Sfr table hockey, thanks for reply. Now if you choose less percentage do you get good red after everything is done?
I will have to read that PDF and see if it helps me any so thanks RUBO
Now what I find is when you do the rest of the test prints and read them the I1 reads the colors you print and if they are not the right color to what it thinks they should be, the I1 will make them right by adjusting how much of each color is needed to make that red for example. As you know we don't have red in our ink, we have magenta, so already to make a bright red a profile uses all the colors.
So to some degree, yes, if you lower your ink limit too much you will not get good color but I can't say how much of a window we have before we notice a change.
What I can say is that I have had in the past some old waterbased ink that would make a print look washed out and not very good for color. Making a profile for that old ink did make a much better looking print and I was able to use the ink. If you could not make your own profile you would never be able to make it work.
Reading other threads about making profiles made my head spin and I am still trying to make sense out of what happens. All I know is what I am doing now is working for both the solvent and waterbased but for solvent I have found the ink limit to be way more important for most of the medias compared to waterbased. Keeping the ink limit on the slightly lower side is working.
Even with Roland Eco Sol inks and stock profiles, the ink was laying too heavy. Making the profile in Flexi with ink limits was way better for color and ink volume.
I guess you should even notice your ink lasting longer with propper profiles, seeing that you are not laying too much ink down with every print job.
This could be the next great debate. Does OEM ink really cost more if you don't need as much of it to print the same color as 3rd party inks. That could be a hard test to prove.