Tracking the 10 years of Kodak Flexcel NX

Laurel Brunner looks at the developments in flexo pre-press in the past decade with a special focus on Kodak Flexcel NX technology

23 Jun 2018 | 6790 Views | By Laurel Brunner

Flexo printing is unlike any other printing method and the challenges flexo printers face are complex and sometimes unpredictable. The method uses a range of different printing machine architectures, ink types and sequences, and a vast array of substrates. These variables must all be kept under control to achieve consistent output results. Yet despite industry hype for digitally printed packaging, flexo printers still produce the largest share of print used for packaging applications today (including flexible packaging, corrugated, labels etc.). Flexo printers who can match the stability and predictability typical of offset printing have a massive growth opportunity. In the ten years since the Kodak Flexcel NX system for flexo plate imaging was introduced, process control is improving and wider industry trends favour flexo.

 

Trending flexo

The entire printing industry faces the need for sustainability, improved brand and consumer engagement, and high expectations for recycling amongst consumers and governments. Data helps the graphics industry to exploit process automation to deliver enhanced value to customers. With efficient, predictable and stable production environments, output consistency and smart data, flexo printers can improve both print's sustainability and margins.

 

Back to the beginning

Grant Blewett, Kodak's global sales director for packaging says that "over the last ten years this industry has moved along in leaps and bounds… the consistency and quality of flexo stands absolutely equal to other technologies and in many cases, can supersede them". Flexo's recent evolution has much in common with the development of offset printing since the 1980s. Both moved from being craft-based to a manufacturing model and both have been deskilled, benefitting from process automation, digitisation and shorter pre-press supply chains. Printers in both sectors add value with data management expertise and consistent process control. 

 

Since 2008, Kodak has been working on technologies to improve the predictability and reliability of flexo printing. For Kodak, a company with strong sustainability credentials and transformative imaging patents, the sector was a prime target for development and change. Kodak introduced its Kodak Flexcel NX system ten years ago and now has well over 500 installations. Flexographic printers work hard to manage output colour quality and consistency, but often waste ink, substrate and press time getting colour right. Technologies that help them improve stability and predictability drive productivity gains and growth. Dave Jarvis founder of PrintQuest, flexo pre-press provider in the UK, was an early adopter of the Flexcel NX system technology. He has seen PrintQuest grow from an operation "set up in my garden shed" to a business with 16 employees.

 

A new pre-press dawn

In the 1980s open systems and data formats drove supply chain collapse in pre-press for the commercial print and publication markets. Low cost standardised pre-press cut the cost of print, but in the 2000s competition from digital media posed an existential threat to the printing industry. It responded with innovations such as direct to plate and direct to press imaging. Digital print output process efficiencies and improved colour quality, lead an explosion in print applications. Colour and imaging process control made offset printing predictable and stable. Data management, production consistency, process reliability and inventive applications keep conventional printing competitive with electronic media. Brands increasingly drive graphics industry innovations, with complex integrated media projects using multiple digital and print formats, especially packaging.

 

It's all about data

Flexographic printers and their customers enjoy many of the same pre-press advantages as their offset and digital printing colleagues. However, with press speeds ranging from 200 to 600 metres per minute and virtually limitless substrate options they still have the advantage. Advancing technologies such as the Kodak Flexcel NX system support high quality Extended Colour Gamut (ECG) printing. Managed colour data can reproduce spot colours using CMYK plus orange, green and violet inks. This means less cost, less wash-up, faster make-readies and faster deliveries, plus tangible bottomline benefits. Peter Hamm, general manager of ReproService EuroDigital GmbH, a leading German packaging pre-press provider, notes that "Print quality changed. In the past, we had a gap between web offset and flexo. Today we have a printing solution that's more advanced than gravure."


Peter Hamm, general manager of ReproService EuroDigital GmbH

The Kodak Flexcel NX system journey started in 2006 with acquisitions of Kodak Polychrome Graphics (KPG) and Creo. Chris Payne president of Kodak's flexographic packaging division explains: "We recognised that because of digital substitution in the print industry we needed to move into areas such as industrial printing … we didn't have anything in flexo printing, but we had technologies and skills to go into flexography.". He adds that "there was a big opportunity to make it a much more dominant process with premium print performance. The most rewarding feedback for me is that today most printers using our products not only get the quality they need for brands, but are also getting production efficiencies."

 

Today flexo is taking market share from other printing methods and seeing organic growth as more companies start to trust the process, which can deliver the stability and predictability of offset. Hamm says that ReproService's customer base has "broadened with the Kodak system, the same customers are doing more runs and we achieved new customers. And customers are delivering more complex artwork than before because the process can support it".

 

How?

As the pioneering Flexcel NX system technology has evolved Kodak has perfected a means to carry ink more effectively on the plate, using structured, engineered surface patterns on each printing dot "to hold ink and manage ink flow on the plate in a much more sophisticated way" as Payne explains. The plate printing surface is imaged with different patterns, with varying shapes and depths defined according to the imaged content's printed output requirements. Kodak's unique imaging technology and plate making process, renders this data accurately on the plate. The result is optimized print performance within the complex environment of the flexo process.


Steen Madsen managing director of Reproflex in Denmark

Steen Madsen managing director of Reproflex in Denmark was the third company in Europe to install the Kodak Flexcel NX system and was also a beta site for the technology. He says that "we had a sceptical view in the beginning," but "we could get our data from the Mac and ArtPro and transmit to the TIL [Thermal Imaging Layer] and then to the plate without any loss. This is not possible with a LAMS [laser-ablative mask system - used in traditional digital flexo plates] based plate. The Kodak Squaresopt imaging technology laser gives a completely accurate conversion of data." Data created in pre-press and accurately rendered on the flexo plate, fully exploits the plate's capabilities for stable, predictable high-quality colour print. For Madsen "when it comes to brands, we use NX for all of them because of the predictability."

 

Taking control

Control is what Flexcel NX is all about. Martin Dreher Scientific director of the German Flexo Technical Association's technology centre at the Stuttgart Media University sees a clear trend towards the use of advanced screening as flexo printers improve control over dot gain, notoriously difficult to manage in the flexo process. The rising use of high line screens in flexo is a wider trend and made possible because of enhanced imaging process control. Dreher says that due to Flexcel NX's enhanced ink transfer "flexo samples are on a par and some of them [can be] much better than on a par with gravure".

 

Achieving such high results depends on process control and education. Stefano d'Andrea, technical consultant from FTA Europe, recommends keeping in mind the words of management guru Ed Deming: "it's not enough to do your best, you must know what to do, and then do your best". He also follows Albert Einstein's advice that "the value of an outcome is in the process to achieve it", remarking the importance of workflow calibration. With flexo following such principles can lead to improved process control and d'Andrea recommends flexo printers to take control.

 

Industry insiders clearly expect flexo printing to take market share from gravure printing, in much the same way as offset has expanded its reach. Process and imaging control make it feasible to opt for FM screens and fixed colour palette printing with up to seven colours. This expands applications options for print buyers in all parts of the industry, but especially for brand owners looking to extend their market reach via packaging innovations. Payne observes that "we're still in the first innings with flexo, it takes time to gain brand buy-in and for additional capital investment in press equipment. But it's happening. People that are in today have a tremendous opportunity".

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