"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I'll make sure that others don't make the same mistake.
I'll say this again, we've managed to get detail that in the beginning we couldn't get, but if you have to throw all the cargo off the ship to get it to float it's not really a cargo ship is it? Meaning, the screens aren't usable for anything over 100 pieces due to the need to underexpose to achieve the detail.
In fact "in the wild" the only problems I have run in to on this LED unit are all here on the boards.
I of course am known for pushing a full and complete exposure as the starting point, making adjustments in mesh choice and emulsion to take up the rest - a no-fail policy.
I know of faults in many other units on the market that he (and Vastex) are addressing in their design.
As with cars, we all chose different ones. We adjust to how they 'drive'. As an emulsion manufacturer we did not buy into LED in the beginning. Metal Halide wasn't broke, but LED has created a new screen making dynamic that is different from Metal Halide. Both work, but with some adjustments needed. I now sell LED mesh! OK that's just a marketing slogan, but what I have found is that LED likes higher mesh counts. A 150S vs a 110T, a 225/40 Yellow vs a 160W. Our analysis of the exposure is this. LED's do undercut a bit, but by moving mesh counts up a little the details are still decent. Are the halftones as good as a Metal Halide, well no, they are a bit soft on the inside, but with a fast SBQ emulsion, complete exposure, (Thanks Greg, this needs reinforcement in our industry.) and an alternative mesh count that is higher but with similar print quality, your results will be fine. Again, like cars, a new one may require rethinking on how you drive it, but it will take you where you want to go.I recently dialed in a 24 auto shop with 2 STEII's, auto develop and more importantly auto reclaim. Speed? So fast a Metal Halide user could work 7 days a week and not equal what an STEII with multiple heads and exposure can output. What helps is post exposure on SBQ products. Without post exposure on LED you risk break down on discharge and water base, and more importantly any screen opener or solvents used in plastisol printing will lock in the emulsion without post exposure. Auto reclaming machines aren't very strong IMO. But with the right emulsion, post exposure, it works beautifully. Post Exposure sources by strength and light quality: Sun from 10-3, 8k Metal Halide, 5k Metal Halide, LED. The reason for LED in last here? Spectral output. Emulsions like mulit-spectral to completely cross link. Will the LED work for Post Exposure? Yes for the majority of our print runs. For 90K runs? not sure yet, untested.As Pierre mentioned, you can control your haltones with curves. Choke the tonal spread, 5-95, or even 8-92% still looks great, add some contrast and the print is excellent.Long Runs? - I still prefer Metal Halide here. But for me that is 60-90k range, and we rarely see this in the states. LED is so fast. Great improvement on Vacuum drawdown speed, and instantaneous release of vacuum. And lets face it $300-500 MH bulbs every year gets costly. Here is where I see some issues on LED exposure: Emulsion types: SBQ is the best, followed by diazo (which will undercut a bit more due to longer exposure time), and dual cures I don't recommend, although you can get an exposure and an image, its the time needed for both SBQ and diazo that are present in a dual cure with a short LED exposure that is underserved. SBQ is exposed long before the diazo in a dual cure. So the exposure is marginal for long runs, and post exposure doesn't help much. I have a new emulsion. I have buried this in the post on purpose. PM me if you want to know more about the emulsion I used to dial in the 24 auto shop with completely clean screens through an auto reclaim using all ink systems.
Quote from: alan802 on February 25, 2016, 09:51:33 AMI'll make sure that others don't make the same mistake. I wonder what this portends...
Quote from: DouglasGrigar on February 25, 2016, 07:14:27 PMQuote from: alan802 on February 25, 2016, 09:51:33 AMI'll make sure that others don't make the same mistake. I wonder what this portends...It means when someone asks me what I think of it I'll be honest and tell them the unit isn't near as good as our 15 year old Richmond Solarbeam with an 18 month old, aging bulb. I know it's being subtly stated that there is probably something wrong with the people operating the unit and I'm sure there are some at Vastex, you included, that know more than I do about stencil development, but honestly, I've shot thousands of screens and take my education and knowledge of the processes very seriously and if I can't get a 10% dot from a 50lpi on a 280/34, 10%EOM, and numerous emulsions tested, bla bla bla, it's not the fault of the user in THIS SITUATION. I've thought about plugging the Richmond back in and even with the old bulb, crappy scratched up glass and awful control panel, and testing the units side by side and documenting it all for everyone on the forum to see. But I'm sure there will be plenty of skepticism that the test was biased and most importantly the guy doing the testing is not near as smart as he thinks he is . Have a good weekend folks.
I apologize for that, and I also got a little hot after reading Douglas's reply to that statement because quite frankly the whole situation has me miffed and at a few different things. When I read the posts on the last few pages I couldn't help but feel like there were things being said that I feel were a bit disrespectful
Quote from: screenprintguy on February 17, 2016, 08:09:07 PMAll due respect, Danny Grunniger's printing is beating the competition and his screens are imaged with an M&R STE, which has a small strip of led's. So I don't see too much argument past that. If a starlight has even more juice, ummmmm, correct me if I'm wrong buuuut, wouldn't that be even more accuracy. The guys I know with Starlights do amazing work, won't have to buy bulbs and, none of them seem to be lacking detail. What am I missing?Maybe it is the use of of CTS or good dmax films which allow for longer and more complete exposure of the emulsion. Does LEd work, yes, but why do we see manufacturers formulating emulsion specifically for LED light. My belief is a multi-spectral light source makes for optimal exposure no matter the emulsion type.
All due respect, Danny Grunniger's printing is beating the competition and his screens are imaged with an M&R STE, which has a small strip of led's. So I don't see too much argument past that. If a starlight has even more juice, ummmmm, correct me if I'm wrong buuuut, wouldn't that be even more accuracy. The guys I know with Starlights do amazing work, won't have to buy bulbs and, none of them seem to be lacking detail. What am I missing?