First live production run completed at Trafford Park
Printers
All twelve printing towers are in place, and print tests are
well underway in Manchester, UK, site of the first large Heidelberg
Mainstream press installation.
"The installation to date has progressed extremely
well," reports Jacques de Wit, managing director at Trafford
Park Printers. "This is the largest press installation ever
done by Heidelberg, and the professionalism they have shown is
impressive."
The first live production run on the new Mainstreams was
completed on June 26 as part of the ongoing commissioning and
testing program. The gapless presses successfully printed a
full-color supplement, including broadsheet and tabloid sections,
for the The Daily Telegraph. The exceptional performance of the
Mainstream prompted press crews to extend this test run to 120,000
copies and to shorten concurrent runs on their other presses.
Testing of the two new gapless Mainstreams will continue to
intensify over the summer. The twin seven-web presses, with 35
printing couples each, can be operated independently or in tandem
as a single press line. The team at Trafford Park Printers expects
to meet the ambitious goal of printing The Daily Telegraph and The
Sunday Telegraph by later this summer.
"Having available dedicated project managers on both
customer and supplier sides, together with regular planning
meetings with Heidelberg, architects, engineers and suppliers of
ancillary equipment have been the key factors contributing to the
success of the installation to date," according to de Wit.
"We have also allocated dedicated press commissioning crews
and engineering support, together with extensive training programs
for our staff."
Trafford Park Printers and West Ferry Printers in London are
partners in Britain's Telegraph Group. The two contract
printing sites print approximately 30 million newspapers per week.
The Group confirmed the decision to install the Mainstream presses
at drupa 2000. The choice was a logical one, according to de Wit.
"The Telegraph is never, ever run collect due to the volume of
copies involved, so the Mainstream presses were attractive with
their 1x4 configuration," he explains. "We liked this
concept and the ability to print up to 80,000 copies per hour with
the one-around by four-across plate cylinder configuration and 1:1
plate-to-blanket cylinder ratio."
David Sarazen, a director for Heidelberg's Newspaper
Product Center, has worked with de Wit's staff since day one.
He says the success of the installation is due to meticulous
planning. "Since, drupa, our teams have been in almost
constant contact with the teams at Trafford Park Printers to plan
every detail of the press configuration and the shipping and
installation process," Sarzen explains.
Heidelberg staged and tested a large section of one of the
Trafford Park presses at its Dover, New Hampshire factory in the
U.S. before tearing it down and shipping it across the Atlantic.
That extra attention to detail at the outset has sped up the actual
installation, according to Sarazen.
Heidelberg began shipping the Mainstream presses for the
Trafford Park Printers installation - a total of one million
kilograms of equipment - in September. The shipment followed
completion of press hall modifications in Manchester.
The ability of the Mainstream to match the output of a
traditional two-around double-width press while cutting plate
consumption in half appealed to de Wit's team. The print
quality provided by gapless blankets was an additional plus.
"The biggest challenge today for newspapers is to get
the largest number of copies out on time and at excellent print and
color quality," de Wit says. "Advertising is also very
important to national newspapers and the main revenue stream. From
that automatically follows, that the quality of our color
reproduction has to be as good as possible - first class."
De Wit says he trusts the concept of gapless blankets and
their ability to eliminate cylinder bounces that occur when blanket
gaps meet. "I believe it will give us an improved print
quality. It is good and it has been proven in heatset
printing."
When asked about additional factors that led to the selection
of the Mainstream, de Wit points to paper savings. "We have
chosen a 578 millimeter cutoff, and Sunday Technology will also
enable us to achieve significant savings on paper, particularly
with the Daily Telegraph where we print high-volume,
high-pagination broadsheet newspapers.
"Finally, with the Mainstream, we can print up to six
sections broadsheet in one pass," de Wit concludes.
"Again, this is a major profitability factor."
Heidelberg is the world's leading print media solution
provider. The company manufactures and supports an extensive range
of sheetfed, digital and web press systems as well as prepress and
postpress components, software and consumables for all printing
applications. Heidelberg has 18 manufacturing sites, 250 sales and
service sites and approximately 26,000 employees in 170 countries.
For further information:
Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG
Corporate Communications
Hans-Dieter Siegfried
Tel.: +49 (0)6221 92 50 63
Fax: +49 (0)6221 92 50 46
E-mail:
hans-dieter.siegfried@heidelberg.com