"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
[size=0px]We are currently using Kiwo Versatex but are also experimenting with a Murakami emulsion which both work great with the Spyder, the wax will really stick to any emulsion I'm sure, so you will have more freedoms than with a ink based vs wax based unit.[/size]
I'll add that if you're really geeky about gain, buy yourself a reflective densitometer on ebay.... you can get one around $300 or so shipped.It will really open your eyes to just how much gain excessive squeegee pressure, bad curves, thickness of emulsion really causes.Sometimes I wonder if the cts vendors should just include them, as the results end up so much better if you can linearize the entire process from art to print, your proofs can look the same as what you print without your artists "knowing" the particular press or press op.
Ooh good one. The need for a densitometor is way WAY under valued/under promoted in our industry for film and DTS alike. Look at all the years we've had film and never went as far as really testing our film output to confirm what % we put where. It's one of those things most consider not that beneficial....till you have one.
* When adjusting your gain, use a smooth gradation bar, as well as a section bar. Section, meaning 1%,2%,3%,4%% on up to 100%... but the smooth gradation bar that goes from 100% solid down to 0% with (no breaks or sections) is the one that will revile any bumps in the curve. Then, RIP that it, so you have your original to compare to... and make another curve with a slight adjustment in the shadow tones and RIP it again. Then preview both, back and fourth, and you can begin to see where you need to make more adjustments if any. It will show any slight bumps in the gradation. Once you like what you see, print both on the same screen, let the press operators print a few strike offs to get ink flowing then on the 3rd or 4th, check the print (from the press) and see where you might need to make more cut backs. What you are looking for is a smooth transition. Curve (points) can be off by a single % and be recognizable in a smooth gradation. That's why it's important to test or preview smooth gradations and not just sections of %.
It looks just like the Douthitt CTS.. What's the difference between the two?
From my memory, might be wrong: newer version of Fuji printhead, more printmodes, bidirectional printing, improved printcontroller (whatever that means)
Mark is a great guy to deal with and they were there every time I called, even remote in and fix it on the fly for ya kind of thing. Head alignment was finicky and took a few adjustments for it to settle into place.Out of nowhere you'd get a clog and come back to a screen with missing info here