DoubleDown
New Member
Does anyone have a good contact, really good contact or knowledge of how to properly profile inks for UV printers?
Thank you,
Thank you,
See unfortunately that's not altogether true, because with UV inks you have to obviously put down all the ink possible to gain a large color gamut but you have to find the happy medium of bringing back the ink so you don't get lawnmower striping running bi-directional. When you are pumping up your machine to faster speeds, this becomes a big issue, as when you are doing large portions of dark solid colors.
We have had some top people profile our machines and have even done it ourselves but when you are running thousands of prints of dark material and the customer is not used to seeing light and dark color banding in their prints, it becomes an issue. Of course running unidirectional is a cure but that cuts speed in half and speed is money in this business. The faster and more effectively you can run the machine with good quality is the key. That is why I was looking for someone who has tons of experience in this department and advice.
But I appreciate the input.
Thank you,
Does anyone have a good contact, really good contact or knowledge of how to properly profile inks for UV printers?
Thank you,
Mike,
Yeah, you could be right on the belt drive system which is why I am considering selling the 9840's and getting the new Jeti. The 9840's are really good machine, don't get me wrong if you use them correctly, just need to lose some of that effect at the higher speeds, etc. Heck, the color people who profile Jeti's all day long were extremely impressed with the color gamut and quality these machines produce.
I will definitely contact HP about that...of course it's just more money on profiling machines. We already spent a good amount to get every machine printing out the same color across the board, but I'm curious to find out especially since they are keeping the machine.
I'll call ya and thanks,
See unfortunately that's not altogether true, because with UV inks you have to obviously put down all the ink possible to gain a large color gamut but you have to find the happy medium of bringing back the ink so you don't get lawnmower striping running bi-directional. When you are pumping up your machine to faster speeds, this becomes a big issue, as when you are doing large portions of dark
At normal speeds your ink coverage is not the problem, from your statement I figure it's only when your speeding up the machine. Maybe the passes/carriage speed/lamp ratio needs adjusting until you find the highest speed that is acceptable that the lamps will keep up & cure correctly rather than going back to ink densitys. Along with heat settings for ink viscosity and head voltage adjustments at higher speeds. Maybe there's a limitation to the tolerance of speed vs quality for that machine. Maybe???
Tell me what do you normally adjust when running at faster speeds??
and how long has this been going on?
Chris I know that since HP bought Colorspan They have decided to re introduce your machine under HP IID (Scitex, Nur , Colorspan). Versus discontinue it.