"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Quote from: Inkworks on August 03, 2012, 08:43:04 PM170C = 338FRight on.274F=134 C= totally under cured. But as I have said they went through at 338F for 2 minutes.
170C = 338F
Quote from: Rockers on August 03, 2012, 08:46:32 PMQuote from: Inkworks on August 03, 2012, 08:43:04 PM170C = 338FRight on.274F=134 C= totally under cured. But as I have said they went through at 338F for 2 minutes.Sorry, Google search done it to me. On the temp info.
I used Ryonet WBP Hybrid emulsion. It doesn't seem to have the solids of some others I've used. For this job, I coated 2/1 so there wasn't alot of EOM. I always post expose for discharge and use harden x. With the Harden x, I've had it hold up for a 900 piece job.
Answer.. the plastisol wasn't cured completely. Needs to stay in the heat longer or you need to flash the base before the colors. When using a waterbase underbase and plastisol colors, the underbase cures first by steaming off the water, only then will the plastisol start to cure. This plastisol under-cure tends to happen more when people do a true WOW print with no flashing of the discharge base first. If you flash the base until you can start to barely see the design on the shirt, then print your colors, you'll find the shirt won't need to stay in the dryer so long.
Quote from: ShirtShackandMore on August 03, 2012, 09:41:25 PMI used Ryonet WBP Hybrid emulsion. It doesn't seem to have the solids of some others I've used. For this job, I coated 2/1 so there wasn't alot of EOM. I always post expose for discharge and use harden x. With the Harden x, I've had it hold up for a 900 piece job.Got a pot of WBP here but no harden x. Does adding the harden x make it a lot harder to reclaim the screen?