To draw on a widely-used analogy: large-format printers are akin to musical instruments, such as a piano or a guitar. They all require re-tuning at periodic intervals to bring them back to producing the proper tones. The area that will be most noticeable with a non-linear printing device is near-neutrals and grays, as opposed to saturated colors. The frequency for tuning depends on the required accuracy of the output (notes in the case of the music instrument, color in the case of the printer), For a performance artist, the instrument is tuned on a daily basis, while for the average user, maybe 1x year or less.
With printers, this is referred to as re-linearizing the print mode. Most RIPs have a function for this.