Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Good to know (Glitter).Unless you think they will price match Atlas (230 Mesh (45 Microns) 55" wide @ $12.76/yard for 10 yards for example) I can't justify the extra cost given I've never done this before and have LOTS of learning and mistakes to make... plus my shop is not setup to hand "fragile" mesh at ALL so I imagine I will bust a lot of mesh doing stupid things at first. Plus I'm getting 10% off being my first order... hence why I'm making sure I get as much as I "need" so I can take advantage of the discount.
True but even crap mesh in a MZX is better than my crappy wooden statics or low tension aluminums.
One reason to keep them, if they are decent, would be if there are any jobs that you would like to catalog.
Quote from: Frog on February 07, 2012, 07:30:47 PMOne reason to keep them, if they are decent, would be if there are any jobs that you would like to catalog.I'm planning on "renting" my screens... $30 bucks for a year or maybe 18 months. At the end of that period they could renew or decide to pay the screen charge ($12 bucks) next time they want that job. That way it makes it more "acceptable" for me to tie up a roller for that long.That is my thoughts right now at least.
If I was you do the same thing your thinking about doing just don't keep the screens with the designs on them. Reclaim them and if they reorder make the screen again. If you have some guys that do order alot keep them but the rest just reclaim. Just my 2 cents.
I'm surprised no one (including me) has mentioned it, but start out with the lower mesh--save that 230 and 305 until you've done a couple dozen, retensioned them, and popped some. Your checkbook will thank you.