Tablet Identity
The ability to feed an SODF into a printing machine and precisely position it is key to optimal print quality and consistency. A number of tablet-and-capsule ink printers are available that can take blank, bulk tablets or capsules and position them for precision rotogravure printing.
When you can’t limit your SODF’s dimensions to a sphere, which would allow printing in any position or direction to create a complete and legible logo, you must identify and isolate its target face for printing relative to its other sides or orientations. The ability to distinguish a tablet’s target face and orientation from the remainder of the tablet is known as its identity. A tablet’s identity is good if it has a face that is easily distinguishable from any other side.
Tablet identity is key to ensuring proper positioning during tablet manufacturing. You use it in much the same way as you would position people to take driver’s license photos. You would define their identities by properly lining them up for the photo, determining if you have positioned them so that they are roughly in the photo’s center and facing the camera to entirely capture their faces.
These criteria align with the goals of a good print on tablets as well, even without measuring equipment. In the same way that people identify each other by matching expected and observed geometrical patterns on their faces, such as eye distance or nose curvature, printing machines recognize tablet features to position the tablet in the center of the printing equipment.
Tablet Design Makes the Difference
A well-designed pocket for positioning a tablet is machined to match expected geometric patterns, such as curves, so that the printer can position the tablet in one way only as it’s fed. This method works best when your tablet’s side is distinctly different from its face. Recognizable features, such as crowning curves or tapers instead of the straight lines in a square, increase the probability that the printing equipment will position your tablet correctly.
A chief example of dangerous indistinction in tablet design for high-volume production is overexposure of a compressed tablet’s belly bands. Belly bands are the straight sides on compressed tablets that tooling and manufacturing processes require. When the ratio of the tablet face width to its belly band approaches 1:1, the belly band is overexposed. This causes feedrate issues, which can, in turn, affect print quality.
Tablet designers must scale a tablet’s belly band to the thickness and shape of its top and bottom faces for the tablet to remain manufacturable, and they also must consider how overexposure of the belly band affects the process after compression. Because belly bands are a product of tooling and are flat to aid in manufacturing, they inherently have lower identity than the curves on the tablet’s front or back faces. Even if the belly band follows a curve around a tablet’s perimeter, it can only be curved in one axis.
If we define identity as the number of possible alignments available based on a tablet’s geometry, a belly band curved on one axis will have lower identity than a tablet’s face curved on two axes. If we compare two tablets with the same surface area, with one having a larger belly band, the tablet with the smaller belly band will have a higher identity. Its surfaces with the capacity to be curved in two axes will take up a higher percentage of the area. The closer the band’s width is to the width of a tablet’s face, the less identifiable the tablet is and the less likely it is to receive a good print.
A marking machine vendor must design tooling to minimize the possibility that the tablet will stand on its edge, causing the marking machine to print on the belly band, which results in an incomplete and/or illegible logo print. The difference between the width and thickness of a compressed tablet should be at least 0.100 inches (2.54 millimeters). The greater the width-to-thickness ratio and the smaller the belly band, the greater success in positioning the product properly and in creating high-quality print output.