"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I would do a few things to try and find out what the problem is.1 Make a large graphics image of registration marks and print this a few times on the same screen to check if the Exile is printing in registration.2 Print the same image a few times on one screen but take the screen out and put it back between printing.3 Print the image, set it up and print it. Clean the screen, set it up on another head and see if it's in register, do this on all the heads.You need to eliminate possible problems.I am getting a Douthitt unit this week, hopefully I won't have the same issues.
Mark Diehl @Douthitt Corporation offered to help us out and found as well already some issues that need to be addressed. Awesome considering he works as direct competition to Exile. I`m sure Maxie will be in good hands with the guys at Douthitt Corporation.
Something I did after having our Iimage installed just to convince myself the Iimage has not quirks like being described here.I made a file with a bulls eye at each corner of the printing area, I did 4 different sets each a different color and sent the separated file to the printer. Put a screen in and printed each one of those sets of bulls eyes to see how well each lines up on top of the previous set. Surprisingly they came out absolutely perfect in registration, I did it with four different files to rule out different file variable. We also sanded down the corners of all our frames to allow metal on metal contact with the new Tri Loc system that uses and LED light to show full contact on all three points. This has helped a lot as well.So anytime there is registration issues which is never much at all is attributed to the press or sloppy screens.
Quote from: inkman996 on April 08, 2019, 10:44:29 AMSomething I did after having our Iimage installed just to convince myself the Iimage has not quirks like being described here.I made a file with a bulls eye at each corner of the printing area, I did 4 different sets each a different color and sent the separated file to the printer. Put a screen in and printed each one of those sets of bulls eyes to see how well each lines up on top of the previous set. Surprisingly they came out absolutely perfect in registration, I did it with four different files to rule out different file variable. We also sanded down the corners of all our frames to allow metal on metal contact with the new Tri Loc system that uses and LED light to show full contact on all three points. This has helped a lot as well.So anytime there is registration issues which is never much at all is attributed to the press or sloppy screens.Good testing. Here is a tip less known about registration. Some art departments will send two separate files for one job. A base file and a colors file. Don't.1, there is just no need. There are several ways to set up art with just one file including the base. #2, Two separate jobs, are treated as two separate sends. and two separate sends will not "always" line up perfectly. It can be a hair off in any direction. Not due to the machine and output, but due to math and processing. You would think that it would be identical, but it's not always. Similar to sending one eps file once, and it reads 754k. Send that very same eps file and it can read 762k another time. Also similar to creating a 12" vector perfect circle and printing that out to film or on paper or DTS. Measure that, and it's 12" wide x 12.015". It's math and the outcome often gets rounded off to the nearest depending on X and Y.