Oosterhout, July 2018
– In 2014, printers Druckhaus Ulm-Oberschwaben (DUO) completed a comprehensive renewal programme, having invested in four COLORMAN autoprints from Manroland. The very next year saw the start of the search for a reliable and innovative solution for colour density control, which DUO has now found in the shape of the IDS-3D system from Q.I. Press Controls (QIPC).
The
core business of Druckhaus Ulm-Oberschwaben with its two sites in Ulm and
Weingarten is the production of all newspapers and local weeklies published by
Neue Pressegesellschaft Ulm and Schwäbisch Media Ravensburg. Working six days a
week, the business employs 170 staff in producing an overall print run of
290,000 copies.
Thanks
to the high level of automation, only two grammes of ink per newspaper are used
even now; but for CEO Ernst Jackwert that is still too much. The introduction
of 16 IDS-3D cameras from QIPC aims to reduce the ink consumption even more and
further automate the production process. "As a modern printing operation,
we have to protect the environment by reducing our use of resources on the one
hand, and, on the other, using our well-trained staff effectively by automating
unnecessary manual tasks," Ernst Jackwert explains.
IDS-3D
is the only fully automatic colour and damp control system that uses an
image-based process with markless measurement and also monitors the quality of
the printed image in that way. The digital camera processes the measurement
data in real time and uses the digital TIFF image as a reference. By
automatically adjusting and optimising colour and water content, IDS-3D
achieves reproduction with absolute colour stability and significantly
contributes to reducing wastage. At the same time, the integrated Automatic Ink
Mist Shield (AIMS) feature enables the system to automatically clean the lens
when needed. "We are absolutely convinced that in IDS-3D we have chosen
the best and most innovative solution, which will play its part in the
first-class quality of our products," Ernst Jackwert summarises.
The
QIPC quality management system IQM will also come into use in Ulm and
Weingarten from autumn 2018. IQM is a web-based reporting system that logs data
relating to register, colour density or fan-out that is relevant to product
quality and summarises all nonconformities in a clearly structured production report.
Due to the integrated error detection facility, the printer can see precisely
how many copies of a particular job did not meet the desired quality standards.
In that way, production quality and reliability can be significantly improved.
"We
are very pleased that DUO, as a classic Manroland customer, elected to use our
systems," observes QIPC Chairman Menno Jansen. "That shows that our
automation and optimisation solutions help newspaper printers to overcome their
economic and qualitative challenges and, therefore, make a contribution to the
success of the newspaper product."