"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I do it twice on the shirt side and once on the squeegee sideEmulsion - How to coat your screen!
LOL... umm... my drying method is as you guys can imagine... "unique".I load them on my press and pull the heads down (platens out of the way) so they are ALMOST horizontal but print side down. Then I run a big box fan to quickly "dry" them. Then after they are basically dry (30 mins?) I load them into the cardboard box they came in. I cover this up to keep it as light tight as possible (I also leave them print side down in there).The method of coating is the one described by Douglas Grigar though I don't really see the glisten, I just go with a few coats and move on... I THINK it's glistening but it's hard to see it next to my glistening body. That last squeegee side is apparently the key to all of this coating stuff... it pushes all the emulsion through to the print side.
Never thought of that.It is definitely in the plans... Just been swamped with everything.A printer/embroider friend of mine also runs an ice cream truck business and he uses large broken chest freezers (he stands them on end)... he has several broken ones (as you can imagine he probably goes through a few of these in his business... running those compressors on generators is probably bad for them ). So he said I could have one. I'll be building my rack out of one of those. Just trying to figure out how to circulate some air in and out of it.... I'm guessing some baffles built in or around it. Maybe cut out some offset holes through the insulation and such.Don't hate me because I'm an evil thrifty genius.
I load them into the cardboard box they came in. I cover this up to keep it as light tight as possible (I also leave them print side down in there).
Not possible/practical at this point. I have a completely open shop 30x30 building. It is unattached from any other building.I do have a dehumidifier already from a different project.