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Old Mutohs had the USB but they never officially supported it. You can print to the USB through a RIP instead of a windows driver and it works but is not always reliable which is why they never supported it.
Flexi has a feature called, "Color Mapping" that does exactly this and I wouldn't be surprised at all if Onyx has a similar feature. I don't have any experience with Onyx with this particular feature but it might point you in the right direction. RIPs often use the same terms to describe features.
We sell plastic engraving material and some of it is metalized. If you pull more than 1 or 2 sheets out at a time, you get a strong enough shock to make your muscles spasm!
You can use any color value you want as long as it's designated as a spot color and named exactly "CutContour" no space capital Cs. Corel should be able to make a spot color I just don't know how as I'm more of an Illustrator guy.
You can build a file in any software and create a spot color called, "CutContour" and Rasterlink will recognize it as the cut line without having to use the plug-in. You just open it directly in Rasterlink and it will read it.
The size of the machine will be the number after the model. So yours is probably either a 130 or 160. I agree though that if you want the most control over profiles, use a full featured RIP like Onyx or Flexi.
For Rasterlink, make sure your profiles match the machine model and ink set perfectly. Even if the size if different it won't work which is dumb I agree.
We sold a customer an expensive flatbed printer once and when they didn't buy ink in the first 6 months, we called them. "You guys sell ink?" I kid you not.
You'd be surprised how many people I've heard say eco solvent inks are safe because of the eco part. Also, while I don't deal a lot with Latex, I agree it is the healthier option.
If you keep your maintenance parts clean and the bottom of the head where the head seals with the cap top clean, it should be able to sit for about a week or 2 and be easily recoverable when you get back. If you want to be 100% sure, run the longstore function which flushes the entire machine...
It's funny seeing people's risk tolerances on here. I'm more in the camp of, better safe than sorry. Sure working in a room with a latex isn't going to affect you much today but doing it for 20 years is going to have some effect and I don't feel like taking that chance especially when putting in...
I assumed the doctor was a bitmap for some reason. It still could be an issue if you have any effects on that vector object like drop shadow or outer glow.
It's a rendering intent conflict. You need to go into your RIP and change the rendering intents for bitmap and vector to be the same. Anytime you have raster data layered with vector and the rendering intents are not the same, it will do this. A quick and dirty way to fix the problem is to...
As far as ink fumes go, you're good to go. The biggest health issue with HPs is the fact that they require so much heat. Heating up vinyl releases phthalates into the air which are known to cause cancer and birth defects.
Yeah I'd search the computer for that file. Unfortunately, I'm not 100% sure on this but, VersaWorks may not keep a copy of the original file. That info could just be meta data and the only actual data is the RIP data. So there may not be an EPS file to recover.
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