Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Pretty good stuff. We had RC Screen Shop mix us a gallon for a 700pc job that ran yesterday (thanks brandon!). Ps, check out RC for WB gallons on PMS colors, reasonably priced (unlike another close-by supplier) and very nice folks to boot. The WB-99 was mixed with Quick Cure base and is the creamiest WB ink that's been in the shop even with significant thinning with water. It took two hard prints with a 70 duro blade through a 110/71 to get that nice, halfway through, penetration. Printing was done on contact with a push stroke. Smells kinda like high-quality, voc free house paint. The Rutland buckets are nice, good seal to them. Prints looked fantastic. All and all I give it a 7/10 though. Why? Because we had a chunk of dried yellow pigment clog the screen 2/3 of the way through. We were able to clean it out with some TW S-034 cleaner and continue but this is lame. I can see why eb is selling the pigment set he has if this happens frequently. We have never seen this occur with any ink system. No biggie for manual printers who can stop and clean before dozens of shirts are trashed but an easy deal breaker for autos I would imagine. This might even damage finer mesh counts. The gallon was properly mixed by RC for sure and then I mixed the living hell out of it with my drill on high speed and paint mixer for about 20 minutes as I thinned it and added some Matsui black to darken the color a touch, why there would be a dry chunk in there after that is beyond me.
Yep, back to pullin' on manual waterbased printing. While you do need more pressurethan plastisol printing, it's not so much just the direct pressure, but a combination of pressureand blade angle, created by a softer squeegee. With a 60 duro and 180 mesh we can actuallyget too much penetration with one hit.And after the way the Sericol ran yesterday, I'm sold. We're switchin. If anyone wants a stellardeal on the Rutland Pigments hit me up.