"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I agree with Colin. The variable that seems most likely is the thin thread.One thing that jumped out to me was that you said you no longer rinse the inside of the screen bc of this problem.To me this sounds like classic under exposure.So a few quick thoughts.Was the old mesh yellow too? If not maybe try adding some time to exposure.Is the cap film maybe to thick? If so adding some time should help.*-we're not using cap film, but we had to make changes to our coating techniques bc of EOM thickness on thin thread.Murphy
I would try a new degreaser.
-EZ frame frame issue. The channels trap dip tank solution which mix with the water during screen wash out and then come into contact with the cap film during wash out causing the film to bubble (or whatever you want to call it). That said I have been spending a lot of extra time trying to make sure the screens are properly rinsed. But I may be leaning towards this.if you think it may be this, why not let the screen dry throughly, do not apply the film right away, let it totally air dry, then rewet it and apply. Maybe during the reclaim process with the newer presssure washer, maybe the its hitting back of washout booth and spraying back on itself from the wall behind. Just a thought..
Out of curiosity, what is the reason you use the cap film instead of standard emulsion anyway? Doesn't it cost a lot more?
Have you started or stopped using a water softener, or perhaps been using a softener and allowed it to run out of salt. Looking for changes that may have occurred which you have not linked to the issue yet. Think soapy water in a shower and how the softness of the water affects bubbles, this is a surface tension issue.Capillary film is dependent on water being held in the mesh via surface tension of the water, the thing which allows bugs to walk on water, and if that surface tension is inadequate your mesh will not hold the water to allow the capillary action to be effective.On that same theory the thin thread will increase the theoretical open area of the mesh and the surface tension may not allow the cells to hold water for proper capillary adhesion.Applying cap film to 60 mesh is a problem for the same reason but is much easier to understand when you can see huge holes in the mesh.GREAT CONVERSATION
-I thought for the first time about ENCAPSULATION. I sprayed the inside of the screen with a water bottle a LOT heavier than I usually do. I then used a couple of hard squeegee stroked to really force the film into the screen.