Exporting Gradients Without Banding in the File? (Not the Print Quality)

Cannot seem to export a gradient file without some fairly drastic banding between colours. 

Very basic info, it's for a vehicle wrap, so relatively large and noticeable. The Gradient goes from Black, to Orange, to Red, to Yellow.

The various 'tips and tricks' I've seen haven't really done anything, setting the fountain steps and or/locking them doesn't do anything but enhance the banding, and using a quick fix like the dithering solutions or adding blur, changing to 8 or 6bit etc. nothing does the trick. 

With that being said I'm not looking for a quick fix, is this just something that can't be done easily on CorelDraw? I.e. if you can't just use the gradient fill tool and export a clean image is there any point in using this software? Not looking to have a 6-step print process every time I need a gradient. If gradients are a constant thing should I be switching to Illustrator? (I ask because I see that they've purchased some specific code to improve their gradients compared to CorelDraw) 

Any valid info would be useful (no need for know-it-alls with bad attitudes who spend their time trolling these posts making people feel inadequate) just info.

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  • What kinds of files are you exporting to use in the large format RIP application? Also what RIP application are you using? Generally speaking I would recommend exporting PDF files.

    Some of the banding problem may also lie in how your gradients are being built. What kind of "black" are you using? Is it just a 100% K black? Or are you using a "rich black" that relies on all four CMYK colors? If the black is only from black ink then that might be the source of your banding problems. A rich black that involves all four CMYK ink colors will be less likely to show banding issues.

    I tend to hop a lot of my artwork back and forth between the CorelDRAW and Adobe Illustrator environments to take advantage of the strengths both applications have. The two different RIP applications we use for our latex and flatbed printers are Adobe-certified and do very well when fed PDFs generated by Illustrator or InDesign.

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