"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
On another note I have often wished I had a heat press built into my manual press to smooth and flaten base prints or white ink prints.It would be great if I could drop a heat press onto one of my manual plattens to modify the condition of a semi-cured print RIGHT ON THE PRESS.The thought comes to me that on an auto it would be great to have a heat press platten at a station after a rough print and the rise of the platten would energize the platten against the pre-flashed ink print setting it nicely for the next series of colors. then again a heated roller, or immediate after flash station might do the same thing if the roller really works and the garment doesn't crawl forward of the roller. mooseman
You can use a spider monkey on a mini steam roller if you want. You can put lard in the screen if that floats your boat. There's always a better idea!
Quote from: mooseman on September 01, 2012, 06:59:52 AMOn another note I have often wished I had a heat press built into my manual press to smooth and flaten base prints or white ink prints.It would be great if I could drop a heat press onto one of my manual plattens to modify the condition of a semi-cured print RIGHT ON THE PRESS.The thought comes to me that on an auto it would be great to have a heat press platten at a station after a rough print and the rise of the platten would energize the platten against the pre-flashed ink print setting it nicely for the next series of colors. then again a heated roller, or immediate after flash station might do the same thing if the roller really works and the garment doesn't crawl forward of the roller. moosemanLike this Moose?2 Color Fleece Printing
Quote from: Gilligan on September 01, 2012, 10:17:54 AMQuote from: mooseman on September 01, 2012, 06:59:52 AMOn another note I have often wished I had a heat press built into my manual press to smooth and flaten base prints or white ink prints.It would be great if I could drop a heat press onto one of my manual plattens to modify the condition of a semi-cured print RIGHT ON THE PRESS.The thought comes to me that on an auto it would be great to have a heat press platten at a station after a rough print and the rise of the platten would energize the platten against the pre-flashed ink print setting it nicely for the next series of colors. then again a heated roller, or immediate after flash station might do the same thing if the roller really works and the garment doesn't crawl forward of the roller. moosemanLike this Moose?2 Color Fleece PrintingThat machine could be a very expensive but awesome koozie , sleeve , tag print press and maybe left chest if your daring.
I just want to say that after using the smoothing method for some time now, the roller that Erik @ Action developed gave me the best results than any of the other methods. Sure, you can make your own, but I think by the time you add the time, labor and material costs together, you will find that it would have been cheaper to just order one. Action has always taken care of their customers over the years and is offering to refund your money if you don't like it. Not many people stand behind their products these days and that says a lot about their company. Eric and the folks at Action spend a lot of time and money developing their products before we see them for sale. I am not paid in any way to endorse Action. I'm just a screen printer that uses their products and have always been happy with their service. This roller might not be for everyone but I think it will benefit the auto printers out there who's customers are demanding super smooth prints. I always have a couple of cooling stations that I can't use on my press, might as well put them to use right? One thing I do know for a fact is that once you smooth the initial white under base, everything you print on top is smooth as glass. I can use higher mesh counts for my more transparent colors that usually show every little pit or imperfection of the white. Some printers have people at the end of the production line heat pressing shirts to smooth out the print. This can be done with the roller with no extra cost (labor,power, time etc.) Once again, I will get some better video out soon for those who want to see it.Brian
Quote from: brianbrownlee on September 01, 2012, 11:27:29 AMI just want to say that after using the smoothing method for some time now, the roller that Erik @ Action developed gave me the best results than any of the other methods. Sure, you can make your own, but I think by the time you add the time, labor and material costs together, you will find that it would have been cheaper to just order one. Action has always taken care of their customers over the years and is offering to refund your money if you don't like it. Not many people stand behind their products these days and that says a lot about their company. Eric and the folks at Action spend a lot of time and money developing their products before we see them for sale. I am not paid in any way to endorse Action. I'm just a screen printer that uses their products and have always been happy with their service. This roller might not be for everyone but I think it will benefit the auto printers out there who's customers are demanding super smooth prints. I always have a couple of cooling stations that I can't use on my press, might as well put them to use right? One thing I do know for a fact is that once you smooth the initial white under base, everything you print on top is smooth as glass. I can use higher mesh counts for my more transparent colors that usually show every little pit or imperfection of the white. Some printers have people at the end of the production line heat pressing shirts to smooth out the print. This can be done with the roller with no extra cost (labor,power, time etc.) Once again, I will get some better video out soon for those who want to see it.BrianI 100% agree with your commenst and assessment of the dedication to achieve total customer satisfaction practiced by Erik and the Team at Action Engineering.