Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Does ink need to reach a certain temp (325) or maintain temp for a period of time to cure on the shirt?
In the end, a few trips through the laundry are the ultimate test.
time is irrelevant chemically though, as time is just a means to an end: every molecule of ink reaching the proper temperature. Once the ink has cured it has cured and keeping at that heat longer does nothing once the reaction has happened. There are specially formulated transfer inks out there than will regel above a certain temp, but again, temperature is the key, not time.
Bottom Line:ENTIRE INK LAYER must reach fusion temperature. If fusion happens at 300 degrees, then it must reach 300 degrees THROUGH THE ENTIRE LAYER.Side note:The longer an ink is at fusion temperature, THE STRONGER IT'S ADHESION WILL BE. This only applies to a certain length of time at fusion temp. That length of time varies between manufacturers. Too long at fusion temp and the ink will begin to yellow and discolor due to the heat.
Not to argue, but i mentioned the entire ink layer getting to temp in both posts, not just the surface. My only real point was it always bugs me when people say "such and such ink requires 2 minutes at 330 to cure" or something similar. The 2 minutes is not important in and of itself, and is simply a function of the variables that determine if the entirety of the ink has reached the right temperature. On a warm day with a thin ink deposit it could take 30 seconds, or it could take 10 minutes with HD inks on a cold day with a poorly insulated dryer.