"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Thanks Pierre.I don't have temp control, but I just raised it about an inch higher.Waiting for it to warm up and going to try it again.If that's not enough I can raise it a little more, I'm at the min dwell time for the Flash AMatic.
I just set up a unburned screen with some ink on it to try out smoothing.
Quote from: StinkyDaddy on April 04, 2018, 04:39:07 PMI just set up a unburned screen with some ink on it to try out smoothing.I have not had to resort to a smoothing screen, but wouldn't you want an 'exposed' screen just with no image to lock in the emulsion? Will ink break down unexposed emulsion?
Looks like you may need a little more off contact. Also consider dropping your navy screen 156. The roughness of your base will greatly efect how the rest of the printed colors look, the darker the top color the more it seems to be effected. Also, are you printing base, flash, base, flash, navy? Or trying to glob the base on for anone pass white? If so, this is compounding the problem as well. Sent from my XT1585 using Tapatalk
Quote from: screenxpress on April 04, 2018, 08:53:32 PMQuote from: StinkyDaddy on April 04, 2018, 04:39:07 PMI just set up a unburned screen with some ink on it to try out smoothing.I have not had to resort to a smoothing screen, but wouldn't you want an 'exposed' screen just with no image to lock in the emulsion? Will ink break down unexposed emulsion?I didn't say that correctly, it was a screen with no image. I put it out in the sun for a few minutes to burn it.
a one minute dwell time for a flash? Unless I missed something, that's an extremely long time to flash, hence the remarks about over flashing. It should only be a few seconds, at least that's my experience. I don't spend much time on press, but on a rare occasion I do, manually, and I count to 5, and it's flashed, an old Hopkins flash. On our auto, it's a few seconds.Steve