UNDER THE HOOD | RICOH PRO Z75 30 Issue 361- July | August 2026 email: editor@printmonthly.co.uk half that duplex on materials up to 310gsm, slowing to 3000sph simplex/1500sph duplex on materials up to 400gsm; Carter notes that some heavier materials can be handled, but the thickness of the media is the deciding factor at this end of the scale, with up to 600 micron being the upper limit. The lightest compatible stock is 60gsm simplex or 80gsm duplex. Carter explains that that the press was designed to achieve as flat a paper path as possible from air-assisted and vacuum-picked sheet input to stacked output. Ricoh developed its own chassis for the Pro Z75 rather than adapting an existing offset one, but sought advice from its partner HEIDELBERG throughout, hence the press uses gripper-to-gripper feeding for wrapping round the imaging drum and reversing for duplexing. Ricoh also offers HEIDELBERG’s pallet feeder which it says is the best available. Standard input is via a vacuum feed 5000-sheet unit with an option for a second one. The paper feed system is combined with a scaled-up version of Ricoh’s swing and shift front-to-back registration system developed for the company’s 9200/9500 series of sheetfed toner presses. Ricoh doesn’t quote specific figures for accuracy here, but Carter says they are well within the tolerances that would be expected for a commercial offset press of this size. The press delivers a resolution of 1200 x 1200dpi with two bits per drop, delivered by Ricoh’s own v5.5 printheads. These allow three drop sizes which improve subtle gradations in colour as well as supporting very fine detail in type and line graphics. The inks are pigment waterbased types and printhead life is said by Carter to be of the order of three to five years, depending on usage. The Pro Z75 is rated for a monthly duty cycle of 1.7 million B2 impressions. The press works with offset uncoated, coated, and inkjet-treated stocks. Ricoh doesn’t mandate priming for any of these, as the inks will work with all of them, but Carter reports that all dozen or so user sites – bar one that is focused solely on packaging – have taken the option to have an inline primer unit as this increases flexibility, particularly enabling more colour lift on uncoated stock. As is common with pigment-based inkjet, the colour gamut achievable is larger than that of offset equivalents and while Ricoh hasn’t formally measured it yet, user reports suggest that this makes it easier to hit certain otherwise problematic brand colours. Room to Spare Perhaps of greater interest for the future is the fact that the printhead arrays feature two ‘spare’ channels alongside the CMYK ones. While nothing has been formally announced, Carter suggests that these might be adapted for additional primary colour or embellishment purposes, such as spot UV, enhancing the flexibility of the press, particularly in packaging applications. more difficult than anticipated, but he says this has been overcome via a hybrid drying system that combines hot air, near infra-red (NIR), and UV techniques. The Pro Z75 is supplied with a Fiery FS500 Pro digital front end incorporating an APPE 5 RIP, and capable of keeping up with the engine speed and accepting all the main graphic arts file input formats, including PDF/ VT as well as various PDF/X standards. This can be integrated with Ricoh’s various workflow offerings, such as Process Director and the Ricoh Auto Color Adjuster profiling device for matching colour to existing workflows. After a little time finding its feet in the real world, it looks like the Pro Z75 is now a serious contender. Carter notes: “It took massive resource and commitment to get to where we are now. Ricoh is in this for the long term.” He adds: “We are a lot more confident about the value proposition, ROI calculation and ability of migrate offset volumes to digital.” ►Tim Carter, director at Ricoh UK The colour gamut achievable is larger than that of offset equivalents and while Ricoh hasn’t formally measured it yet, user reports suggest that this makes it easier to hit certain otherwise problematic brand colours One of the early challenges Carter alluded to was drying. With the typically high coverage levels that come with high-quality work, getting the system to dry water-based ink rapidly enough without shrinking or cockling sheets that were about to be turned and printed on the reverse turned out to be
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