Mass Production: Printing presses can quickly and continuously complete large-scale printing tasks with the same or different content, significantly improving production efficiency and reducing unit costs. For example, book and magazine printing presses can produce thousands of copies per hour, far exceeding manual printing.
Accurate Image and Text Reproduction: Through high-precision printing plates (such as offset, flexographic, or gravure plates) and color management systems, printing presses can faithfully reproduce the details of the original artwork, including complex patterns, gradient colors, and small text. Modern four-color printing presses can even achieve color gamut coverage of over 99%.
Diverse Substrate Adaptability: Printing presses can handle substrates of different materials (such as paper, film, and metal foil) and shapes (flat and curved). For example, UV printing presses can print directly on plastic bottles, while digital inkjet printing presses can handle personalized customization needs.
Process Integration: High-end printing presses often integrate post-processing such as hot stamping, die-cutting, and lamination, achieving one-stop processing. For example, packaging printing presses can simultaneously complete printing, die-cutting, and box gluing.
Environmental Protection and Energy Conservation: The new printing press utilizes water-based inks and LED curing technologies to reduce VOC emissions; the closed-loop ink supply system reduces consumable waste and meets green printing standards.
Intelligent Control: Through CIP3/CIP4 data interfaces and IoT technology, the printing press can achieve remote monitoring, automatic registration, and fault warnings, improving production stability.
