It's amazing how little information you actually contribute to these threads beyond just calling other peoples information into question.
What question are you actually referring to in your last post? I've seen no wandering off topic in this thread by anyone except you.
I thought that eye4color's method of using the chroma values from the LCH readings to determine the maximum saturation point of the hue was rather ingenious. You're either just not getting it, or you're just baiting people. After going through this a few times with you now I'm leaning towards the latter. It would seem you're far more interested in pushing people's buttons than contributing anything useful.
eye4color is not being ingenious, he's trained and is clearly color literate. Many people measure ink restrictions by eye (some even through a loupe). He's right, measuring chroma is the most accurate method. Now the question is, what chroma values are you aiming for?
There was one guy I worked with that did ink restrictions by holding a Pantone book to the individual C, M, and Y. As a result, he never got more gamut than Pantone process CMYK can give. I like knowing that I'm getting the most of whatever the process.
Damn, never thought of doing something like that, but its pretty ingenious as a reference. Unfortunately, Pantone charts have a shelf life, so I wouldn't recommend it.
Eye, I have always used a reflective densitometer from the press room. At first I would match the CMYK to the pantone book as mentioned. I then realized that the profile could not make the gamut bigger than the in limits would allow. I now get the most density out of the color before it peaks. Is this similar to what you are doing but I have the privelage of a densitomiter?
I never used the method myself. I prefer to read the chroma directly. Especially since I don't setup proofing systems these days, only straight production for me now.
Good one Bly.
It's gotta be better than the old Gretag Colorlab program I've been struggling with!
Not sure how effective it is really mate and it doesn't give the Delta e but it's better than the old squint approach I used to use.