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FORCEJET™ technology is found exclusively in the RISO’s inkjet product line.
RISO built its inkjet technology on the proven track record of the duplicator chassis, but instead of individual ink cylinders, RISO used heavy-duty inkjet print heads capable of creating full-color variable images.
How it works
RISO ComColor® high-speed inkjet printers employ 24 in-line piezo drop-on-demand print heads for each of the four colors (cyan, magenta, yellow, and black – and in the case of the ComColor GL Series, the fifth color, gray). These use vibration to create ink droplets, the print heads are stationary, and the paper passes underneath them, as the paper moves beneath the print heads, these lay down the individual colors. The fixed position of the print head makes possible the high printing speeds found in ComColor inkjet printers, and it also results in a longer life span for the equipment.
Thermal inkjet print heads are found in almost all desktop inkjet printers. Unlike Piezo systems, thermal inkjet printers use an electrical charge to heat the ink inside the print cartridge to form ink droplets, the print head shuttles back and forth across the page as it applies ink to paper, as a result, this technology is much slower and far less reliable, a much shorter expected life span, and its cost-per-page is substantially higher than RISO’s FORCEJET technology.
Inkjet printers are generally less expensive to acquire and use than toner-based devices. The heat used by toner-based printers to fuse applied toner and fix it to the page causes these machines to be more vulnerable to failure and leads to more downtime, higher service costs, and shorter life spans.
Toner is also incompatible with plastic and many paper types, and it is prone to cracking and flaking when folded or put through finishing devices such as postal sorting equipment. Their heat requirements also make toner-based printers far less energy-efficient than inkjet devices.
Variable Data Printing, or VDP, is a form of on-demand printing in which elements such as text, graphics, and images can be changed from one printed piece to the next using information from a database.
Today’s VDP applications go far beyond the laser-personalized letters, invoices, and customer statements of recent decades and it is now possible to customize a variety of documents from sales brochures to training handouts to fit the needs, interests, and preferences of individual customers, employees, or members. VDP has been shown to boost the effectiveness of printed output whether it’s measured: by response rates, readership, ROI, or customer satisfaction.
RISO ComColor inkjet printers produce variable output in color easily and economically. Whether each page is completely different, or a simple mail merger is used just to place a name and address on a page, postcard, or envelope, a ComColor inkjet printer can handle a wide array of variable data print jobs.
RISO ComColor high-speed inkjet printers make great entry-level systems for commercial printers considering expansion into mailing services. Printers can still turn a profit on the unit with everyday print jobs while they prospect for mailing applications. A dedicated mailing system will tie up valuable resources until the printer finds enough business for it to break even. The same can be said for the mail house that may want to start offering print services. ComColor inkjet printers allow the mailing services businesses to continue running their applications on it while prospecting for printing customers.
But you don’t have to be a commercial printer or mail house manager to take advantage of ComColor printers’ VDP capabilities. ComColor inkjet printers do not require a skilled operator, so practically any office can produce personalized and customized direct mail, newsletters, sales collateral, training kits, assessment tests, and more. Both machines are also tailor-made for traditional back-office functions such as invoicing and printing customer statements.
There are two main operational modes to VDP. In one methodology, the document template and the variable information are both sent to the press, and the raster image processor (RIP) combines the two to produce each unique document. The other methodology is to combine the static and variable elements prior to printing, using specialized VDP software applications. These applications produce an optimized print stream, such as PostScript, which organizes the print stream efficiently so that the static elements are only processed once by the RIP.
RISO offers users a choice of RIP; PostScript RIP is required if printing from a Macintosh computer, commercial, in-plant and other users that will be printing out of PostScript applications such as Adobe InDesign, Quark, and Page Maker should opt for the PostScript RIP.
RISO provides a wide range of accessories ready to effectively support high-volume printing with various processes, such as paper feeding, stapling, punching, binding and so on, while shortening work time and reducing outsourcing/personnel costs.