Ricoh Pro C7200 wins Buyer’s Lab award for miniscule colour drift in rigorous tests
Time:2021-05-28 From:
Buyer’s Lab has given Ricoh’s Pro C7200sx Series its coveted Mid-Volume CMYK+ BLI PRO award. The Ricoh device impressed the judges because colour drift was lower than 3.8 out of 100 across 42 colours and 37 000 clicks.
‘The all-round consistency of our colour sheetfed device over the full production cycle of the tests is what won the day,’ says Vaughan Patterson, head of Commercial and Industrial Print (CIP) at Ricoh South Africa. ‘It’s a huge part of what our customers need their devices to achieve so they can deliver dependable products to their customers while minimising operator overhead and maximising productivity.’
David Sweetnam, Director of EMEA/Asia Research & Lab Services, Keypoint Intelligence (which owns BLI), says: ‘We were especially impressed by its performance over our production length test suite, where, over a series of six challenging 1.5 hour workflows generating over 37 000 clicks, the device never suffered a colour drift across the 42 colours in the FOGRA39 media wedge of more than DeltaE00 3.8, neither did it exhibit a front-to-back or page-to-page registration shift of more than 0.4 mm, earning it our coveted 5 Star rating in this category.’
‘The Ricoh Pro C7210sx/x is designed from the bottom up as a production workhorse,’ adds Martin Soane, European Lab Manager, Keypoint Intelligence. ‘The device’s fifth imaging station allows printshops to go beyond CMYK, including fluorescents, white, clear, and invisible red.’
The latest accolade follows the Ricoh Pro L5160 large format production printer receiving the 2020 BLI Pick Award for Outstanding High Production CMYK Eco-Solvent/Latex 54”/64” Printer.
Eef de Ridder, VP of Ricoh Graphic Communications at Ricoh Europe, says: ‘It is a great honour for another one of our solutions to achieve this industry recognition – particularly following such rigorous testing. It is also a testament to the commitment of our research and development, engineering, and manufacturing teams that the consistency of registration remained true throughout the thorough process.’