What I meant is that getting the right gray colors when it comes to different profiles is a russian roulette.
You can go through a million profiles you might not get the right grey color. To get decent gray you will have to print saturation only. I don't think you have any other choices since if you print with cmyk profiles the printer will use all colors to print greys. And then you will get green or pink hue in it
quesion is what is the setting on flexi to do so? I did figure it out on Onyx and Versaworks.
Also saw some videos on youtube so my question is probably already answered but I wouldn't know until i go to my buddy's shop and see it for myself.
Im not sure you quiet understand how ICC Profiles work.
You create, or you pay someone to create an ICC profile for the particular media you're printing on. and that profile will only work for that media. You cannot use a profile for a vinyl on paper or even a coated paper profile on a uncoated paper. it will not look the same.
You dont sit there choosing profiles that you'll think will work with your media.
in flexi you can use gradient and transparent layers with spot colors? I know in Versaworks you can't
by the way I just looked up spot colors in photoshop. this is far from spot colors in illustrator. You apply it to channels and you can not even save the file with more than 27 spot colors. Anyway. As I said. No spot colors in my case.
No exp with versaworks or flexi. I use onyx.
And i dont understand what you're trying... From your original post you're trying to print B&W or in grey scale or just using black ink, Either way you're trying to produce a neutral black and white image.
OK. Y
ou do not need 27 channels in photoshop to print black and white!
In your RIP, there should be a colour library with pantone/named colours. You should be able to make your own and use your own CMYK mixture. IF so make one and name it "BLACK 01" and set the CMYK formular as 100%k If it's in LAB you will need a spectrophotometer so don't worry about this step.
Open your image in photoshop.
Convert it to gray scale.
Go to your channels and duplicate your Gray channel
Click on your gray copy chanel, go to the drop down box on the right and click Channel Options
Rename it to what your spot channel needs to be (E.G Black 01 if you've created one or Pantone Black C if you're using pantone colour charts ect...)
Select Spot Color. Choose a colour (visual) like red or green.
Make only the gray chanel visiable and keep that selected. erase everything on the art board so it's white.
Turn on your spot colour channel and now you'll see the spot channel and the colour you've selected (visually) so if it's red, now your image will be red
Save it as a PDF.
Open it into your RIP.. In your RIP you should be able to edit the spot colour mixture. If you chose a pantone colour you should be able to change it to 100% K.
There you go.
There's other ways to do it.
But just Proved you all wrong in making spot channels in photoshop with a Raster image.
That's all the help im going to give before people start contradicting me again because apparently i'm wrong, you cannot do spot colours in Photoshop and apparently you need more than 20 channels to do a B&W Image.