"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Quote from: Dottonedan on October 15, 2019, 09:23:21 PMSounds arbitrary for everyone really. No wrong or right.For me, I would be in the camp of Squeegee strokes. A double stroke is two impressions. Any transfer of ink (in my opinion). Probably same for total impression count on the life of a machine. It would count roller strokes as well.On the I-Image machine, it counts every exposure, and every print even if it’s just a nozzle Check.how can i find the number of prints on our i-Image ST ?
Sounds arbitrary for everyone really. No wrong or right.For me, I would be in the camp of Squeegee strokes. A double stroke is two impressions. Any transfer of ink (in my opinion). Probably same for total impression count on the life of a machine. It would count roller strokes as well.On the I-Image machine, it counts every exposure, and every print even if it’s just a nozzle Check.
Dan, Now your talking squeegie strokes . Thats not impressions. A impressssion is a finished logo.
It may be obvious however a double stroke does not affect the index just the print head/s
Quote from: tonypep on October 17, 2019, 03:23:18 PMIt may be obvious however a double stroke does not affect the index just the print head/sAgreed, but if one is looking for production time invested as it pertains to impressions, a double stroke is a bit longer than a single. If you double stroke 4 of 10 colors, that's going to take longer than 10 single strokes.I dunno. Makes to real difference in the end I guess. You still spent X time on production in a year. Can't change that by changing a tile of a category description.