - which we did on our previous 3 digital presses.
Colour calibration was the next problem - this is again an EFI Fiery issue - the i1 pro we used previously has been superseded by newer devices from X-Rite and EFI - which do EXACTLY the same job as the older i1 pro - Purely money grabbing from both companies. There's even a patch reader that allows the i1 pro to work - but I can't figure out how to implement the files that it produces.
We have found that colour calibration works extremely well through the platen - and have set up a comprehensive list of materials which match from one to the other.
Registration - this was a wow moment - our previous machines really struggled with front/back reg - but again by using the platen and a register sheet - the machine produces a colour coded 2 sided sheet on the specified material which is positioned under the registration sheet and aligned with an arrow - so every material we use is closer than we could ever dream of (including litho) - it actually compensates for heat shrinkage and slew. This on it's own is a huge time-saver - for those pesky 250 runs of double-sided business cards that used to take ages.
Training - we paid for a day of training and we definitely got that. The trainer was extremely well-informed and when he didn't know he told us, rather than bluffing. We went through the basics like Shading Correction, AutoGradation adjustment and Colour Calibration - repeatedly until our most common materials were in the Fiery paper catalogue. Imposition software and techniques, Registration (as mentioned above), Mixed media jobs - ie Cover material mixed with text materials, staple folded at sra3 - then trimmed on the guillotine to produce excellent results.
I won't go into all the details - but we had a full day from 9.30 to 5pm - the trainer barely paused for a breath - even though he suggested a quick break for lunch, he hammered on regardless.
The machine is still new to us - although we have had some issues with the Fiery - we really haven't had any problems with the printer. Colour - excellent, Solids - excellent, Halftones - excellent, Registration on every material - excellent, Finishing - excellent.
After 6 months I will return and post further comments - hopefully the experience remains the same.
UPDATE....
Moments after I posted this, the delivery company arrived with the replacement POD Deck Lite XL - I'm anticipating installation tomorrow.