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Platen-type Letterpress Printing
A platen press is made up of two flat surfaces called the bed and the
platen. The platen provides a smooth backing for the paper or other
substrate that is to be printed. The raised plate (image to be printed) is
locked onto a flat surface. The plate is inked, the substrate is then
placed on another flat surface called the bed and pressed against the
inked plate producing the impression.
The platen and bed carry both the paper and the type form. The press
then opens and closes like a clam shell. Platen printing is typically used
for short runs such as invitations, name cards, and stationary. Larger
platen presses are used for die-cutting and embossing. Some platen presses
are arranged with the bed and platen in the vertical plane.
The plate is inked with an inking roller that transfers ink from an
inking plate to the image carrier. Ink is placed on the inking plate by an
ink fountain roller. The platen style press has been widely used in
printing small-town newspapers since the late 1800s. The printing area is
usually limited to a maximum of 18 inches by 24 inches. These presses are
also used to print letterhead, billheads, forms, posters, announcements,
and many other types of printed products, as well as for imprinting,
embossing, and hot-leaf stamping.
Flat-Bed Cylinder Letterpress Printing
Flat-bed cylinder presses use either vertical or horizontal beds. The
plate is locked to a bed which passes over an inking roller and then
against the substrate. The substrate passes around an impression cylinder
on its way from the feed stack to the delivery stack. Another way of
describing this is that a single revolution of the cylinder moves over the
bed while in a vertical position so that both the bed holding the
substrate and cylinder move up and down in a reciprocating motion. Ink is
supplied to the plate cylinder by an inking roller and an ink fountain.
The presses can print either one or two-color impressions. Flat-bed
cylinder presses, which operate in a manner similar to the platen press,
will print stock as large as 42 inches by 56 inches.
Flat-bed cylinder presses operate very slowly, having a production rate
of not more than 5,000 impressions per hour. As a result, much of the
printing formerly done on this type of press is now done using rotary
letterpress or lithography. The horizontal bed press, the slower of the
two types of flat-bed cylinder press, is no longer manufactured in the
United States.
Rotary Letterpress Printing
There are two type of rotary letterpresses, sheet-fed and web-fed.
Sheetfed rotary presses are also declining in use; in fact these presses
are no longer manufactured in the U.S. Web-fed rotary presses are the most
popular type of letter press printing.
Like all rotary presses, rotary letterpress requires curved image
carrying plates. The most popular types of plates used are stereotype,
electrotype, and molded plastic or rubber. When printing on coated papers,
rotary presses use heat-set inks and are equipped with dryers, usually the
high-velocity hot air type.
Web-fed rotary letterpress presses are used primarily for printing
newspapers. These presses are designed to print both sides of the web
simultaneously. Typically, they can print up to four pages across the web;
however, some of the new presses can print up to six pages across a
90-inch web. Rotary letterpress is also used for long-run commercial,
packaging, book, and magazine printing.
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