On gloss paper with a 3880 and using PK you should get a Dmax above 2.0 and typically around 2.2, with whatever driver. My guess is that the media preset you use does not take the PK ink but stays with the MK. If that is a media preset for say bond paper it also lays down little ink.
What surprises me is that you get 2.3 with MK on a gloss paper, even with the dripped ink. Is that measured after the black surface gets a matte look so 24 or more hours later?
The high Dmax on gloss paper with a gloss black ink is that high because the resulting gloss black does reflect the light away from the spectro, colori or densitometer with the usual 45 degr angle illumination. A matte black still reflects light in more directions so the sensor gets some too.
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Met vriendelijke groet, Ernst
http://www.pigment-print.com/spectralplots/spectrumviz_1.htmJuly 2013, 500+ inkjet media white spectral plots.
Ernst-
Yes. I let the ink drops dry overnight outdoors and in the 100 degree daytime temps too. Maybe 24 hours passed before I picked the paper up an read it in the i1. Actually, the drops all appear to be a semi-gloss once dried but they are thicker than the inkjet would spray too. The Matte Black may be more diffuse once sprayed.
I will note that I am using Jon Cone's "Dye" ink and not the Epson 3880 OEM "Pigment" K3 ink as I'm not fond of pigment on metallic papers and some super-gloss film that I sometimes do. Might be his inks have a better dMax, but I dunno as I never dropped the ink out of the Epson OEM tanks to compare. However, when I run it through the printer, the PK shows about 1.8 at dMax now. Disappointing that is is quite a bit less than an ink drop test. However, I did do some Matte black on a thick velour and it was black as charcoal, just I never measured it (yet).
I'm also playing around with the QuadTone RIP which is sort of bug-ridden (I/O 32 errors?) in Windows 8 with the GUI that is old. So far using its old-tech GUI and dropping the image onto it and going straight to the printer, it produces a nice tonal range a nice black. If I output the 21 step wedge they use to set it up with the same readings out of the i1 Photo Pro 2, and then pass it through their ICM script-maker executable, the ICM profile made is not as nice in the tonal range (blocks up the black end) and has some coloration added too. It's odd that it bypasses the ICM profiles and Epson driver both on the "Drag-and-Drop" method, but using the ICM profiles generated with the Epson driver & QU it makes two very different images, no matter if I turn Color "On" or ABW (B&W) "On" in the Epson driver window either. Best is the non-ICM one for me now and a more even tonal gradation too than the ICM made one.
I still have to play around with QuadTone RIP some more with B&W images. Very different program and quirky setup. I guess it makes sense if you work through it all. I posted the odd curve image it made for the 3 gray inks out of the 3880 in the Technical Software part of this forum. But they sure look nice on some of the "Northern Light B&W test images" where you can see well into the shadow details over the ones made using a ICM profile.
I probably should sign up for one of Jon Cone's ink classes where they even mix ink by hand for color control in B&W. Then dump the 8 different shades of grey inks into some 3880 for fun and supposedly better tonal range and sharpness both. The piezo ink printing guys doing all this black/grey ink stuff only are really excited over this stuff.
Mack