@marconiparello. With regard to the double cut through the colour bars. I used to know a guillotine operator who worked for a print company that had a contract to print for Kodak. He told me that if Kodak found any blank or single sided copies, they would refuse to pay for that whole job! Kodak’s print buyer said “We pay you to print ink on paper - not to include blank copies”. The double cut was a quick way of applying quality control in the finishing department. You couldn’t always rely on the press operator to remove his bad or blank sheets.
Fast check on sheet registration through the stack, and a quick check of accuracy of back gauge…. My family owned a commercial printing company for decades. It’s just a check, and to get the last of the air out of the tail of the stack, not necessary, but best practice.
Nice...good work.
That’s an experienced cutter operator. Great form and technique.
First double cut? Why? Give me an explanation. 🤔
Very, very quick register check with colour bars?
@@jasonschnarr5037Understood, it avoids errors and losses.
@marconiparello. With regard to the double cut through the colour bars. I used to know a guillotine operator who worked for a print company that had a contract to print for Kodak. He told me that if Kodak found any blank or single sided copies, they would refuse to pay for that whole job! Kodak’s print buyer said “We pay you to print ink on paper - not to include blank copies”. The double cut was a quick way of applying quality control in the finishing department. You couldn’t always rely on the press operator to remove his bad or blank sheets.
@@markmiwurdz2248 Ok. I understand perfectly. Thank you. 👍🏻
Fast check on sheet registration through the stack, and a quick check of accuracy of back gauge…. My family owned a commercial printing company for decades. It’s just a check, and to get the last of the air out of the tail of the stack, not necessary, but best practice.
Thanks