[SNIP]
I sense you are ready to spring on me something that will blow my previous response out of the water...I know you have years more experience than I...
...I would like to add, here in California, printers are really hurting and many just don't want to spend money on equipment, the ones that don't have CTP yet are the smaller printers, the ones with small budgets, I have a customer right now getting ready to buy a Cobalt from me, they only see the lease payment and not the ROI over time....
....There are all the other factors as well, costs of film etc. they won't be buying, the cost of labor and the time saving of CTP, the cost of maintenance after the warranty is up etc. etc. etc., .if I could get printers to see all that i would sell a lot more equipment!!!
No. Nothing spring on you. If I were a vendor of V or T tech I'm sure I'd pounce on you with irrefutable logic
I have my experience but it's probably vendor skewed and may not be reflective of reality.
My CtP experience has been visible light CtP (which is now represented by violet) and thermal (which, one may argue, replaced the original visible light CtP).
Film costs are eliminated by any CtP - visible or thermally exposed.
What I'm asking for is a list of criteria or checklist that someone would follow to decide between violet (visible light - don't care whose) and thermal (don't care whose).
This should be a technical argument so it should be pretty objective.
Criteria could include a comparison of:
Run length
Max lpi
FM capability
Suitability for UV
Total cost to deliver a plate to pressroom (not just the cost of the plate)
Need for calibration maintenance
Choice of plate offerings
CtP service costs
etc.
It's a "decision tree" choice...if this and that are important then choose violet. If that and this is important choose thermal. If neither this nor that is important then either one will fit the bill.
Once the V vs T decision is made then the criteria would be narrowed down to which implementation of V or T was "best" - and a different set of criteria.
ROI might be a bit more difficult to quantify - but there should be some kind of criteria that encompasses the notion.
best, gordon p