Making a PDF X3 file for printing in only 1 colour (black)

Hi,
Sorry but it seems I need again some help.
From InDesign CS 3 I am making (Print to Adobe PDF) a PDF file for a printing house (books and magazines).
I need to do a PDF X3 compatible file, and among other settings it checks that indeed the file has only black, no other colors. I do this trough "Print to Adobe PDF" because while working, my text is colored so that I can more easily identify the styles in use. Then I print with the option "Composite CMYK" and "Text as Black". I also use crop marks.
The problem is is that when checking the PDF X3 compatibility, the crop marks appear as a second color (Registered) so the file is flagged as having problems.
What settings must I use so that the file cheks OK, that it has only black (1 colour) and can be generated by using "print to" and not "export as"?
Thanks for the help,
ionP

Thank you for your suggestion, unfortunately it seems this is not the solution.
I did print as composite gray, before that in "Preferences" I changed the settings to "Printing/Exporting: Output All Blacks as Rich Black". But when checked the conformity to PDF X3 the crop marks are showed as special color (so that I have a PDF with 2 colors).
I also checked with an Acrobat Plug-In, "Quite Revealing", and it shows also 2 colors, Black (which is OK) and Registration (and that is not not OK). It should show only "Black", which it does if I do not put crop marks, but I need the crop marks.
ionP

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    ...imagine I have a label that is a star with 200x200 px, and the artboard is white background with 300x300px,
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    All the above is offered in a spirit of helpfulness (and some tongue-in-cheek jest). Take it as such. Bottom line, though--and this is not meant to be the least bit insulting--unless the company you have just contracted with is a small mom & pop shop and/or has very basic labeling projects, it really sounds as if you are already in well over your head. I am certainly not saying any of this is rocket science. It isn't. A dedicated person can learn its ins-and-outs in relatively short time if that time is well spent. But an online user forum is a very error-prone, incomplete, inefficient, and therefore poor way to learn it. It doesn't sound like you have that much time to waste.
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