Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
One more question regarding flood bars. On the press I work on (an older Gauntlet), aside from the angle built into the edge of the floodbar itself, the flood bars are canted toward the squeegee in such a way that when the floodbar lifts and the squeegee comes down, there is very little space between the edge of the squeegee and the edge of the flood bar, pushing ink up behind the squeegee. Depending on the viscosity of the ink, especially whites and high opacity colors, there's upwards of a half pint of ink up there, making a mess at cleanup, and what seems like having to constantly add ink to the screen. I've seen pictures of M&R presses and they all seem to have the flood bar tilted toward the squeegee like that, but some other makes seem to have the flood bar more perpendicular to the screen and parallel to the squeegee. Is there any reason I can't rotate the angle of the flood bar back within the travel allowance on the angle adjustment to open up that space a bit? Thinning some of the inks isn't an option as the loss of opacity is unacceptable. What effect will changing the floodbar angle have, if any? As currently set up, we're not doing a hard flood anyway.
We have both, but prefer the ink traps that M&R offers. The winged flood bars eventually create a pool of ink (a mess) above the image/behind the squeegee.
Hey Gabe,we actually do a "hard flood". That's when you push the ink into the mesh with the floodbar. In order to do it, we have the floodbar set up just PAST the point of touching.pierre
Another question, when looking at flood bars and squeegee holders I see single notch or double notched. I assume that this is just to make it easier to mount the clamps? My American has single notch that appear to look like the m&r styling.
does this work with White, If I do anything like this with white I get a double image, My white flood id always 3-4mil above the mesh.Quote from: blue moon on November 03, 2012, 11:15:17 AMHey Gabe,we actually do a "hard flood". That's when you push the ink into the mesh with the floodbar. In order to do it, we have the floodbar set up just PAST the point of touching.pierre