Ok here's another thing to do. Download the image and put it into an editor. With my DELL 2410, anything beyond the B is all crushed on the screen. Then I open up the image in an editor and I play with the levels. The levels beyond the B looks to be the same as I adjust the curves and brightness. It seems like a solid block. I wonder if this is what is being seen, it appears to be in the image. I have used that print in verification of my profiles and it is in the storage now. I have about three feet high stack of targets and verification prints!!!!!
In my personal experience, when you want that kind of detail in the dark shadows, pigment has always been the choice for that kind of resolution. The Pro-100 which is sitting there until I get the time to play with it promises to be better able to delve into the shadows like pigment can with the two grays in dye ink. We shall see.
Now when it comes to crush, I once saw what can happen with printer drivers on a Pro4000. With the Epson driver, the crush was happening in the DRIVER. When a colorbyte RIP was used, the crush was gone. This sold me on the superiority of some RIPs. There are some things that drivers and ICCs just do not fix.
In my personal experience, when you want that kind of detail in the dark shadows, pigment has always been the choice for that kind of resolution. The Pro-100 which is sitting there until I get the time to play with it promises to be better able to delve into the shadows like pigment can with the two grays in dye ink. We shall see.
Now when it comes to crush, I once saw what can happen with printer drivers on a Pro4000. With the Epson driver, the crush was happening in the DRIVER. When a colorbyte RIP was used, the crush was gone. This sold me on the superiority of some RIPs. There are some things that drivers and ICCs just do not fix.