Before the adaptation of flexographic printing for commercial packaging use, printing on corrugated substrates was highly troublesome.
The delicate material would either be crushed during the printing process or printing had to be done so lightly that graphics were limited to simple, unappealing designs and text that made use of only one or two colors.
Flexographic printing has made it possible to achieve much higher resolution, multi-color, intricate images and text on corrugated substrates without harming the integrity of the materials. In spite of its seemingly limitless possibilities, flexo printing on corrugated still has its own set of challenges.
If you're experiencing issues with flexo printing on corrugated materials and not achieving the printing results you desire, consider the following troubleshooting tips.
If your print has a streaky appearance, washboard-like look, or spotty, uneven inking, you likely have an issue with the ink's compatibility with the project. Using inks that are incompatible with your image carrier and/ or substrate can leave smears across your print.
In addition, using contaminated ink can result in foreign particles or hickeys on your finished products.
It's important to check plates before every print run and to maintain them properly. Dirty, damaged, soft, uneven, worn, or loose plates can lead to dirty prints, spotty printing, washboard effects, uneven ink transfer, streaking, and image bleeding.
Switching to more durable, elastomer printing sleeves may also be a solution to consider.
If you're finding uneven color deposits, smeared images, streaking, or image bleeding, and your printing plates are in good shape, then your ink's pH could be to blame. The pH level of ink affects how quickly or slowly ink dries and how well the color will absorb and stick to your substrate.
Ink that dries too quickly or too slowly could be at the heart of your corrugated print run troubles.
Ink viscosity affects how well ink deposits on and clings to your substrate, and different substrate materials with different surface tensions call for various levels of viscosity. If your viscosity is too low, your print runs might have trouble with foaming, abrasion, spotty ink deposits, or uneven appearance.
If ink viscosity is too high, you could face similar issues plus smeared ink, uneven color, color that's darker than expected, halos, fisheyes, and contaminants in the ink.
Flexo printing — especially on corrugated substrates — requires a delicate balance of several components all working in harmony. For a print run to turn out exactly as expected, all components have to be exactly right.
That means pairing the proper ink viscosity with the right surface tension, storing inks as instructed, always using compatible inks, proper maintenance and cleaning of printing plates, and more.
For more information about troubleshooting your corrugated substrate print run problems or other concerns, contact a flexographic printing expert at Luminite.