"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Andy, that is a good point. I did not noticed that the top one is a plate maker.For the bottom one, I would contact the seller. These units were made as a screen printing exposure unit and also as a plate makers. I think that the only difference is a vacuum blanket. (I think)When I contacted M&R, they wanted to see the picture of it before they would give me instructions, just to make sure it is the one for screen printing.
the second one supposedly has Mercury bulb rather then metal halide. 'not a good choice for parts either. . .pierre
Quote from: blue moon on October 03, 2011, 10:33:12 AMthe second one supposedly has Mercury bulb rather then metal halide. 'not a good choice for parts either. . .pierreBoth of them are Mercury. Bulbs can be bought on eBay, between $40 and $100.I got the new bulb and I kept the old one as a back-up.
I thought your unit was Metal Halide? Mercury units are not recommended from what I understand. . .
Quote from: blue moon on October 03, 2011, 11:16:42 AMI thought your unit was Metal Halide? Mercury units are not recommended from what I understand. . .Nope, it is Mercury.As far as I understood them, the only difference is that Mercury bulbs do not emit as much UV rays and that is why they are a bit slower exposure units.Also, Mercury is liquid metal that emits radiation (I do not think that bulb or two will matter or will kill you ).
Quote from: DKgrafix on October 03, 2011, 11:30:40 AMQuote from: blue moon on October 03, 2011, 11:16:42 AMI thought your unit was Metal Halide? Mercury units are not recommended from what I understand. . .Nope, it is Mercury.As far as I understood them, the only difference is that Mercury bulbs do not emit as much UV rays and that is why they are a bit slower exposure units.Also, Mercury is liquid metal that emits radiation (I do not think that bulb or two will matter or will kill you ).Well at least when you have exposure problems you will know what is causing it.....
I was exposing dual cure and now I use Chroma Blue pure photopolimer emulsion. As far as I know, no issues except that it takes a bit longer.Brad, mk162 has the same unit as me, and have been using it for a while.