"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I had a nice chat with them later, and between us we came up with an uneven platen pressure due to the fact that our press is a clamshell. So the suggestion was to make a shim to go near the back that would force the platen level. Then I looked at my hat press, with the larger platen that the left front print fit on, and voila, it came out great. So, even after applying transfers since the 70's, there's still something to learn, or in this case, re-learn...Steve
Quote from: Sbrem on December 23, 2020, 05:00:36 PMI had a nice chat with them later, and between us we came up with an uneven platen pressure due to the fact that our press is a clamshell. So the suggestion was to make a shim to go near the back that would force the platen level. Then I looked at my hat press, with the larger platen that the left front print fit on, and voila, it came out great. So, even after applying transfers since the 70's, there's still something to learn, or in this case, re-learn...SteveThough some clamshell designs have come up with engineering tweaks to help overcome this, it is the nature of the beast. What one saves in footprint over a swing-away, there is the inherent characteristic of the back hitting first (and, in your case) also giving more pressure. Another problem sometimes is stuff creeping forward if not stuck down well.
Quote from: Frog on December 23, 2020, 06:05:24 PMQuote from: Sbrem on December 23, 2020, 05:00:36 PMI had a nice chat with them later, and between us we came up with an uneven platen pressure due to the fact that our press is a clamshell. So the suggestion was to make a shim to go near the back that would force the platen level. Then I looked at my hat press, with the larger platen that the left front print fit on, and voila, it came out great. So, even after applying transfers since the 70's, there's still something to learn, or in this case, re-learn...SteveThough some clamshell designs have come up with engineering tweaks to help overcome this, it is the nature of the beast. What one saves in footprint over a swing-away, there is the inherent characteristic of the back hitting first (and, in your case) also giving more pressure. Another problem sometimes is stuff creeping forward if not stuck down well.I misspoke, it is a swing away, an Insta 216, but the effect was the same.Steve