50 Years of Electromechanical Engraving
50 Years of Electromechanical Engraving
50 Years of Electromechanical Engraving
This truly revolutionary development ushered in the industrial production of gravure cylinders for
illustration, decorative and packaging printing. As a direct, singlestage, semi-autotypical production
method, electromechanical engraving subsequently replaced the
production methods of conventional (cells with variable depth)
and autotypical (cells with variable
area) cylinder etching that had
dominated up to this point. The
complex manufacturing process
was highly manual and featured
multiple stages. Yet on closer inspection, gravure forme production
at that time actually always involved the conventional method. As a
result of their dome-shaped cells of
variable depth, the cylinders produced using this process were characterized during the production run
by superb colour brilliance, colour
saturation, and a certain threedimensionality that is today often
still unequalled. The production and
time- and personnel-intensive outlay that needed to be invested in this
system is illustrated by the following operations for manufacturing a
conventional gravure forme:
Screen and contone copy of the
pigment paper;
Manual cleaning and degreasing
of the Copper surface of the cylinder;
Left:
Hell experimental laboratory in 1959 first test
setup for electromechanical engraving.
Right:
Inventor of electromechanical engraving
Dr Rudolf Hell.
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The invention by Dr Rudolf Hell marked the start of industrial and thus
standardized gravure forme production
ANSGAR WESSENDORF
Functional principle
of the K193
Nothing has changed in the functional principle of electromechanical engraving in the last 50 years.
The improved successor to the K190
was the HelioKlischograph K193
with its two equally large cylinders
that were either rigidly connected to
each other (K493 model) or were
located in separate units with a
synchronous drive (K193 model).
Both cylinders rotated at the same
speed. The original cylinder bore the
scanning copy (generally a contone/text combination) and the
Copper surface of the gravure cylinder was engraved using an electromechanically controlled diamond
stylus.
Scanning was mainly performed
by a light source and two photomultipliers that together with an
optical lens and related electronics
were combined in an optical head.
The cylinders rotated at a constant
circumferential speed and the
photomultipliers, which received
the light reflected from the original,
transmitted the density values of the
rotating original as electrical signals. The optical head moved along
the original cylinder with a defined
rate of feed to scan the original in a
helical form. At the same time, the
impression cylinder was engraved
by a diamond stylus operated by an
electromagnetic system and proSource: BORIS FUCHS and CHRISTIAN ONNASCH, Dr. Rudolf Hell Der JahrhundertIngenieur im Spiegelbild des Zeitgeschehens, Heidelberg/D 2005.
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C O M PA N Y R E P O RT
The HelioKlischograph
K193 unveiled in 1963 engraved gravure cylinders
on a 1:1 scale. The originals could be processed
as reflective images
positively or negatively, in
a right-reading or laterally
reversed format.
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C O M PA N Y R E P O RT
1959
1962
1965
1969
1974
1980
1981
1983
1985
1995
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
1990
1988
A significant day
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C O M PA N Y R E P O RT
Far left:
The K304 was able to
engrave two gravure
cylinders simultaneously
in the Twin version.
Left:
Introducing the O/G
conversion scanning head
made it possible to
process originals created
for offset printing (O)
with screening unsuitable
for gravure (G).
Summary
2001
2001
2002
2002
2002
2003
2003
2004
2008
2009
A momentous history
RUDOLF HELL, the inventor of electromechanical engraving for gravure cylinder production, founded Dr.-Ing. Rudolf Hell KG in Kiel/
D in 1947. The Siemens electronics group acquired a shareholding
in this company in 1971. Following the merger with Linotype AG
in 1990, Dr.-Ing. Rudolf Hell GmbH was renamed Linotype-Hell AG.
In 1997, Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG took over the company, which as Hell Gravure Systems GmbH was managed as an
independent entity. In 2002, Hell Gravure Systems was sold to Dr
SIEGFRIED BEISSWENGER (the then CEO) and MAX RID (owner of Kaspar
Walter). Since 2009, the Kiel/D-based company has been owned
by Heliograph Holding. Besides Hell Gravure Systems, this company also owns gravure supplier companies Kaspar Walter, Daetwyler Graphics, Schepers, and Bauer Logistik-Systeme.
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