The present invention is in the field of lithographic printing, and relates in particular to the steps for preparing imageable or imaged printing plates for mounting on a plate cylinder of a printing press.
Common practice in the newspaper printing industry includes the steps of radiation imaging a photosensitive coating on a plate as supplied by the plate manufacturer, developing the plate by chemically reacting the imaged coating with an aqueous fluid, and bending each end (head and tail) of the developed plate before delivering the plate to the press where the plate is mounted on the plate cylinder of the press. The imaging step includes at least three reference marks in the margins of the plate, at corners. Developing reveals at least the reference marks as well as the main imaged areas of the plate.
The acute bends in the head and tail of the plate allow for the accurate attachment of the plate to the printing press cylinder. These acute bends slip into grippers that tightly hold the plate to the cylinder when the press is in operation. The accuracy of the head and tail plate bends is critical to within thousandths of an inch. Automated vision bending equipment uses cameras to define the exact location of each bend. These cameras detect the reference marks on the head and tail of the plate.
This way of revealing reference marks is not compatible with the growing interest in so called “on-press” development, whereby the step of developing the plate in a fluid before mounting the plate on press is avoided because the plate is developed by dissolution or dispersion in the fountain fluid while it is on the plate cylinder of the press. Instead, the coating includes a dye component that discolors when imaged, thereby rendering the reference marks and all the imaged areas of the coating somewhat visible before the plate reaches the bending tool. This discoloration has low contrast relative to the unimaged coating around it, resulting in degradation in positional detection and thus in the accuracy of the bends. Although special cameras are being designed to accommodate the lower contrast reference marks, success has so far been limited.
One disclosed embodiment is directed to a method for revealing margin references marks in a rectangular lithographic printing plate comprising initially transporting the imaged plate in portrait orientation along a first transport direction, secondarily transporting the imaged plate in landscape orientation, and at a fixed stop after the plate has been transported in landscape orientation, developing at least a portion of the margins of the coating at the short sides (head and tail) to reveal the reference marks.
Another disclosed embodiment is directed to a method for preparing lithographic printing plates for on-press development. Rectangular plates having an overlying, radiation polymerizable coating are sequentially fed to an imaging station where a plurality of latent image reference marks are produced among at least two margins along a respective two sides of the plate, and a latent print image is produced within the margins. The imaged plates are transported from the imaging station to a plate bending station where the heads and tails of the plate are bent over. Between the imaging station and the bending station, the unimaged areas of the coating are removed only in at least two of the margins to reveal the reference marks.
A preferred embodiment is also directed to a method for preparing lithographic printing plates for on-press development, from a supply of rectangular plates having short sides and long sides, a substrate, and an overlying, radiation polymerizable coating. The plates are sequentially fed to an imaging station where the coating is radiation imaged to produce a plurality of latent image reference marks allocated among at least two margins along a respective two sides of the plate, and a latent print image within the margins. The plates emerge in a portrait orientation and travel along a first transport direction whereby the long sides are parallel to the transport direction. The imaged plate is then reoriented to landscape whereby the short sides are parallel to a second transport direction along which the imaged plate is delivered to a margin developing station. At the margin developing station, the unimaged areas of the coating are removed only in the margins to reveal the reference marks. The plates with revealed reference marks are fed in landscape orientation to a bending station where the plates are bent in dependence on detection of the reference marks. The bent plates are mounted to a plate cylinder of a printing press and while the plate is mounted on the plate cylinder, the latent print image is developed within the margins.
Preferably, the reference marks are revealed while the plate is held in an aligned position, especially adjacent the feeder for the bending station.
The method is especially suited for use wherein the coating is soluble in solvent but not water or fountain fluid, the unimaged areas have cohesion that is greater than adhesion to the substrate, and the unimaged areas within the margin are removed (i.e., the print areas of the plate is fully developed) by press ink pulling the unimaged areas of the coating off the substrate and transferring the pulled off coating to a press blanket, without chemical reaction. However, the method is also usable with water soluble coatings.
The method avoids the need in the prior art for special dyes in the coating so that the reference marks can be seen as a color change in the coating when the plate is imaged. Since in the prior art the entire coating includes this dye, the subsequent on-press development of the plate via chemical reaction, releases this dye into the press fluids and can adversely affect the color and emulsive qualities of the ink. With the preferred embodiment, the coating surrounding the imaged areas for the reference mark (and page number) are removed by chemical reaction upstream of the bending tool, but the unimaged areas of the main surface of the coating are removed on press as solid particles by the mechanical tension of the ink. During a relatively small number of press roll rotations, all the unimaged coating is transferred as particles by the blanket to waste leader, and coating material does not dissolve into the press fluids.
This advantage is achieved without the need for replacing equipment or altering the footprint of conventional press room set-up for the sequence of imaging, bending, mounting, and on-press developing of plates. The developing station for revealing the reference marks can be located anywhere between imaging and bending, but most effectively at a location where every plate is temporarily stationary and aligned in the same position. One such location is where the plates hit a stop for reorientation from portrait transport to landscape transport, and another such location is a stop for the landscape transport, at the feed of the plate bending station. The equipment for revealing the reference marks can straddle the frame and cantilever or arch over the belt, slats or paddles of the plate conveyors.
The invention will be disclosed through descriptions of various embodiments with reference to the accompanying drawing, in which:
At the imaging station 18, the plates are imagewise exposed to produce a plurality of latent image reference marks in the margins and a latent print image within the margins. Typically, a page number is also imaged in the print image area, adjacent a margin. It should be appreciated that the margins are not physically delineated, but rather have dimensions that are well known in the industry and dependent on the particular overall dimensions of the plate. Generally, three latent reference marks are required in a respective three corners of the plate.
At some point during the continued transport of the plate 16, a reorienting device alters the relationship of the plate to the plate transport direction. In
Each of the operations described with respect to
Provided the plates are consistently retained on the transporter, the brushes 34a, 34b can be stationary while the plate 22 moves along the brushes, thereby removing unimaged material from the entire margins at the head and tail. Alternatively and preferably, the plate 22 is temporarily aligned at a fixed stop or the like, and the brushes are translated horizontally along the head and tail margins of the stationary plate. It should be appreciated that whereas the revealed marks must have a precise relationship and high contrast for optimum detection in the bending machine, the removal of the coating around the latent reference marks does not require such high precision in the alignment of the brushes with the reference marks, because the brushes operate on a relatively wide area of margin (e.g. ½ inch) as compared to the dimensions of the reference mark. One or both brushes should be wide enough to extend inwardly from the margin to also reveal the page number
When the plate enters the bending machine 64, cameras 68 recognize the reference marks R1, R2 and using automated equipment well known in the art, precisely bend the head and tail downwardly as shown at 70.
As shown at 72, the plate is brought to the press operator who locks one bend into the gripper on the plate cylinder, the plate is wrapped around the cylinder, and the other bend is locked in the opposite gripper. The press is then started and as indicated at 74 the remainder of the unimaged coating is removed on-press, thereby revealing the oliophilic areas within the margin that ultimately pick up ink, transfer the ink to a blanket, which blanket transfers the ink in the desired print pattern onto the paper or similar media.
In the most general implementation, the process associated with the on-press development can take a variety of forms, but in general the mechanism requires multiple rotations of the press cylinder, with or without fountain fluid, or with or without contact with the blanket, until the plate has been fully cleaned out of uncoated material and the remaining oliophilic areas of coating very closely conform with the dot boundaries established in the imaging step.
Although it is preferred that the reference marks be revealed while the plates are stationary relative to the transport and landscape orientation, the reveal of the marks can be achieved while the plates are in portrait orientation, such as at the stop 48 where the transport direction is changed. The head 76 of the plate reaches the stop surface 48 and the fingers 50 for lifting the plates onto the subsequent conveyor can be delayed a sufficient time for development of the margins. Moreover, since every corner represents an intersection of a long edge margin or a short edge margin, two or three reference marks can be revealed by two spaced-apart brushes traveling either along the longitudinal margins or the transverse margins.
In yet another embodiment shown in
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