"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Quote from: Rocfrog on June 01, 2012, 02:25:37 PMOk so what your basically saying is that if we keep our ink cure temps just below 340* we have a better chance of not having "bleeding" issues.....NickIf your dryer is way too hot you will have issues like your talking about with almost any white ink. I would guess your way over heating the shirts. If your ink has puff in it the white will also puff up like crazy if your too hot. Is your white puffing up?
Ok so what your basically saying is that if we keep our ink cure temps just below 340* we have a better chance of not having "bleeding" issues.....Nick
With quick white I can tell I am too hot by checking if it puffed. You really should not be able to tell that it puffed on a low bleed white ink. (ok if your printing bullet proof prints you can...my prints are very thin and smooth) I will defiantly say your too hot and that is your main problem. Your other problems are your employees are opening "the big door" and not checking the dryer after doing it. Changing something like that will affect your dryer times. I also would look into a new dryer if it is that old. Just the power savings alone is worth it. Lastly stop buying white ink based on price. White ink is the only ink that you should buy on performance. Buy one low bleed white ink and stay with it.
Quote from: Screened Gear on June 01, 2012, 02:58:25 PMWith quick white I can tell I am too hot by checking if it puffed. You really should not be able to tell that it puffed on a low bleed white ink. (ok if your printing bullet proof prints you can...my prints are very thin and smooth) I will defiantly say your too hot and that is your main problem. Your other problems are your employees are opening "the big door" and not checking the dryer after doing it. Changing something like that will affect your dryer times. I also would look into a new dryer if it is that old. Just the power savings alone is worth it. Lastly stop buying white ink based on price. White ink is the only ink that you should buy on performance. Buy one low bleed white ink and stay with it. Jon,As far as I know QW does not have any blowing agent in it. However QW will blister easily and that might be what you are seeing.Rocfrog stick your hand way in there to get a reading. You have to get up under that curtain and get the reading as close as possible.
Rocfrog stick your hand way in there to get a reading. You have to get up under that curtain and get the reading as close as possible.
What you need to watch for is that the print may look fine right out of the dryer but come the next day or two you will see the bleeding. That's what was happening to us before.