"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
So we bought and ordered an STE II. It arrived on Tuseday, and our tech showed up for install on Wed.Tech spent all day Wed. Installing the machine. Thursday morning we started with the training. If you know how to use a computer and printer, then you know how to use this machine. Simple as that.Our Tech, flew in from South Carolina. His name was Lester, and he was awesome. Made learning about the software and the machine a breeze. We were making screens within 10 minutes of him showing us how the rip worked.We run all of our screens with Xenon Nova (a diazo emulsion), with a 1/1 sharp side. So far we've made about 40 screens. on our non halftone screens, we are exposing them at about 23 seconds. With our halftone screens we just dialed it in, at 12 secs.We are running our first discharge job with a screen exposed this way later today, as well as a previously printed 8 color sim process job. So i'm super excited to see what the results are!I'll update more after we do some printing, but right now we have to print 2000 shirts with an 8 color front, and 1 color discharge back by 6pm!
Quote from: ericheartsu on August 08, 2014, 02:25:22 PMSo we bought and ordered an STE II. It arrived on Tuseday, and our tech showed up for install on Wed.Tech spent all day Wed. Installing the machine. Thursday morning we started with the training. If you know how to use a computer and printer, then you know how to use this machine. Simple as that.Our Tech, flew in from South Carolina. His name was Lester, and he was awesome. Made learning about the software and the machine a breeze. We were making screens within 10 minutes of him showing us how the rip worked.We run all of our screens with Xenon Nova (a diazo emulsion), with a 1/1 sharp side. So far we've made about 40 screens. on our non halftone screens, we are exposing them at about 23 seconds. With our halftone screens we just dialed it in, at 12 secs.We are running our first discharge job with a screen exposed this way later today, as well as a previously printed 8 color sim process job. So i'm super excited to see what the results are!I'll update more after we do some printing, but right now we have to print 2000 shirts with an 8 color front, and 1 color discharge back by 6pm!Why are your halftone screens different from the spots?Pierre
Typically our halftone screens are on either 230, 272s or 305s. But to be honest, with this emulsion we are using, we've always been kind of baffled as to why halftone exposure is usually about half of what a standard blockier image is.Even when we were using films and our richmond 7k, we'd expose our halftones at 40 units, and solid, blockier images at 70 or 80 units, depending on what the purpose of the screen was.
I wish I knew the technical aspects more. We quote ALL screens the same, except for our low meshes.But it would be great if anyone could chime in and teach this youngin a lesson
If you can figure out how to do an exposure calculator on a screen made with the wet ink out of the i image ste let me know...... Doing the "step wedge" for the dts screens isn't really something I've figured out how to do well yet. Using film, etc no problem but the times are vastly different then the ink sitting on screen.