Thanks for all the suggestions. So our printer is used.. I think 10 years. We had our tech set up our machine and show us the basics. This machine came right from its old owners and never had any service done before it was dropped off to me. I haven't had any other service on the machine other than discovering from printing x10 4x8 foot coloured sheets of coroplast that the magenta was dropping out due to the last chance filter needing some cleaning (we were able to get that fixed as it was covered under the installation cost). I haven't had a chance to do controlled testing but from what we were able to do it seems as if the banding is happening on larger floods (36x24"). I ran a few 8x18" and 12x12" floods all separately and no banding. So I guess I should ask our tech to do a new white ink filter and pump (do you have the specific name of this pump? ). Any other service tips for keeping an older machine in good condition? Thank you
Ink filters are the same for all colours - problem is that the white ink is the heaviest of all (due to the titanium used in the white pigment), so you have to remember to shake a white pouch from time to time (without disconnecting it from the socket, just squeeze the pouch a few times to avoid stratification of the ink in the pouch). Ask the previous owner, when he replaced filters in other channels (filters can be replaced by the operator, service is not required for this, just remember to remove the air from the filter according to the procedure in the manual). The ink pump is a different story, the service key is required to perform the replacement procedure correctly.
Try to print the same solid of K:
- without the white underprint
- with the white underprint, but unidirectionally
- as a pure K solid, without any other colours added by the ICC profile (some RIP packages have this option as a standard)
I suppose that such banding can be a result of:
- wrong calibration of the K heads (between themselves)
- wrong calibration of the W heads, which appears on the top layer as banding of the K solid
It's good to prepare a file containing solids in pure CMYKW colours (each of them separately), that will show you each channel as a separate part.
And I'm not sure if you know, that you may use IPA before the flush to clean the nozzle plates. But if you use IPA, it leaves the nozzle plate completely clean and dry, which then creates really bad prints, so if you use IPA on i.e. K channel, clean heads with it, then perform the ink purge (cleaning) on K channel to spread the thin ink layer on the nozzle plate and then try to print the nozzle test.