Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Interesting list.I have never seen tack expressed as a percentage, or shear thinning as a ratio like that.How does one go about measuring them?
This, my friend, is why we love white discharge and colors. My printers don't like dealing with dealing with plastisol, especially white. Its also why we were referred to for large volume contract continuous business by an ink manufacturer
So you're saying I can use cold cream to reduce tack...sweet!! ;-)
Quote from: farmboygraphics on April 12, 2016, 12:30:43 PMSo you're saying I can use cold cream to reduce tack...sweet!! ;-)Only if you first warm the cold cream in a hot oven or preferably a ceramic kiln then gently stir.
Both tack and shear-thinning properties require lab equipment to quantify but it is equipment every ink maker should have. It is most certainly "the hard way" but we gauge tack [~how the white adheres to iteslf VS how it adheres to something else] every day on press. Ink which has excessive tack won't bridge or matte-down easily, it requires a lot of squeegee angle and / or pressure, doesn't clear the mesh well and tends to leave a rough surface. Shear thinning is a ratio of two viscosities [~the friction between two fluid layers of ink]; flooded viscosity and transferring viscosity. We want the tack ratio to be low as possible and to a limit we want the shear-thinnning ratio to be as high as possible.