"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Quote from: Printficient on June 02, 2011, 03:24:50 PMIn thinking of this I came to the conclusion that if one does not pop many screens than the time to install panels over bolt mesh is a non sequitur. If one works at a shop that pops a lot of mesh then the cost savings of the bolt mesh is a no brainer.The time factor here is in the initial installation of mesh. When retightening the mesh there is very little difference between the two.This is one of those things that the industry needs to educate (NOT sale) the end user on. While there is a very specific need for retens, the honest fact of the matter is they are not necessary to print high end art.This industry needs to quit selling things and start sharing the basic thought processes to print any level of art on a shirt.The only way to make it today is to cut costs. You do not need a Corvette to go to the store. If you want one and can justify the costs of one against your bottom line than by all means get one. Just know that you can get to the store just as well on a bicycle.OK Let me have it. I am on your side, I value new and creative over outdated traditionalism. Any choice made on facts and a clear understanding of the cost structure is a good choice.An example, you could buy a bunch of used wood frames with mesh similar to a drunken co-ed on the Vegas strip and end up spending lots of production time lining up the job and then never getting it to line up (the mesh stretches out of registration). The choice of the cheap wood frames became a liability.If a newbie chooses to use panels in his one man shop and then pull the panels rather than reclaim is that a bad choice? If that increases his print time when he is likely already up to his neck, if he includes the price in the job and knows his profit margin and cost structure - could anyone call that a bad choice?I am just the heretic.
In thinking of this I came to the conclusion that if one does not pop many screens than the time to install panels over bolt mesh is a non sequitur. If one works at a shop that pops a lot of mesh then the cost savings of the bolt mesh is a no brainer.The time factor here is in the initial installation of mesh. When retightening the mesh there is very little difference between the two.This is one of those things that the industry needs to educate (NOT sale) the end user on. While there is a very specific need for retens, the honest fact of the matter is they are not necessary to print high end art.This industry needs to quit selling things and start sharing the basic thought processes to print any level of art on a shirt.The only way to make it today is to cut costs. You do not need a Corvette to go to the store. If you want one and can justify the costs of one against your bottom line than by all means get one. Just know that you can get to the store just as well on a bicycle.OK Let me have it.
I think that a newbie would be better off with static frames.
Have you measured that cost to actual mesh use per screen, when I did over a year ago it was about seven bucks...I have not checked this again, and do not even know what current mesh prices are, have you checked?
WTF Sonny...really? yeah lets waste money buying something that we will not keep...that makes no sense what so ever in the real world of business. I would tell everyone to buy retens and more specifically newmans since they are the best on the market...but your point is to buy substandard equipment to learn to print correctly? really? so should someone start off using substandard equipment so they can learn to print right? how about having the right tools for the job....?sam
Quote from: DouglasGrigar on June 01, 2011, 11:40:57 PMHave you measured that cost to actual mesh use per screen, when I did over a year ago it was about seven bucks...I have not checked this again, and do not even know what current mesh prices are, have you checked?150/48 for example...By the yard, yields 2 screens: $16 or $8 per screenBy the panel: $29.30 per screenAnd that's at the first qty discount for the panels, mesh is at single yard prices. So that's what, 73% more than bolt mesh. You could count the lock strips but that's a one time purchase. And yes, if you throw in labor time it probably works out to be a good deal with the panels in that you can work on something else instead but it takes me about 15-20 minutes max to load a screen carefully, square to the roller with corners softened specifically for the mesh count and tension I'm going for. We're talking a few hours a month here. What I can't afford with our print schedule these days and our small library of 30 screens is to have a popped screen mid run and have spend that additional half hour to remove the busted mesh, reload and go. The panels are going to kill it in scenarios like that. Also, with a small screen library, I can now detension screens and load in different panels if that needs to happen without losing mesh. This is why I went with the panels. Tensioning takes the same amount of time whether you use panels or bolt mesh. You have to "seat" the bolt mesh a little more carefully but no big difference there.I think I have now officially spent more time debating this issue than it would've took to load hundreds of screens with bolt mesh.
Point in case: Requires less squeegee pressure. Tighter screen requires less pressure to deflect than a loose one?
The amount of off contact to print properly with a static is an infinitesimal amount more than with a reten
The only thing retens have going is if done correctly they do give a constant parameter in tension.
Honestly I can't really believe this is even open to debate. If static frames were a viable long term choice than most shops would stock them and stop there. Re-tens, in my humble opinion, stomp static frames into the dirt.
It does leave the question, where will the hybrid screens fall into place in your view.
Quote from: DouglasGrigar on June 02, 2011, 09:21:26 PMIt does leave the question, where will the hybrid screens fall into place in your view.I don't really consider them hybrids, it's just another method of attaching mesh to frame to make a static screen, just with no glue involved.Roller frames offer infinite adjustment of tension, and therefor can truly be called "re-tensionable".
Come on Sonny. Isn't screen printing about? Having statics increases this vs. Retens. With retens you can set the newtons in order to have constants thus leading to repeatability on many fronts. Sam