Oosterhout, May 2018
- One of Europe’s largest newspaper printers is
readying itself for the future with technology from Q.I. Press Controls and
EAE. For the last two years the newspaper industry has been closely following
Mediaprint’s Vienna retrofit project. Here, new QIPC quality control systems
have been installed, Koenig & Bauer has undertaken an extensive mechanical
retrofit and EAE has completely overhauled the control electronics and software
architecture. Over 30 newspaper printers from eight different countries were
invited to Vienna to take a close look at what is the largest retrofit project
that EAE has undertaken to date.
In 2001/2002 Mediaprint installed a total of 13 KBA Commander newspaper
presses in three Austrian locations. 16 years on, what was to be done with this
kit in a country where newspaper print runs have held up well and where large
quantities of printed newspapers will still undoubtedly be circulating in 2025.
Mediaprint, the joint print service provider for the publishers of
Kronen-Zeitung and Kurier (combined print run of just under 950,000 copies),
decided on a comprehensive retrofit.
All 39 press towers have already been fitted with Q.I. Press Controls’
current IDS-3D closed loop density control. The existing ABB controls and the
ABB planning system are being replaced with EAE control components and the VIP
Dispo/Mail/Statistic and Print Image software packages. In addition, the
Austrian printing plant is the first user of the new EAE Desk 7 control desk.
Three of the eight presses at the Vienna-Inzersdorf site have now been fully
upgraded and the customer is in a position to talk about its initial
experiences.
Attendees at the open house were treated to an in-depth presentation of
how the EAE software modules work through a mix of talks and live production.
These modules have replaced software that was partly developed in-house by
Mediaprint. Bernhard Schmiedeberg, Senior Vice President Sales at EAE,
highlighted in particular how the control architecture has been simplified, so
that each press tower now only needs one PLC instead of 11.
The EAE part of the project got underway in February 2017 and the
conversion of the 13 web presses should be complete by May of next year.
Progress has been helped by the fact that one of the eight Mediaprint presses
in Vienna could be taken out of production for ten weeks. This also allowed all
the engineers to be trained on the project, so that it should be possible to
fully convert the last two lines in Salzburg within the space of two weeks.
For all those involved, the Mediaprint retrofit is an important
showcase. It demonstrates the smooth way in which Koenig & Bauer, Q.I.
Press Controls and EAE have been able to work together, it shows off the Desk 7
operating under production conditions and it confirms the potential for
savings, which, in the case of Mediaprint, run into the tens of million euros.
It was not just representatives of companies like Axel Springer, Funke, News
Printers or CPP who took advantage of the opportunity to talk to Mediaprint’s
staff. QIPC and EAE Chairman Menno Jansen together with EAE Managing Director
Jörg Westphal were also in Vienna to hear from users of the Desk 7 and the VIP
software.
Menno Jansen
sees the current version of the new control desk as just a first step. In his
talk at the open house he did not simply cover the latest QIPC developments
such as the reduction in ink use through smart dampening control. Above all, he
focused on the
control desk of the future. In future, the central, high res 4k screen
of the Desk 7 will display a dashboard that provides at-a-glance information
about press status through colour signals and smart graphics.
For QIPC-EAE this future is only a few months away. These functions will
become a reality on the control desk in a retrofit project underway in
Amsterdam. De Persgroep, the Dutch customer, will not only cut the number of
control desks per press from three to two, as at Mediaprint, but it also aims
to control two press lines from a single Desk 7.