Terry,
Interesting, but yours was up-rezzed in QU (I noticed that [Q] in the named TIF) so I would expect it to handle what it did doing a "Print to File" within QU. Can the same be done with CS6 without going through QU? I don't know what was done to the file, other than it was a file out of a D800E to TIF via CS6.
The original file TIF I have came out of CS6. My screenshot is below.
Only odd thing I noted was the original showed as "Adobe 1998 RGB," and when I scaled it down in CS6 to try (and it worked) for QU it read as "Nikon Adobe RGB 4.0.0.3001" for some strange reason. I don't know why or how it picked up the original Nikon RGB out of the file since my default is Adobe 1998 RGB.
** Sidebar, I have noticed with PaintShop Pro X6 that it does have some oddity over CS6 in that when I launch it even my screen shifts color a bit warmer against CS6. I have to go back into Windows 8-64 Color Management and reset the default each time I mess with PSP X6. I played with PSP X6 Color Management a lot, but it does seem to do some oddities against PS for some reason.
Hopefully Adobe PS isn't monkeying around with their PS TIF images. If they are, the subscription model may be interesting in a few years when people begin having backwards compatibility issues trying to read them if they cancel their subscription (Shades of AutoDesk's AutoCAD!).
Back on topic, I noticed in the QU Help this: "If you are opening large images, make sure you have enough RAM installed and also check your Windows virtual memory settings and try increasing virtual memory." Don't know if this may apply here?
No big deal since I got it to print, just odd.
Oh.
And a "BIG YES" in that QU does a far better job of print sharpening over most all others - even Adobe! I sort of dread going to Ergosoft's StudioPrint 14 RIP (B&W Piezo printing) for fear it might not be sharp or much like the soft prints out of PS CS6, but maybe passing it through "Print to File" in QU will be a bit better in sharpening for it? Guess I could try a file out of CS6 and one done through QU's "Print to File" to compare the sharpness.
Mack