I'm having issues achieving good burns on halftones. Before getting into it, here are my specs...
Printer: Epson 7600
Film: Film Direct generic roll
Ink: Film Direct dye black
Program: Photoshop
RIP: Accurip Black Pearl
- Drop Density 12
- Resolution (8 pass) or sometimes the max res (2400)
LPI: 55
Mesh: 180s and 225s
Emulsion: CCI LXP
Coating Method: 1/1 sharp
Exposure unit: CCI LED (8 amps)
Exposure time: still figuring it out. Anywhere between 7-10 seconds. I've been using a 21 step guide, but these 3 second differences don't affect the steps by much.
So what I need advice on is how to get the less opaque areas to burn. The smaller halftones never seem to come out. Not sure what percentage of opacity they are. As far as my step guide is concerned, my burn time is correct. So I start trouble shooting backward from there. I have no way to measure my EOM, so I skipped that, which brought me to my RIP settings. I did some reading on here and saw someone mention that Epson recommends using the highest resolution even though that eliminates your control over drop density. So I tried outputting some halftones that way, but still no luck.
I feel like the light is undercutting my halftones or something. When looking at the film, the dots seem dark enough to print, but when I go to wash out, it takes some serious pressure to get those suckers developed. Realistically, what percentage halftone and what LPI can I expect from an ink and film system? I know that DTS allows for much better halftones and burns. So is 55LPI too high for ink and film? Or am I doing something wrong?