RE: Spectrolino repair
RE: Spectrolino repair
- Subject: RE: Spectrolino repair
- From: Hanno Hoffstadt <email@hidden>
- Date: Sun, 14 Feb 2016 17:20:44 +0000
- Thread-topic: Spectrolino repair
Well, for M1 measurements you want to get the effect as if you had used a D50 light source. This can be just a single source (M1 type 1), or multiple sources with a model or compensation (M1 type 2).
For type 1, the "D50-ness" in terms of fluorescence is evaluated as in CIE 51.2, referred via ISO 3664 for daylight simulators. There are three (virtual) fluorescent samples which respond to different peak excitation wavelengths (340, 370, 390 nm). For all three the resulting total radiance factor is calculated, then CIELAB and the Delta E (1976) to a nonfluorescent reference. Actually when you calculate this for D50 itself, you get not only DE=0, but a spectral match. So you see that 365 nm, while practical to use from e.g. a mercury discharge lamp, is only part of the answer. 365/370 nm excitation peak is however quite typical for most OBAs in papers that I have seen. So it makes sense to focus on this particular aspect to get most graphic arts applications - the paper-based ones - "right".
- Interestingly, the visual part of the spectrum of the light source "should match" D50, but this is not evaluated in ISO 13655 to my knowledge. So it could be a different source like a white LED or tungsten lamp or a multi-LED mix as used by Barbieri in the Spectropad, which would affect the excitation of fluorescent inks that are excited in the visible range too (like many fluorescent yellows, oranges, reds). Maybe Ray can tell more about the spectral correspondence of the M1-filtered eXact light source to D50 in the visible range?
For type 2, the light source can have any spectrum, and the "D50-ness" of the compensation method in terms of fluorescence "shall be evaluated" using fluorescent certified reference materials, probably similar to the IR3 standards issued from Innventia (Sweden) or Paprican (Canada) for the UV calibration in the paper industry. I personally haven't seen such a D50 evaluation yet.
Anyway, from my experience with the eXact as a type 1-device and with several FD-7, i1pro2, and SpectroDens III, I would say that these M1 devices have a good inter-instrument agreement on most OBA-containing substrates. We at GMG have measured several dozens of test chart sheets with all four devices on the same sheet, thanks to the versatility of the ColorScout A+ xy tables with different adapters. Many of those were sheet-fed and web CMYK offset test charts (like ISO12642 / IT8.7/4) on coated and uncoated paper, e. g. for the creation of FOGRA51 and FOGRA52 in ECI's FRED15 project. Usually we find more of a systematic difference from the photometric scale (Delta L* > 1 on the substrate, with X-Rite being brighter and Konica Minolta being darker, Techkon in-between) than from the OBA, except if it is very strong.
With respect to the subject line (the original Spectrolino/Spectroscan topic), I personally prefer the combination of a universal table like the Color Scout with the device I need for my work (like the M1 ones, or a multi-gloss meter, or devices with spherical geometry etc., or even a Spectrolino). Measurement in spot mode with true lifting up and down is necessary for many packaging materials (e.g. PET and OPP films, also some tissue paper). With so many instruments comes an increased need to focus on a good mechanical or height adjustment for each device in its holder. You may have to experiment a bit. The shipped software is a bit rough but supports all instruments, even a SpectroPlate which can then be used as a automated microscope. Support from third-party suppliers is increasing, not yet from GMG as I am sorry to say, but e.g. from Heidelberger (recently) and basICColor (already for a longer time), for a limited, but probably growing selection of instrument types. (As you can see, I thought this solution deserves mentioning and could be useful to others on the list.)
Best regards
Hanno
> Message: 12
> Date: Fri, 12 Feb 2016 06:34:49 -0500
> From: Roger Breton <email@hidden>
> To: email@hidden
> Subject: RE: Spectrolino repair
>
> The way I understand the "problem", one light source is needed to cover the non-fluorescing part of the spectrum. That could be a white LED or a tungsten lamp. But, in my opinion, a second lamp is needed at 365nm to excite fluorescence from the substrate. Does ISO-13655 accurately describe this or does it only gloss over the detail of the required illumination, stating the general terms that it "ought" to be a D50-like SPD and leaving the details of the implementation to manufacturers?
>
> I used a Techkon Spectrodens II that has M0, M1, M2 flavors.
> I used the i1pro2.
> I could be using an FD-xx.
> I could be using a Barbieri.
>
> Presumably, none of the manufacturers quite use the same components and methods.
> Which is "best"? Newer characterization data all specify M1 but it's obvious that "M1" comes in many flavours.
>
> / Roger
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: colorsync-users-bounces+graxx=email@hidden [mailto:colorsync-users-bounces+graxx=email@hidden] On Behalf Of Ray Cheydleur
> Sent: 11 février 2016 08:46
> To: email@hidden >> ColorSync <email@hidden>
> Subject: Re: Spectrolino repair
>
> Graeme is precisely correct, the KM FD series, i1 Pro2 and i1iSis 2 are using a modeling process (as does Argyle and i1Profilers OBA module), the eXact uses instead an approach using filtered Tungsten with additional sources in the UV to provide the spectral power distribution at the measurement plane. Either approach is completely valid for OBA’s as they are well studied and modeled. The issue comes when you look at other potential fluorescing agents. Then the model may, or very likely may not, perform as expected and thus the eXact is the better choice for these more complex situations.
>
> RayC
>
> Ray Cheydleur
> Printing and Imaging Product Portfolio Manager email@hidden
>
>
> Roger Breton wrote:
>
> please forgive my technical ignorance but is there anything fundamentally wrong or flawed in the following approach :
>
> It's a modeling approach, the same in principle as used by ArgyllCMS FWA compensation, and the i1pro2 M1/M2. You calibrate for the media's fluorescent response by measuring with the instrument light sources, and then use a model to predict how it will look under a real D50 spectrum.
>
> Graeme Gill.
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