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The
conventional offset process contains a plate cylinder,
a blanket cylinder and a impression cylinder.
A ink and dampening (fountain) system to supply
ink and fountain solution is also included.
The
press prints only one side of the substrate at
a time. If you wish to print the other side of
the sheet, you must turn the sheet over and re-print
it. The impression cylinder is adjustable to accommodate
the various calipers of substrates or to place
more pressure between the blanket and impression
cylinder. This helps in printing embossed type
papers.
The
plate cylinder receives the ink and fountain then
transfers it to the blanket cylinder which in
turn transfers the image to the substrate thus
"offset".
The
perfector offset press is similar to the conventional
press except it has a mirror image of itself underneath.
The impression cylinder of the top and bottom
are the opposite blanket cylinders. Perfector
type presses are used in high-speed web printing.
Small webs, such as Didde or Stevens, still use
the conventional methods (above). High speed webs
just as the Harris M1000B, M110, etc. use this
method.
The
perfector system prints both sides of the substrate
at the same time. The printing nip is not manually
adjustable but opens under the pressure of the
substrate.
Some
sheetfed presses may be known as "perfectors"
but their makeup is conventional. The press can
at one printing station can turn the sheet over
so that printing on the back side. If a Sheetfed
press is a 4-color press, perfecting between the
2nd and 3rd cylinders, two colors can be placed
on each side.
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