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Such is our insatiable appetite for fresh visual stimulation that the people and the companies who produce these images need printers that are built both for speed and, if they want to stop us in our tracks, for high-quality. Inca Digital Printers Ltd understands the technical and business needs of industrial printers. The Cambridge based company develops and manufactures digital flatbed inkjet printers aimed at companies wanting to efficiently respond to market needs for short run prints, particularly high quality, full-colour images produced on a variety of rigid or flexible substrates. The build quality of a printer has a direct impact on the print quality. Even the tiniest misalignment in the machine’s chassis can be amplified, through the print “head” causing “banding” and other registration errors which show up in the image. Certainly not what you get when you buy a printer from Inca, especially if you’re paying more than £1million for the company’s largest and latest design. Meeting customer demands with calibration
Renishaw has been designing and manufacturing laser interferometer systems for over 20 years. In fact, before Inca invested in the Renishaw XL-80, the company had been using one of Renishaw’s most successful laser systems: the ML10. With its ±0.7 ppm linear measurement accuracy it established the global benchmark for the calibration systems used on machine tools, co-ordinate measuring machines and other position and motion critical systems. Building on the success of the ML10, the new compact XL-80 has a linear measurement accuracy of ±0.5 ppm and a greatly improved dynamic measurement performance, including a maximum linear measurement speed of 4m/s. Calibrating long rails at high speed
Amongst other things, the new XL-80 was conceived with portability in mind. It is much smaller and lighter than its predecessor which, for a company like Inca Digital, where its large machines are built in situ around its ever-expanding assembly and testing area, is a considerable benefit. XL-80 portability“We need to be able to quickly move the XL-80 from one area of the factory to another,” says Inca’s Mike Cummins. “The fact that the whole system fits into a relatively small case, which one man can carry comfortably, is a great attribute.” “Once in a while we also take the laser on site,” adds Dr. Eve, “to recalibrate a customer’s machine in the field - this could be anywhere: the US, Canada, Europe, Japan, China, Australia or New Zealand...In these cases the compact size and light weight makes it easy and economical to take the XL-80 on a plane.” All of which adds up to a beautiful, pin-sharp image, time after time. News updatesRegister for regular news updates from Renishaw Full articleEditor downloads
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