The present invention relates generally to printing presses and more specifically to a registration control in a printing press.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,404,906 discloses using a bowed roller solely upstream of a first printing unit to expand a web laterally to counteract web fan-out from water absorption. Bowed rollers are intentionally not used upstream of the printing units other than the first printing unit. Instead, straight axis idler rollers are used upstream of the other printing units. The web is wrapped around the bowed roller at a wrap angle of between 60° and 180°.
A printing press is provided. The printing press includes a first printing unit including a first plate cylinder, a first blanket cylinder and a first impression cylinder forming a first printing nip with the first blanket cylinder, a first bowed roller upstream of the first printing unit spreading a web before the web enters the first printing nip, a second printing unit downstream of the first printing unit including a second plate cylinder, a second blanket cylinder and a second impression cylinder forming a second printing nip with the second blanket cylinder, and a second bowed roller between the first printing and the second printing unit, the second bowed roller spreading the web before the web enters the second printing nip.
A method printing is also provided. The method includes spreading and flattening a plastic film web before passing the plastic film web through a first printing unit and spreading and flattening the plastic film web after the plastic film web exits the first printing unit and before passing the plastic film web through a second printing unit.
The present invention is described below by reference to the following drawings, in which:
In this embodiment, printing press 10 is a four color printing press, with first printing unit 12 including an inking unit supplying black ink and printing black ink on web 28, second printing unit 14 including an inking unit supplying yellow ink and printing yellow ink on web 28, third printing unit 16 including an inking unit supplying magenta ink and printing magenta ink on web 28 and fourth printing unit 18 including an inking unit supplying cyan ink and printing cyan ink on web 28. In other embodiments, the order of the ink may be varied or different colors of inks may be applied. Also, printing press 10 may include more or less than four printing units.
As web 28 passes over each bowed roller 32 at a wrap angle 0, bowed roller 32 spreads and flattens web 28. It has been discovered that providing a bowed roller 32 upstream of each printing unit 12, 14, 16, 18 to consistently spread and flatten web 28 prior to printing with multiple printing units is key to good registration and blur free printing. U.S. Pat. No. 4,404,906 discloses that fan-out is caused solely at the first printing unit by corrugation or fluting experienced by web as the web leaves the feed roll, and that after the first color is printed on the web, the web is no longer corrugated. It has been discovered that this is not the case where the web speed of the printing press is varied between print jobs or during a print job. When such web speed variations occur, particularly when using thin plastic films of for example between 0.5 and 1.1 mils thick, fluting or corrugation is experienced between each printing unit, causing lateral registration problems and blurring. Printing at high web speeds has caused downstream printing units to print wide due to web fan-in, and the print grows wider with increasing web speeds. This is typically the opposite to web fan-out. Providing a bowed roller 32 upstream of each printing unit 12, 14, 16, 18 allows web 28 to be stable and axially tensioned as web 28 passes through each printing unit 12, 14, 16, 18. This helps to maintain the lateral registration of web 28 for each printing unit 12, 14, 16, 18 for a broad range of web speeds and helps prevent blurring, particularly when web 28 is a plastic film web formed of for example polyethylene terephthalate film or oriented polypropylene film and the plastic film web is printed with higher tack ink. Higher tack ink as used herein is an ink having a tack of approximately 14 to 16, as measurement by an inkometer. An example of a high tack ink is 7600/7800 Duracure ink. The high ink tack, together with thin films and lower web tensions, causes the web to follow the blankets according to the heavier ink coverage areas. This is already non-uniform because the images are rarely perfectly consistent and the uneven web follow causes the web to form out of plane troughs. These out of plane troughs can also change with press speed and are the cause of the misregistration and blurred images between printing units.
In a preferred embodiment, each bowed roller 32 is positioned the same distance a upstream of the respective printing unit 12, 14, 16, 18. Accordingly, the distance a between the first bowed roller 32 and the first printing nip 26 of printing unit 12, the distance a between the second bowed roller 32 and the second printing nip 26 of printing unit 14, the distance a between the third bowed roller 32 and the third printing nip 26 of printing unit 16 and the distance a between the fourth bowed roller 32 and the fourth printing nip 26 of printing unit 18 are all equal. Also, in a preferred embodiment, each bowed roller 32 is positioned the same distance b downstream of the previous printing unit 12, 14, 16. Accordingly, the distance b between the second bowed roller 32 and the first printing nip 26 of printing unit 12, the distance b between the third bowed roller 32 and the second printing nip 26 of printing unit 14 and the distance b between the fourth bowed roller 32 and the third printing nip 26 of printing unit 16 are all equal.
In the preceding specification, the invention has been described with reference to specific exemplary embodiments and examples thereof. It will, however, be evident that various modifications and changes may be made thereto without departing from the broader spirit and scope of invention as set forth in the claims that follow. The specification and drawings are accordingly to be regarded in an illustrative manner rather than a restrictive sense.
Priority is hereby claimed to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/713,297 filed on Oct. 12, 2012, the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61713297 | Oct 2012 | US |