Hi, I have a question regarding a issue we are experiencing with our HP Latex Printer.
Lets say one prints a job of 15 large rectangular labels and the print run is about 1100mm (40in) long. If the vinyl due to the heat that is being used while printing has a dimensional deformation, how does the RIP compensate for that?
If the vinyl has a dimensional shift and lets say becomes elongated by 2mm the marks would be out of alignment with what would initially be in the RIP. When you then take the job to the cutter and it detects the marks, how would the cutter handle that the job is now 2mm longer then it initially was in digital form before being printed. Would the RIP/Cutter adjust the cut lines and make them all fractionally bigger to compensate?
Hope this makes sense, and thank you for any input
Lets say one prints a job of 15 large rectangular labels and the print run is about 1100mm (40in) long. If the vinyl due to the heat that is being used while printing has a dimensional deformation, how does the RIP compensate for that?
If the vinyl has a dimensional shift and lets say becomes elongated by 2mm the marks would be out of alignment with what would initially be in the RIP. When you then take the job to the cutter and it detects the marks, how would the cutter handle that the job is now 2mm longer then it initially was in digital form before being printed. Would the RIP/Cutter adjust the cut lines and make them all fractionally bigger to compensate?
Hope this makes sense, and thank you for any input