- Live production environment proves a real eye-opener for
students
- Hands-on experience dovetails neatly with classroom
assignment
Kennesaw, Ga. - Heidelberg USA recently hosted 35 students
from Clemson University at its state-of-the art, multi-use North
American Print and Packaging Technology Center (Technology Center)
in Kennesaw, Ga. The students are members of the University's
Graphic Communications 440 class, which focuses on commercial
printing with an emphasis on offset sheetfed technology. The
purpose of the field trip, which was the result of a request by
Clemson's Graphic Communications Department, was to give students
the opportunity to experience a live production environment,
complete with integrated workflow and the latest in printing
technology.
To personalize the experience for students, Clemson and
Heidelberg designed the field trip around the production of an
8-page, 4-color book, a student assignment that is a major
requirement of the 440 curriculum. As part of their Tech Center
tour, students followed a selected book project from prepress to
the bindery, getting a first-hand look at the processes involved in
its transformation from digital file to finished book. Heidelberg
also assumed responsibility for preflighting and printing each of
the individual students' projects. The books were printed on a
Speedmaster XL 75, folded on a Stahlfolder TH 82, and finally
saddle-stitched on a Stitchmaster ST 450. Along the way, students
heard from Heidelberg prepress, press and postpress experts, as
well as from specialists in MIS and packaging. At the conclusion of
the tour, each student was presented with their final printed
project.
"It was a great exposure for Clemson students to have the
'Heidelberg experience,' being able to see first-hand the
cutting-edge technology that we have here in our Technology
Center," said Russ Barton, Director of Demo Operations for
Heidelberg USA. Clemson's GC 440 instructor Dr. Eric Weisenmiller
agrees. "The field trip opened our students' eyes to the wonders of
automation, the realities of real world production, and the
numerous opportunities that await them in the field of graphic
communications." The trip was such a success, Weisenmiller said,
that Clemson also plans to bring its summer GC 440 class through
Heidelberg's Technology Center.
Heidelberg USA's Technology Center currently offers 36 pieces of
prepress, press, postpress and packaging equipment, plus workflow
solutions designed to help printers and packaging converters run
more efficient and profitable businesses. Soon to be installed is
the game-changing Speedmaster SM 52 with Anicolor technology,
Heidelberg's answer to short-run, nonvariable digital printing.
Thus equipped, the Technology Center offers the largest array of
prepress, press, postpress, workflow, consumable and service
solutions anywhere in the world outside of Germany.