"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Specs for mesh is given in its relaxed state not stretched.. So the open area is what it is at any tension.. Mesh that is stretched squared will provide best open area but the thread diameter does not get thinner so percentage of open area remains the same.
A (mesh) material made to be resistant to deformation will produce high tensions with very little stretch so it has a low elongation tendency- it is high modulus. A (mesh) material that is made to deform easily can be streched a lot and so will naturally produce very high tensions- It is low modulus.A low elongation mesh, with a balanced SS curve, will produce a squared mesh opening with let's say a 5% stretch from relaxed position and 20n of tension.A high elongation mesh, with an imbalanced SS curve, will have to be stretched to let's say 15% of it's relaxed position And tension in the 30n's to even begin to have the opening get to 90 degree angles and because the ss curve is imbalanced the amount of stretch in the warp and weft will need diffetent values..Specs for mesh is given in its relaxed state not stretched.. So the open area is what it is at any tension.. Mesh that is stretched squared will provide best open area but the thread diameter does not get thinner so percentage of open area remains the same.. Tension (static) does not play a part in ink transfer..Sent from my LG-H811 using Tapatalk