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Elongation shrinkage | |
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Difficulty | Beginner |
Duration | 10 min. |
This is the draft of an article, it is incomplete or in-progress.
You can help by contributing to missing sections, editing existing material, or helping to migrate this page from linked sources.
Based on the way stencils are made in the risograph, if certain test modes are not properly calibrated, printed images can be elongated or shrunk by 0–3 mm. This comes from two places:
Calibration can be performed if the dimensions of the printed image do not match the dimensions of the original (this is often measured between registration or crop marks). What needs to be calibrated depends on how the machine is used on a regular basis.
On older and lower model-number machines however, pursuing perfect calibration can be a wild goose chase. It's only really necessary when miscalibration is detected between layers, or when perfect scale to the sheet is needed (to match fold lines, for example—as in a magic zine).
Both calibrations can be made by comparing a measured (printed) distance against a goal (original) distance, along the left/right axis of printing (along the feed direction of the paper).