"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
that is a lot to get folded without any ink transfer. I thought the same thing at first.
Quote from: mk162 on January 25, 2012, 02:06:56 PMthat is a lot to get folded without any ink transfer. I thought the same thing at first.I would guess the shirt got folded also. Not so much as folded as got caught on the inlet gate. I will also guess that is was printed manually and was flashed after it was printed the last time. (no offsetting of ink when folded.) I have had that happen on my dryer and did have offset on the shirt. If it was printed manually I would have never known.
Quote from: Screened Gear on January 25, 2012, 04:43:34 PMQuote from: mk162 on January 25, 2012, 02:06:56 PMthat is a lot to get folded without any ink transfer. I thought the same thing at first.I would guess the shirt got folded also. Not so much as folded as got caught on the inlet gate. I will also guess that is was printed manually and was flashed after it was printed the last time. (no offsetting of ink when folded.) I have had that happen on my dryer and did have offset on the shirt. If it was printed manually I would have never known.Q: Jon, who flashes after the last color before pulling it off the board?A: Someone who has ruined shirts by snapping them, and offsetting ink when they pull then offBut seriously, that is definitely an extra step.And why would this unnecessary step, if actually taken by some, be limited to manuals? In practice, one p[robably has more time to carefullr remove a wet shirt on a manual rather than an auto running at production speed.
We have a m&r fusion, printed on an auto with no flash following the final white. The shirt folding over is a possibility, I guess, however a slim one. If its possible that residual fluid, or a film, from spot remover could cause this then that has to be it.
Quote from: Frog on January 25, 2012, 06:27:05 PMQuote from: Screened Gear on January 25, 2012, 04:43:34 PMQuote from: mk162 on January 25, 2012, 02:06:56 PMthat is a lot to get folded without any ink transfer. I thought the same thing at first.I would guess the shirt got folded also. Not so much as folded as got caught on the inlet gate. I will also guess that is was printed manually and was flashed after it was printed the last time. (no offsetting of ink when folded.) I have had that happen on my dryer and did have offset on the shirt. If it was printed manually I would have never known.Q: Jon, who flashes after the last color before pulling it off the board?A: Someone who has ruined shirts by snapping them, and offsetting ink when they pull then offBut seriously, that is definitely an extra step.And why would this unnecessary step, if actually taken by some, be limited to manuals? In practice, one p[robably has more time to carefullr remove a wet shirt on a manual rather than an auto running at production speed.Frog,I flash after every color on my manual. Its not an extra step just how I print. My flash is over the board on my right. I print left to right. So after every print the color is flashed. I print all 6 boards then I remove all the shirts one after another. I find it faster this way. I guess the last shirt I print I wouldn't have to flash just take that shirt off first to go in the dryer. I was guessing manually printed but your right on an auto they could have flashed after the 2nd print also. (pfpf)3 color screen print on t-shirtsI have done it this way for years and I can get really fast speeds out of it because of repetition.