"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Squeegee: Wooden or metal handled tool with a rubber blade used to drive ink through a stencil by pulling the squeegee across the screen.
In 16th century Asia the blade was often made of bamboo or wood
Quote from: tonypep on May 16, 2016, 12:48:39 PMIn 16th century Asia the blade was often made of bamboo or woodso only modern squeegees are mad of PU. . .pierre
dos it have to be polyurethane? Could it be rubber? or PVC, or even metal?Is it always shearing? jvanick just said it only shears when printing plastisol, but not when using it for waterbase. . . Or are we shearing waterbased inks, but also driving them in at the same time?pierre
Quote from: blue moon on May 16, 2016, 12:23:46 PMdos it have to be polyurethane? Could it be rubber? or PVC, or even metal?Is it always shearing? jvanick just said it only shears when printing plastisol, but not when using it for waterbase. . . Or are we shearing waterbased inks, but also driving them in at the same time?pierreYou are right Pierre, it does not have to be PU, just as a fill blade (call it a flood blade if you like but don't tell Bill Hood I told you so) is not always metal. In fact on flip configured squeegee/fill I've only seen PU squeegee material used. I think the act of getting the ink through to the substrate is shear no matter what pressure is used. The squeegee marries together other more critical parameters of the process. In point, Joe's bible does not specifically discuss squeegees but ink mesh and stencil are extensively covered.