electriccreative
New Member
Recently we have upgraded from a RS640 (4-colour CMYK setup) to a second-hand XR640 (CMYKcmk). The new machine has been looked over & serviced by our local Roland technician, and everything checks out fine. Heads in good condition, machine all functioning as it should from their point of view.
However, I am seriously struggling to get even close to replicating the colours that would come off the RS640. Generally speaking, the RS was pretty good at being in the ballpark at printing what you see on screen. I realise this is RBG, printing in CMYK, which is well and good when you are printing vector art and can isolate spot colours, but in instances where I am printing a flat image, the results on the XR640 are way off where I would expect.
Attached is a good example of this, to where the printed results are miles off what I expected they would be looking at the flat image on the screen. You can see it is not even close. Greys also seem to be very blue if they are rbg greys. The only way to get a neutral grey is pure K. This is fine with vector artwork, but if I was printing a photograph with less control this becomes an issue.
Since I still have the RS640 in operation, I printed these comparisons at the same time, same climate, same material etc. Only run genuine Roland inks on both machines (XR on MAX2 and in a 7-colour set though). Roland Versaworks 6 as the RIP. Both printed using Generic profiles. Have tried different colour management presets with no joy. Downloaded some aftermarket ICC profiles but haven't found anything that will remedy my problems.
At this point, I am keen to hear advice from anyone who may have ideas on how I can get my XR640 any closer to what I can print from the RS640. As you can imagine I have 1000's of files that have been set up for my old machine, so preferably it would be nice to have both machines in the same ballpark and not have massive differences. I don't care how they exactly stack up side by side, I just want to be able to print a photo and not have the colours be miles off to where even someone without a keen eye can tell something is not right.
I understand going from 4-colour to 7-colour there are going to be differences, but I did not expect to have this much headache. If this looks normal and I just need to deal with it, I guess I will have to do so. Hoping there are some handy tips out there somewhere on this board.
Many thanks in advance,
Mitch
However, I am seriously struggling to get even close to replicating the colours that would come off the RS640. Generally speaking, the RS was pretty good at being in the ballpark at printing what you see on screen. I realise this is RBG, printing in CMYK, which is well and good when you are printing vector art and can isolate spot colours, but in instances where I am printing a flat image, the results on the XR640 are way off where I would expect.
Attached is a good example of this, to where the printed results are miles off what I expected they would be looking at the flat image on the screen. You can see it is not even close. Greys also seem to be very blue if they are rbg greys. The only way to get a neutral grey is pure K. This is fine with vector artwork, but if I was printing a photograph with less control this becomes an issue.
Since I still have the RS640 in operation, I printed these comparisons at the same time, same climate, same material etc. Only run genuine Roland inks on both machines (XR on MAX2 and in a 7-colour set though). Roland Versaworks 6 as the RIP. Both printed using Generic profiles. Have tried different colour management presets with no joy. Downloaded some aftermarket ICC profiles but haven't found anything that will remedy my problems.
At this point, I am keen to hear advice from anyone who may have ideas on how I can get my XR640 any closer to what I can print from the RS640. As you can imagine I have 1000's of files that have been set up for my old machine, so preferably it would be nice to have both machines in the same ballpark and not have massive differences. I don't care how they exactly stack up side by side, I just want to be able to print a photo and not have the colours be miles off to where even someone without a keen eye can tell something is not right.
I understand going from 4-colour to 7-colour there are going to be differences, but I did not expect to have this much headache. If this looks normal and I just need to deal with it, I guess I will have to do so. Hoping there are some handy tips out there somewhere on this board.
Many thanks in advance,
Mitch
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