FactorDesign
New Member
I do not know with 100% certainty that it is the machine, and not the material. If you look at previous posts, printing the same file, with the same profile, on a different material, the saturation of the Cyan either matches the expected Pantone color, or in the case of the Oracal media, appears slightly over-saturated. Unless I am totally missing something, I do not see how there could be such a drastic difference between 2 medias, and only in relation to one ink color, unless there was something going on with ink adhesion/absorption. It would make no sense for the printer to physically change how much cyan is being used on the different medias, because the printer itself does not know that the media has changed.So, are you saying; "The machine is still not delivering the proper amount of cyan."? If so, and you feel confident that is the case, your next step is to acquire the tools to re-calibrate or hire someone to visit and perform the task for you.
I can offer the fact that I operated two of those machines side-by-side in a varied hot, cold, dry, humid environment for over two years and they both did not drift whatsoever from the day they were installed and the two shared the same profiles for color-critical work.
I suspect the problem is both lack of true color management and workflow management which I will cover in another post but that is not to say your machine doesn't need to be calibrated, it may still. You might also need to refine the Onyx Pantone lookup table for your specific blue callouts.
Then the confusion becomes that I have tested 3 separate rolls of 3M IJ180c V3, from different lot numbers. I could see having one bad roll, or a few bad rolls from the same lot, but 3 from 3 different lots?