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Main Office:
Unit 208 Richville Corporate Centre, 1314 Commerce Avenue Extension, Madrigal Business Park, Alabang Muntinlupa City, Philippines 1770
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Telephone Numbers:
+63 (2) 973-7042
+63 (2) 771-1959
+63 (2) 772-1378
+63 (2) 772-1379
Fax Number:
+63 (2) 772-1380
Email: sales@graficad-inc.com
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01. What is inkjet printing?
02. What is a picoliter?
03. Why are wide-format inkjet printers more finicky to operate than desktop inkjet printers?
04. What's the difference between a plotter and printer?
05. What is a piezo inkjet printer?
06. Is a printhead the same as a print engine?
07. Why can't I use just any ink in my printer?
08. What are the different types of inks?
09. Should I buy a printer that is faster or has higher resolution?
10. What's the difference between true resolution, addressable resolution, and apparent resolution?
11. What's the difference between dpi and ppi?
12. What's the difference between expanded-gamut, hi-fi and Hexachrome printing?
13. Why is black represented by K in CMYK abbreviation? Why isn't it CMYB?
14. What is a RIP and what does it do?
15. Why are ink-and-media profiles so important?
16. Why is calibration so important?
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01. What is inkjet printing? |
Inkjet printing is a non-impact printing process
in which text and images are formed by the
precise placement of really small (picoliter-sized)
droplets of ink fired at high speeds from the nozzle
of computer-controlled printheads. Droplets of cyan,
magenta, yellow and black inks are combined to
form precisely placed dots of various colors, which
when viewed from a distance, composes an image.
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02. What is a picoliter?
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A picoliter is a millionth of a millionth of a
liter. Depending on the resolution of the printer,
inkjet drop sizes range from 3 or 4 picoliters to
more than 25 picoliters.
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03. Why are wide-format inkjet printers more
finicky to operate than desktop inkjet
printers? |
Although both types of printers operate on the
same basic principles, it's the width and variety of
the media used in wide-format inkjet printers that
create headaches. Media expansion, surface tension,
and ink absorption are more complex on a larger piece
of media. If the media stretches slightly or if the
paper doesn't advance properly, causing noticeable
blemishes in the output. Users of desktop printers
also aren't likely to change media as frequently;
they don't expect to be able to achieve equivalent
levels of image quality and color reproductions on
bond paper, backlit film, canvas, silk, and vinyl.
Desktop inkjet printers also have an advantage in
setting up files to print. The typical small-format job
adheres to time-honor size and orientation formats,
whereas users of large-format inkjet printers struggle
with tiling problems on oversized jobs and nesting
issues on smaller-format jobs. In addition, most
desktop-publishing-application software is designed
for traditional 8.5x11 inch jobs and offset-printing ink standards. Users of wide-format inkjet printers
typically have to work around these biases in
application software.
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04. What's the difference between a plotter
and printer? |
When digital printing was in its infancy (i.e., 5
to 10 years ago), the term plotter was widely used
to describe either a wide-format inkjet printer or a
computer-controlled contour cutter. These days, the
term plotter is more commonly used to refer only to
cutting devices. (But beware! In some circles, the
terms plotter and printer are still often used
interchangeably.)
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05. What is a piezo inkjet
printer? |
A piezo inkjet printer uses one of two major
types of printheads: drop-on demand or continuous flow.
Drop-on-demand systems are
those in which an electrically stimulated crystal
changes shape, creating pressure on the ink chamber
and forcing ink through the nozzles. Drop-on-demand
printheads are made in Japan by Epson, in England by
XXAR and U.S.A by Spectra and are incorporated in
wide-format inkjet printers.. Continuous-flow inkjets
use an electrical charge to deflect a continuous flow of
ink. Different types of continuous-flow piezo inkjet
systems are used.
One of the benefits of piezo inkjet
printheads in that they can be engineered for use with
either water-based inks or inks in which the
colorants are suspended in a solvent such as oil,
naphtha-alcohol, acetone, or a chemical called MEK
(methyl ethyl ketone).
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06. Is a printhead the same as a print
engine? |
No.
A printhead is the component from which the ink is fired
and is just one element of the print engine, which
also includes the mechanics and firmware to control the
movement and operation of the printhead acrross the
media. When a printer manufacturer buys a printhead from
Epson, Lexmark, HP, or other manufacturer, the
printer manufacturer is given a certain amount of leeway
to design firmware to control operating parameters
such as firing rate and print modes.
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07. Why can't I use just any ink in my
printer?
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Ink is an integral part of an inkjet-printing
"system" because the ink chemistry must have the
viscosity and surface tension necessary to flow
easily and reliably through the printerhead nozzles, but
dry quickly enough for the paper to be advanced onto
a take-up reel without smudging. Thermal
inkjet manufacturers Encad, HP, and ColorSpan offer
users a choice of at least two different types of
inks engineered to work with their particular
Theoretically, piezo inkjet printers can
handle a wider variety of inks. But most piezo inkjet
printers on the market have been designed with the
expectation that users will buy a printer for a specific
range of applications, then stick with a single
inkset for those applications. For example, Raster
Graphics Arizona Digital Screen Press was designed to
use 3M Scotchcal Piezo Inkjet Series 3700
solvent-based inks.
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08. What are the different types of
inks? |
Ink is comprised of a base carrier
(water or solvent), a colorant (a dye or a pigment), and
small amounts of chemical additives to provide
desired characteristics. Most entry-level wide-format
inkjet printers use water-based inks, which are
comprised primarily of distilled water, a benign solvent
known as glycerin, dyes, or pigments and small
amounts of UV inhibitors, drying agents, or other
chemicals.
Water-based dye inks are known for
their exceptional color gamut and quick fading. A new
breed of enduring-dye inks is extending the life span
of prints created with dye-based inks, but these inks produce a smaller range of
colors.
Water-based pigmented inks are known for
their high resistance to fading and typically produce
less vivid colors than dye inks. Like pulp in orange
juice, pigment particle can be anywhere from 50 to 500
times larger than the molecules in dyes, which are
more like granules in Kool-Aid. Because the pigment particles remain suspended in the water or solvent,
thery can clog the nozzles of some
printheads.
Solvent-based pigmented inks combine
fade-resistance with the ability to print directly on
standard materials used for screen printing. But the
use of solvents raises some environmental and in-shop
health issues that many digital-only shops may prefer
to avoid.
The bottom line: There is no perfect
ink. It all depends on your
application.
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09. Should I buy a printer that is faster or
has higher resolution? |
It depends. If you are doing museum-quality fine
art, just a few prints a day, or ganged-up jobs that
will be cut into smaller, handheld prints, resolution
will probably be more important than speed. If you're doing posters that will only hang for a day or two,
a high volume of prints each day, or larger
banners that will be viewed from a distance, speed
may be a more important than resolution. Throughput
speed can also be important if you find yourself
having to reprint jobs that were botched in finishing
department or if color isn't managed
properly.
Most printers today offer a choice of
print modes in which you can sacrifice higher resolution
for faster speed. Creating higher-resolution images
(e.g., 1440 x 1440 dpi) can be a painstakingly slow
process because the printhead must traverse back and
forth across the same swath of media several times,
with the media advancing at ultra-itsy-bitsy steps.
On all printers, various print modes may involve
one-pass, two-pass, or four-pass operation, with
different nozzles firing during each pass to prevent the
appearance
of streaks due to misfiring jets.
When printer manufacturers claim their printers
can print 600-dpi images and have speeds of up to 90
sq ft/hr, be aware that the up to speed is typically
for a lower resolution image. If you expect to always
print in the best-quality mode, be sure to ask what
the throughput speeds is in that print mode. Also note
that RIP software can boost throughput speeds and
offer additional print modes. Conversely, choosing a printer on throughput speeds alone is relatively
futile if your RIP and workstation take hours to process jobs for output.
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10. What's the difference between true
resolution, addressable resolution, and apparent
resolution?
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The true resolution of inkjet
printers is measured in dots per inch (dpi). A 600-dpi
printer means that each dot is 1/600th of an inch in
size, placed in a 600-space/in. x 600-space/in. grid. A
300 dpi printer, means that each dot is 1/300th of an
inch in size, placed in a grid with 300 x 300 spaces/sq
in.
An addressable resolution of 600 dpi means
that dots larger than 1/600th of an inch (e.g., 1/300th
of an inch) are placed in a 600 dots per inch grid.
Apparent resolution isn't a mathematical measurement,
but rather describes how images are perceived by the
human eye.
But there's much more to image quality
than resolution. In theory, smaller dot sizes will
produce finer details, sharper text, and smoother
curves. But if the dot's aren't shaped properly or
placed precisely where they need to be, resolution
really doesn't matter. In actuality, some 300 dpi
printers are capable of
producing output that looks
better than images output at 1440 dpi. You will have to
look and judge for yourself. Welcome to the graphic
arts!
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11. What's the difference between dpi and
ppi?
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Even though many industry
professionals use the terms dpi (dots per inch) and ppi
(pixels per inch) interchangeably, they shouldn't.
Dots and pixels are not the same thing: dpi is a
measurement of printed dots per inch on a paper; ppi
refers to the picture elements (pixels) gathered by a
scanner or viewable on a screen. There is no
one-to-one correlation between the resolution of digital
data (600 ppi) and the resolution of a printed image
(600 dpi).
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12. What's the difference between
expanded-gamut, hi-fi and Hexachrome
printing? |
Expanded-gamut printing refers to any
more-than-four-color process that expands the range of
colors that can be reproduced compared to CMYK inks.
In a hi-fi scenario, lighter densities of cyans and magenta are added to the CMYK inkset. As explained
above, the lighter cyans and magentas help provide
smoother blends and gradations between colors and
between fleshtones. Hexachrome is a six-color
process invented by Pantone (an ink manufacturer) that
adds approved orange and greens inks to the CMYK
primaries. Adding orange and green expands the range of
Pantone Matching System (PMS) colors that can be
reproduced on a printer.
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13. Why is black represented by K in CMYK
abbreviation? Why isn't it CMYB? |
K stands for key. It was traditionally the
reference color used to register the other process
colors in printing. In inkjet printing, the proper
use of black is still fundamentally important to getting
good color reproduction. Black is used to reproduce
text and line art, neutralize the contamination of CMY
inks, add density, and reduce total ink consumption
in wide-format inkjet printing. Many of these
black-generation functions are controlled by RIP
software for wide-format inkjet printers.
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14. What is a RIP and what does it
do? |
From the description above, you'd think that
inkjet printers are incredibly compex machines. But
in reality, they are relatively dumb - just waiting
for instructions on what to do. Most of the
functionality of an inkjet printer is determined by
the RIP (raster-image processor) software or print
controller. The RIP takes an ordinary data file, sets
it for the appropriate output size, and then tells the
printer exactly where to place the droplets of ink on
the paper.
There are dozens of RIPs on the market
because RIPs also provide some of the functionality
needed to customize inkjet printers for specific
applications. For example, Wasatch PosterMaker, Onyx PosterShop, Scanvec-Amiable's Poster PRINT and
AccuPrint, and 3M Cactus RIP's are designed primarily
for print-for-pay production environments. Certain Agfa
RIPs or the new BEST Color RIP provide functions that
enable wide-format inkjet printers to be used for
imposition proofing or contract color proofs. Many
RIPs geared specifically for the sign market have
sophisticated design and layout programs that avoid
the need to use Photoshop or QuarkXpress. Other RIPs
enable wide-format inkjet printers to be networked
with color copiers or film recorders.
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15. Why are ink-and-media profiles so
important? |
In commercial offset printing, printers use cyan,
magenta, yellow, and black inks manufactured
with Standard Web Offset Printing (SWOP) standards.
In wide format inkjet printing, the magenta ink produced by one manufacturer can vary significantly
from the magenta ink produced by other manufacturers. And how the ink ultimately appears on
the print depends on the certain
brightness, absorption, and reflectance
characteristics of the substrate and it's
inkjet-receptive coating. In order to provide proper
instructions to the print engine in terms of how much
ink to lay down per pass, your RIP software needs
data about the color properties of your inks and your
media. Color profiles (ICC and
others) provide this
information.
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16. Why is calibration so
important? |
Calibrating your printer is a way to make sure
that the colors you get from your printer today will
closely resemble the colors you got from your
printer two weeks ago. It's a way of tweaking all of
those variables that contribute to the way colors are
reproduced. For instance, the performance of your inkjet
printer can be affected by in-shop humidity or
ageing printheads. Calibration routines help accommodate
for these variables, so your printer continues to
produce colors that are consistent from one week to the
next.
Calibration is often part of the printer's
firmware or included in the RIP
software.
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Copyright 2008, Graficad Creation, Inc. All Rights Reserved. |
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