What is the correct way to print/export 600 DPI rasterized line art out of Illustrator?
When a print is made from Illustrator CC (2018) on my high-res laser printer (Xerox VersaLink C7000) at its highest resolution (600 DPI), Illustrator CC seems to be limiting the Postscript Native output to 400 DPI when it internally rasterizes the (postscript native) print. All color correction and other correction is turned off in the printer and I set Illustrator to preserve the CMYK values exactly - so, basically no color management CMYK -> CMYK.
The issue is that a thin line that is 0.18 pt (0.0025 in / 400 DPI) is the thinnest horizontal line that can be printed. There is a transition in thickness, a halving that occurs from 0.19 pt to 0.18 pt and then lines cannot get any thinner. Likewise, when transitioning from 0.35 pt to 0.36 pt, the lines double in thickness.
The maximum DPI that my Xerox VersaLink C700 laser printer can print in its highest resolution mode is a line at a true 600 DPI (0.12 pt). I verified this via Photoshop and can, in fact, print lines in multiples of 0.12 pt at 600 DPI, and they scale accordingly in thickness.
I am faced with two possibilities:
1) Set Illustrator to rasterize at 600 DPI for printing of vector art instead of 400 DPI, but I don't know how I can set this in Illustrator (again specifically for vector art such as line strokes).
2) Export the (completely) vector image containing the fine lines at 600 DPI, with each object being of a color where a primary is either 0 or 100/on or off (CMYK), in a format that can be imported into Photoshop, and then print from there. Photoshop seems to have no problems with a document that is 600 DPI when printing at my printer's native resolution. If I was to go this route, what would be the best image format to export in? PNG? PDF?, given that all pixels will be either 0/100 for each of the CMYK primaries.
Now, of course, I understand the limitations of this:
Each point can either be on or off with regard to the four primaries, C, M, Y, and K. So, there is 1-bit per primary available at 600 DPI. For example, if I want a green dot at 600 DPI, I would set the color to C=100, Y=100. All primaries must either be 0 or 100 at this resolution, since the printer is placing (or not placing) a single primary color dot for from one to four of its primary colors. So, the choice of colors at this DPI is: C, M, Y, R, G, B, K, and of course throwing a K=100 on top of the first six possibilities in the previous list, for a richer black with a color cast.
Thanks for any help or suggestions,
Michael
