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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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