Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Starlight 3140 with the glassFixxons/microjet filmAquasol HVP, no diazo/straight out of bucket150/48 mesh, yellow2/1 thin edge coat (do not coat high eom stencils for wb/dc printing, use the thin edge)25sWe don't run HVP that much anymore but this is what my screen tech had on the chart. Expose your screen as long as it can go without losing detail/undercutting. It's a balance between maxing out the steps on the Stouffer strip and holding the minimum detail you need on that mesh. Disregard any comments about shooting screens in 0.5-7s etc. with the Starlight, at least with glass/film and especially with discharge printing- you want your screens strong, not just imaged. *EDIT- probably none of us have a device to measure dmin/max but it makes a difference, especially when using a less collimated light source. Assuming we're all using similar dmin "waterproof" film. For dmax reference I'll say our positives when held up to a bright light, block it out completely, i.e. you can't see the bulb. If your positives are more like looking through darker sunglasses you may not be able to burn as long.
25s??I don't know what you meant by that.
Do you really want 7 seconds tho? Your exposure latitude would be less than. 1/2 a second....