Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
I have got to fine tune my screen exposure times, so I am getting ready to make a test and start reading the instructions, it says to double the time you expect to expose the screen in, WELL my 3140 does not have a timer it has a light integrator, and measure light in units , so how do I go about doing a text.
This is assuming your bulb is on the newer side.
Quote from: jasonl on March 04, 2012, 09:06:35 AMThis is assuming your bulb is on the newer side.Shouldn't that not matter? The integrator automatically adjust the time. A light unit is a light unit. If it takes 100 light units then it takes 100 light units. If you have a 1k bulb it will take X time if you have a 5k bulb it will just take less time. And transversely it will just take longer if your bulb is older.Unless the integrator doesn't really measure the proper waveform and your bulb is SUPER old you shouldn't have to adjust light units as it ages. Just for EOM and emulsion type.
Quote from: Gilligan on March 04, 2012, 11:07:33 AMQuote from: jasonl on March 04, 2012, 09:06:35 AMThis is assuming your bulb is on the newer side.Shouldn't that not matter? The integrator automatically adjust the time. A light unit is a light unit. If it takes 100 light units then it takes 100 light units. If you have a 1k bulb it will take X time if you have a 5k bulb it will just take less time. And transversely it will just take longer if your bulb is older.Unless the integrator doesn't really measure the proper waveform and your bulb is SUPER old you shouldn't have to adjust light units as it ages. Just for EOM and emulsion type.Rich will know better, by my guess is that emulsions are sensitive to a spectrum of wavelength and the integrator only measures one specific value. The ratio of the measured and used (correct wavelength for the particular emulsion) light can change over time as the bulb gets older. The differences are minute and for all practical purposes probably not even worth worrying about, but when the high definition is important it does play a role. Another factor could be the ability of the light to penetrate the emulsion. The stronger the bulb, better it will penetrate all the way through. Weaker bulb will produce the same amount of light (over longer time), but the opposite side might not be linked as well as it used to be when the light was stronger.I have noticed the improvement in the stencils (ever so slightly) after replacing the bulb. So it does make a difference somehow . . .pierre
I have noticed the improvement in the stencils (ever so slightly) after replacing the bulb. So it does make a difference somehow . . .pierre
Evo, but wouldn't a brighter light just mean that the "scatter" would just be brighter as well? Meaning that "undercutting" would be just as significant with a brighter light as it would a dull light.
Evo, but wouldn't a brighter light just mean that the "scatter" would just be brighter as well? Meaning that "undercutting" would be just as significant with a brighter light as it would a dull light.I think Pierre's assessment of light penetration all the way through would seem to make more sense to me.
I assume the gist of it is that a more powerful light will 'push' UV to the print side of the stencil, moreso than a weak light, which will harden the shirt side quickly, but then hit cross linking 'traps', before it reaches the print side, resulting in an unusually long burn time to fully expose the print side. That certainly makes sense.