The right technology, right now
Xerox recently launched the Automated Color Quality Suite Press Matching System, for new and existing users of the Xerox iGen3™ 90 and 110 Digital Production Presses, offering high performance plus quality that matches offset printing. These enhancements enable faster press set up, quicker time to production, greater color stability and automated Pantone color matching and are a perfect match for printing profitable full-color applications that range from personalized direct mail and catalogs to marketing collaterals and photo books.
Xerox unveiled the Xerox iGen4™ Press, the most productive and highest-quality cut-sheet digital press in the printing industry. The iGen4 increases productivity by 25 to 35 percent by automating operator tasks, reducing the need to interrupt the press for adjustments and decreasing overall operating costs. Operating at 110 pages per minute, the iGen4 creates offset and photo-quality images with consistent color from the first print to the last. It is the ideal press for producing high-end collateral, direct marketing and photo specialty products - the type of print jobs that typically generate the most profits for print providers.
Innovation and emerging technologies
Just like car manufacturers show concept cars, Xerox is demonstrating a concept press - the Xerox ConceptColor 220. It takes the speed, productivity, flexibility and reliability of the industry-setting iGen3 press and doubles it, making it the fastest, full-color, cut-sheet digital press ever shown publicly. With the ConceptColor 220, users can achieve greater printing economics by getting twice the speed and twice the productivity with a single operator, saving time and labor.
By integrating two iGen3 engines in-line, it prints 220 ppm and features front and back full-color matching and can approach a monthly print volume of up to seven million color pages. The ConceptColor 220 builds on the tandem architecture technology of the Xerox Nuvera™ 288 Digital Perfecting System, a twin-engined monochrome press that also uses pass-through programming - a technology that keeps one engine running at full speed, even if the other one stops.
Xerox is also using drupa to showcase breakthrough inkjet innovations. Rather than duplicate the inkjet technology in the market today, Xerox is advancing the technology with new modular print heads that are more reliable, low cost and scaleable. Xerox has also been developing next-generation ink in the form of "cured gel" ink, which offers more ways to print on many substrates - from coated paper to plastic to aluminum.
Other new products and announcements
In addition to these new technologies and innovations, Xerox also announced the following in the lead up to drupa:
Source: www.xerox.ru