Lexmark C 720 User Manual

Page 5

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March 2001

Page 5

Color Business Report

a guillotine cut is made, and one must prevent a new

page from arriving at the guillotine while the previous

page is still being cut.

MGI’s software examines files to be printed,

calculates percent coverage, and provides a supplies cost

figure, including the cost of paper. The ticket we have

included for subscribers (printed on roll-fed Bristol 94

lb. cover stock) cost $0.016 to print. The price is slightly

higher if cut sheets are used for the same job, since some

stock on an 8 1/2" cut sheet is not useable.

The Economics at the Back End

The MGI Digital Carte Master Color can take on

work that no other color laser printer can touch,

extending the range of jobs that can be considered for

digital demand printing. Much has been made of how

digital technology changes the economics of pre-press

prep work, making short runs possible. The Digital

Carte Master Color addresses the economics at the back

end. Three rails hold perforating, scoring, and slitting

wheels (see photo). Transverse or horizontal cuts by the

8 1/2" guillotine are automatically adjusted after

computer-controlled pattern verification. While the

MGI’s built-in finishing station can slit, score, perf, and

trim in a single pass.

Source: Color Business Report

Digital Carte Master Color changes the economics of

post-press, the product does not remove finishing

overhead altogether. This is a product for a press room,

not an office. Most jobs involve some set-up and testing.

With the $54,000 price of the unit comes three days of

operator training, an indication that there is a knack to

getting the cuts exactly where one wants them. In

addition, the finishing unit is a sophisticated machine.

Maintenance is not rigorous, MGI’s Michael Abergel

explained, but it is very important. Thus a portion of

the training is dedicated to making sure that customers

are familiar with maintenance procedures.

In addition to the maintenance routines, customers

have to learn which media the printer will handle. We

spoke with a 7-person commercial printer that has been

using an MGI printer for about two years. As long as

they stay with a single stock—Hammermill Accent 80

lb. Cover—performance is predictable and reliable.

Different stocks perform differently—that is,

unpredictably and unreliably. The printing company has

yet to do well with highly textured stiff stocks, preferred

by many customers, for example. MGI asked to see

samples of the troublesome paper, so it could test the

material and recommend settings. Since one cannot

expect one’s print customers to stand by patiently while

MGI’s technicians experiment, the commercial printer

tends to stick to the stocks they know will work well.

MGI has been responsive enough, sending

technicians from its U.S. headquarters in Florida to the

printer’s New England location several times.

Nonetheless, discovering the limits of the Digital Carte

Master Color one at a time has been daunting enough

to have caused the printer to give up. Their Digital Carte

Master Color now is used almost exclusively as a

business card and post card printer. With such limited

use, the company does not feel its investment in the

Digital Carte Master Color has paid off.

Nonetheless, MGI has made an important step with

the Digital Carte Master Color, since the configuration

addresses the ultimate user need for finished

documents. A tighter media design specification may

have resulted in more predictable performance. (That

being said, early Xeikon users complained about the

limited media selection. Designers of documents that

are to go to commercial printers like to specify the paper,

not vice versa.) A more open specification, the path MGI

has chosen, provides a product with more latitude on

paper, but with more work—both in settings and in

testing—for the customer. MGI expects to release

another product during the first half of this year. One

would expect that lessons learned from servicing the

present installed base would provide valuable guidance

for subsequent iterations.

(continued on page 6)

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