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Under the Hood

Mimaki’s 330 series

Mimaki has gone back to review its 300 series of printers and the result is the new 330 series with some stunning increases in capacity and quality. Brian Sims takes a closer look at the range

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The CJV330-160 has a cutter station which can produce cut images to within 0.2mm of repeatable accuracy

Loved, Evolved, Developed

It goes without saying that Mimaki is well known with print businesses which have established a well-proven reputation in the market for a wide range of printing applications. It is very easy when you are in such a position to rest on your laurels and fail to notice competition slowly improving until they overtake your market-leading position. Before you know where you are, orders are failing to come in and you then have to play catch up which is not the best place to be.

Mimaki has not been that complacent. The company has developed and released a new range of printers with the philosophy of ‘Loved, Evolved, Developed’ underpinning the development, and when you look in detail at each of the machines, you easily see how this tagline is a clear identifier for the changes.

The generation step of the new 330 series of machines takes the three original wide-format solvent printers and upgrades both capacity and quality. The range is made up of two solvent printers, one with an in-built cutter and a dye-sublimation printer; the series being JV330-160 and the CJV330-160 (with cutter), plus the dye-sublimation TS330-1600.

The generation step of the new 330 series of machines takes the three original wide-format printers and upgrades both capacity and quality


All of the machines have undergone an in-depth design review of the architecture of the printer’s chassis and this has resulted in the new machines being 230% more rigid than the original 300 series. Stronger materials have been used in key areas identified in the review and new materials being placed into the chassis to improve flatness.

This obviously feeds into the 330 series of machines being able to place the dots onto the substrate with significantly more accuracy and repeatability. You do not need to be a design engineer to know that this means the ability of the 330 series of printers is able to print to much higher standards than the 300 series.

Mimaki does not rely on you looking at their printed product to see if these changes have made a difference, the company actually measures it. If you were to look at a set of dots printed on the two machines, the 330 series of printers can control the dot landing accuracy in the X-Y direction to within 4µm and 20µm respectively compared to 26µm and 35µm with the 300 series of older printers.

The updating of the chassis is not the only major update, the second and most important is the printer head nozzle design.

The new 330 series now has a nozzle row length up from 25.4mm to 33.8mm meaning there is a greater area for deploying ink onto the substrate. Furthermore, the new heads are staggered with a new pattern for each channel.

The 330 series now has four pairs of channels in the nozzle head rather than eight single channels. Each being a cluster of magenta/cyan and yellow/black on one side of the head with the mirror of this configuration being on the other.

Proven technology

As you would expect, and with the ethos of the 330 series being ‘Loved, Evolved, Developed’, it is of no surprise to see Mimaki continue to utilise its very successful ink deployment and machine management technology.

The first being a Dot Adjustment System (DAS) which has been designed by Mimaki to automate the placement of the dot depending on the media and printing conditions. The idea being that the DAS reduces the input needed by the operator and reduction in streaking for overlaid inks, lack of image definition, and the avoidance of white streaking across the sheet.

Ink deployment is enhanced by a key Mimaki tool called Mimaki Advanced Pass System (MAPS4). MAPS4 disperses the ink pattern on the sheet in a very specific way to allow the even drying of the
product.

Further to MAPS4, the eco-solvent inks used in the 330 series printers come equipped with Mimaki’s Waveform Control technology (WFC). With this system, the printheads are able to round nearly perfect circles of ink droplets rather than the deformed circles that can form once the ink is deployed.

The benefit of this is that it allows the eco-solvent inks and Plus Series printers to produce high-quality images with sharp letters and lines and almost perfect-sized dots.

With regard to maintaining the inkjet heads there is a Nozzle Check Unit (NCU) which checks and cleans each nozzle automatically but if the cleaning process has not been successful, the Nozzle Recovery System (NRS) monitors and swaps nozzles when any become clogged or blocked. Both NCU and NRS allow the Mimaki to keep production stable meter upon meter.

The final part of the puzzle is the new drop technology called Mimaki Weaving Dot Technology (MWDT). This technology monitors and changes the firing order of each of the print head nozzles which greatly improves ink droplet placement. The implication of using MWDT is there is far smoother and deeper photographic reproduction of images.

The nitty gritty

As described earlier, there are three machines in the 330 series, two solvent printers and one dye-sublimation printer; the JV330-160 and CJV330-160 (with cutter) and the TS330-1600.

The two solvent printers are very similar in design and specification, both having the same technology described but the difference is the CJV330-160 has a cutter station in the machine which can produce cut images on the substrate to within 0.2mm of repeatable accuracy.

All the printers have a new conveyance mechanism in them which can handle substrates up to 250mm in diameter and the media changer can handle up to three of your most commonly used substrates on one printer saving both space and time when it comes to the interchange between jobs. There is another version of media holder for the TS330-1600 where it can handle mini-jumbo rolls of substrate when media paper is needed for the job.

The JV330-160 is equipped with an XY slitter to help reduce post-production activity by slitting and cutting the printed product online


The JV330-160 and CJV330-160 are both equipped with an XY slitter to help reduce post production activity by being able to slit and cut the printed product online. Cropmarks can be read by the printer and this makes major in-roads into getting the product to the client quicker avoiding post production work.


Statistics

  • CJV330-160
  • Print resolution: 300,600,900,1,200 dpi
  • Print head technology: On-demand piezo head (2 staggered printheads)
  • Max printable width: 1,610mm
  • Media width: 1,620mm
  • Media diameter: 250mm


Plenty of colours

Ink on the series of printers is broken down into the solvent and dye-sublimation models. The former has capacity for eight colours being CMYK along with LC, LM & Lk plus orange and white. The combination can be changed to match up a double set of CMYK or double white. The inks come in two-litre packs and the white in 500ml packs, with an ink circulation unit (MCTv2) recommended for white inks.

The range is made up of two solvent printers, one with an in-built cutter and a dye-sublimation printer


The TS330-1600 comes with CMYK along with LC, LM and Lk colours but with fluorescent pink and yellow which are much more in demand for the products the printer is designed for. Another change with this printer is that the ink capacity unit can be upgraded to a 10kg ink tank. Due to the nature of the product produced on the TS330-1600 the Sb411 inks all come with an ECO PASSPORT meaning they are safe for direct contact with the skin and have high ecological credentials.

The 330 series has a new tool which is pre-set in whichever RIP software you choose (RasterLink 7 for the solvent models) and it is called ‘Deep Color Natural’. This has a number of functions but basically it can print with more vivid and high contrast colours giving brighter highlights and deeper blacks.

The tagline ‘Loved, Evolved, Developed’ seems very simple, but you can see where it has produced some very impressive developments on already well-proven printers.


Brian Sims Principal Consultant, Metis Print Consultancy, www.metis-uk.eu

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