The French regional daily, Le Dauphiné Libéré,
has just ordered two Heidelberg Mainstream presses
The Dauphiné Libéré is owned by the Delaroche
holding company which controls the Rhône-Alpes-Bourgogne
division of Socpresse (Le Dauphiné Libéré, Le
Progrès de Lyon, the Journaux de Saône et Loire and Le
Bien Public). Its circulation is around 300,000 copies in the
Rhône-Alpes region and part of Provence. The regional daily
wanted to replace its existing presses on the Veurey Voroize site
near Grenoble, with presses of the latest technology.
"Updating our production tools is essential if we are to
meet the needs of our readership and advertisers," said
Christian Merger, Technical Director of the Dauphiné
Libéré. "The world is evolving around us, and to
remain competitive the newspaper is duty bound to offer an
attractive medium from the point of view of print quality and
contents, increasingly targeted and close to the news and its
readers. "Our new production tool must offer maximum
flexibility, more color and lower production costs", he
continued. "In addition, it must allow us in the long term to
increase the number of our editions, in order to have an optimum
balance with the geo-marketing criteria of our distribution area.
The Mainstream presses will allow us to meet all these
requirements."
Launched in May 2000, the Heidelberg Mainstream is an 8 page
1x4 format press (single circumference, double web width) designed
to meet the needs of newspaper publishers in terms of speed,
quality and production flexibility.
The exclusive technology of the tubular blankets, known as
'Sunday technology', developed by Heidelberg, eliminates the
vibrations created by the blanket cylinder gaps, allowing the
Mainstream to deliver an excellent print quality at high speeds.
The gapless blankets will allow the press to achieve the necessary
dynamic stability to produce up to 80,000 copies per hour in a
plate cylinder configuration of 1x4 and a plate cylinder-blanket
cylinder ratio of 1:1.
"The 1x4 format will allow us to considerably reduce
downtime between two editions due to the reduced number of plates
to be changed, said Christian Merger, we estimate that the
downtime, which is more than 40 percent on our current
installations, should reasonably fall below 30 percent. This is of
course not counting the reduced running time generated by the speed
of the new machines.
The Mainstream presses at the Dauphiné Libéré
will have a 500 mm cut-off and a 1480 mm web width, which will
allow the daily newspaper to reduce its final format of 410 mm x
590 mm to 370 mm x 500 mm. They will be installed on the Veurey
site. Both Mainstream presses will have the same configuration of 7
webs, 31 inking systems and 3 former plates. They will be equipped
with a JF-255 jaw folder and 7 Contiweb FD splicers. These presses
will print up to 56 pages, 20 of which will be in four colours or
48 pages with 24 pages in four colours. They will print up
to three separate signatures simultaneously.
"The Dauphiné is distributed in 22 different
editions in nine "départements" of the
Rhône-Alpes and Provence Alpes Côte d'Azur regions.
Production speed is consequently an absolute necessity for us",
emphasised Christian Merger . The Mainstreams will facilitate
changes of editions. The 1x4 format that they offer is very
attractive, since it will allow us to reduce plating up time. In
addition, mounting and removal of plates is simplified thanks to an
exclusive technology which will allows us additional time
gains," he concluded.
Due to the 1x4 format, the Mainstream requires only half the
plates of a 16-page double circumference double width press, an
advantage which reduces the cost of the plates, CTP investment, and
the time needed to produce and change the plates.
The presses will be delivered in spring 2004 for a start up
planned in the last quarter of 2004. They will be manufactured at
the French Heidelberg site in Montataire, near Paris, specialising
in the production of web offset presses.
The Mainstream concept is particularly appreciated by French
publishers and the sale of the two presses to the Dauphiné
Libéré brings the number of Mainstreams sold in France to
nine, the last ones sold being destined for the regional newspaper,
the Progrès de Lyon. A total of 21 Mainstream presses have now
been sold worldwide, with a total of 697 printing couples.
"The success of the Mainstream with the regional daily
newspaper press publishers, particularly in France, proves that
Sunday technology and the 1x4 format are perfectly suited to
publishers' requirements in this market segment," declared
Jacques Navarre, Senior Vice-President, Newspaper Product Center at
Heidelberg. "We are pleased that the Dauphiné
Libéré has opted for the Heidelberg web presses. The
Mainstreams will meet their needs in terms of productivity and
quality color print."
Image:
The Grenoble based French newspaper Le Dauphiné
Libéré has just ordered two Heidelberg Mainstream
newspaper presses.
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