Single Pass Inkjet System Design
High speed inkjet system design and process development
Thursday 30 -Friday 31 January 2020
Hotel Ilunion Bilbao, Bilbao, Spain
COURSE FOCUS
This course provides an in-depth introduction to the real world challenges of high speed single pass printer design. The course focuses on five key areas:
Printer Development Process: Attendees will learn a proven printer development process, from market requirements to specific design suggestions. This includes an overview of drop placement error budgets, how to work effectively with key vendors plus methods required to make trade-off decisions.
Jetting Process: How does it work and how do the key process variables affect image quality and reliability? Questions answered such as “what limits the speed of printing?”, “what are the most common reasons for jetting reliability issues?” etc.
System Integration & Design Process: Commonly made mistakes during integration from ink supply design, encoder assembly, substrate transport system and other common integration issues plus specific design suggestions to minimise such issues.
Printhead & Ink Selection to Match Printing Application: List of printheads and inks that are available. Discussion of common printing applications with key variables affecting printhead and ink selection. Process to match printhead and inks to application requirements.
Application Process Development: Overview of process development and testing procedures to tune the printing process including ink/substrate tuning, time from print to drying, interstation vs. standard drying, ink formulation changes, print quality tuning on range of substrates, screening, colour laydown order, ink limiting, pre-treatment of substrate, etc.
High speed single pass production printer development is very challenging. This course provides a proven framework for printer development plus practical recommendations on key design areas, testing and solutions to common development mistakes. The course will assist those undertaking design or implementation of inkjet systems by providing critical insights to the design and implementation process. It also provides the knowledge and understanding to ask the right questions of vendors in the inkjet system selection and installation process.
COURSE OUTLINE
Thursday 30 January 2020
12:30 - 13:30 Registration
13:30 Course begins
High speed printer development: Challenges & markets
Why digital printing?
Inkjet vs. conventional printing: The secret is the cost curve
Current & emerging single pass markets
Printer development process: Key areas of focus
Overview of product development: key points
System architectures
Process development basics: Marriage of printhead, system, ink formulation & substrates to meet market requirements
Market requirements & engineering specifications
Jetting process & effect of ink properties
Slow motion video of jetting
Printhead inputs & outputs diagram
Rectified diffusion: What is it & why does it result in reliability issues?
Flow-through vs. non-flow through printheads
Jetting effects of critical variables
Overview of drop placement error budgets
Common sources of errors
Error budgets concept
Banderly Curve: Determining drop placement errors
Printhead mounting errors
Substrate transport errors
Statistical method to calculate system errors
Sample calculation for single pass system (An Excel spreadsheet will be provided with sample calculations)
17:00 Session ends
17:30 – 18:30 Reception
Join us for local beers, wines and good company!
FRIday 31 January 2020
9:00 Course begins
Sub-system design
Encoder design
Printhead mounting
Print electronics integration
Drying/curing
Technical areas: Key points
Ink supply design
Non-recirculating
Vacuum feed
Pump feed
Ink recirculating systems
Constant pressure
Recirculating pump feedback systems
Low cost systems
White ink and high pigment load inks
Design of transport systems
Belt-based systems
Web-based systems
Sheetfed systems
Printing on 3D parts
Printhead selection to match printing application
Common printhead specifications
Application requirements: rotary printing, large print gap, interstation drying, substrate movement, etc.
Known constraints / issues for specific printheads
Fit between printheads and applications
12:30 - 13:30 Lunch
13:30 Session begins
Ink selection to match printing application
Ink types and vendors
Recently developed ink types
Application requirements; open time, pigment loading, drying time, etc.
Method to identify potential vendors and select best vendor
Ink price negotiation strategies and risks
Recommended ink testing
Process development: The marriage of printhead, system, ink formulation and substrates
Common process variables that are tuned for an application
Process testing & equipment
Ink/substrate interaction
Process development: Key points
Vendor & outside resource management
Key vendors
Advice & services vendors provide – an under-utilised resource
Overall design & development management plan
Discussion of attendee’s projects
Attendee’s projects & issues they are experiencing
Rob Rogers will be available after the course for private discussion on specific projects
17:00 Course ends
Course Leader
Rob Rogers, Founder & President
Print3 Technologies, USA
Rob Rogers is the Founder and President of Print3 Technologies, a one stop shop for contract engineering and technical consulting, assisting clients to rapidly bring world class inkjet products to market.
Rob has been involved in the inkjet industry for over 15 years, where he has been responsible for a wide range of inkjet production printing systems including high speed on-press variable data printers, an inkjet label printing press, a one hundred part per minute container printer, flooring printers, a solar cell deposition system and many others.
Rob formerly worked at Dimatix where he assisted international customers with new product development. Rob was a Co-Founder and Principal Engineer of Jetrion, an EFI company. While at Jetrion he was responsible for multiple custom inkjet production machines and the first commercially successful label press.
He has consulted for Heidelberg, Mark Andy, and many confidential clients. His team has recently designed and built a print engine for a confidential Fortune 500 company that was demonstrated at the DRUPA trade show.
Rob graduated from Kansas State University with a degree in Mechanical Engineering.