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All
presses are composed of four basic units:
feeder, registration, printing, and
delivery. It is important that you understand
the process a sheet of paper goes through
in its trip from the infeed pile through
the registration system to the printing
unit and finally to the delivery pile.
The Feed Unit: The simplest and most
common sheetfeeding system is Pilefeeding.
With this system a pile of paper is
placed on a feeder table while the press
is off. As the press begins to run,
each sheet is removed from the pile
and the press moves the table up so
that the top of the pile remains at
a constant height.
To
feed the paper, most sheetfed presses
today use what is known as stream feeding.
Stream feeders pickup and move the paper
in a steady stream with each sheet over
lapping the other. An air blast is used
to separate the top sheet from the rest
of the pile. This blast can be adjusted
for papers of different weights and
for different atmospheric conditions.
Once the top sheet has been slightly
separated from the pile, a set of sucker
feet pick-up and begin to move the sheet
into the registration board where the
registration unit takes over. The sucker
feet are small vacuum tubes with rubber
skirts. The amount of vacuum in the
sucker feet can be adjusted for the
type and weight of paper being used.
In
actual operation, the sucker feet grab
the top sheet from the pile and move
it forward a short distance where it
is picked up by pull-in wheels that
put it squarely on a conveyer belt system
on the registration board. The press
automatically controls the precise moment
when the sucker feet grab the top sheet,
their movement toward the registration
board, and the time when the vacuum
is cut off and the sheet enters the
registration unit.
As the press removes paper from the
infeed table, the height of the paper
pile decreases. The press automatically
moves the infeed table up which then
moves the pile closer to the sucker
feet. There are also usually additional
tools to assist in the feeding of paper.
Devices such as sheet separators and
blow tubes are usually attached. Sheet
separators are small thin metal strips
which assist in the separating of the
top sheet from the others. Blow tubes
are side mounted near the edge of the
pile. Small blasts of air (from the
blow tubes) also assist in separating
the top sheet from the others. Registration
Systems: Registration is the process
of controlling and directing the sheet
as it enters the printing unit. The
main goal of registration is to ensure
absolute consistency of image position
on every sheet printed. The term fit
refers to the image position on the
press sheet. Registration refers to
the consistency of the position of the
printed image during printing.
After
leaving the infeed pile, the press sheet
is moved along the registration board.
The registration board (also known as
the feed table) consists of a conveyer
belt system and some type of registration
system. The conveyer belts carry the
paper to the registration unit, where
it is momentarily stopped and squared
to the plate cylinder along the top
edge by a headstop. At the same time,
it is either pushed or pulled slightly
sideways and placed in the proper printing
position. The device to pull or push
the sheet into position is known as
a side guide. Adjustments can be made
on the side guide to affect or change
the proper registration.
It
is at this phase in the printing cycle
that sheet squareness and stability
is important. If the sheet is not square,
for example, the sheet will print fine
on the first pass but if printing on
the backside the sheet will not line
up front-to-back. This will mean the
fold or cut marks and front to back
page alignment will be out. The result,
of course, will be a rejection by the
printer. The printer can in some cases
밷ack-trim?the sheets to 뱒quare?them
up. Sheet porosity (Gurley) is also
important. To low a porosity (Gurley
<5) may cause problems as the feed
suckers may pick up more than one sheet
due to the openness of the sheet.
Many
printers like grain long (fiber aligned
in the long dimension of the sheet)
or grain short (fiber aligned in the
short dimension of the sheet). There
are positives and negatives to both.
Grain long will be less prone to 밼anning?problems
(see glossary) or less prone to registration
problems. This would be important if
printing a multicolored job. On the
other hand since the grain is in the
long or cross direction, say a 19?x
25?sheet, the sheet will have a tendency
to 밹url?or 뱑oll?over and
jam in the feeder or transfer unit.
The sheets will also have a tendency
to 뱑oll?over in the delivery
stack. Paper that is printed grain short
will not have the tendency to curl or
roll over since the grain is going in
the machine (press) direction. The sheet
will, however, have the tendency to
fan out or in as the fiber is aligned
in the machine direction and can be
뱎ushed?or out or in during the
printing process (due to nip pressure).
Printers will also use grain long or
short depending on the type of work
they are doing. If printing a book,
for example, they will purchase the
paper grain direction based on fold
in the book. The printer will want the
grain to be parallel to the binding
edge. Pages bound with the grain perpendicular
to the binding edge to not lie flat
or turn easily. The printer will take
all this into account when planning
paper for press.
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