"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Will be watching this for later as we haven't run any discharge/wb jobs on our new press...and if I remember correctly, you also converted from a javelin v-squeegee setup right?on our chopper heads on our old Javelin, we used to run at 50-60psi, 70/90/70 duro, 20ish degree angle with very few problems...will be interested to see what others recommend.
The thing about the v-squeegees that I found is that during your flood stroke, you'd be 'loading' the screen a lot more than a chopper flood bar does. not sure what the correct answer is here as if I did the same as I did with the javelin, I'd be tearing screens.
Try upping your pressure, that's what we had to do on our new sportsman. Most prints are around 50psi, and once we did that, no issues.
Quote from: ericheartsu on December 29, 2014, 12:01:23 PMTry upping your pressure, that's what we had to do on our new sportsman. Most prints are around 50psi, and once we did that, no issues.Thanks man, will give it a shot. What squeegee duro/angle/off contact are you running?
Increasing angle and slowing down the speed may help prevent this. Brand new squeegees really bite into the mesh and emulsion if the angle is too vertical. I look at the print process of discharge as "pinching" the ink rather than "scraping' the ink that is common with plastisol. Slowing down the print stroke a little should also help.Yes you can use a squeegee as a floodbar, works nicely to fill ink well completely and can help back off print pressure. Also helps to preserve the stencil with a softer blade set at a slight angle.The last trick is to use a bias stretched screen on coarser mesh. Could be a sharp squeegee is catching the threads like speed bumps. Bias stretched screens avoid squeegee chatter, especially on coarser meshes. 150 is not that coarse. You could also use Murakami 150S LX mesh. We fuse the mesh threads at the knuckles and the thread itself is also softer to provide a lower RZ value on the inside of the screen. You can also face coat the inside of the screen to smooth out any mesh bumps.Al
We use Smiling Jack Squeegees, straight up and down, typically on contact or one step up from on contact. We use their "white knight" blade
We tried the SP1400, and we weren't a huge fan. I know some shops like it a ton, but Brandon had us try the Saati Red PHU and that's working AWESOME. Also Tony had us give the CCI WR14 a try, and that emulsion is amazing.The White Knight is a yellow blade, very similar to the red smiling jack. Each color puts down a different ink deposit, and the white knight puts down the most in our research so far. It works really well for discharge prints.
I hadn't thought of face coating the screens but will give that a shot as well. In regards to the LX mesh, is there anywhere to get that by the yard or is it only sold by the bolt or in panels?