Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
PrepressJust as I try to do on opaques and/or fleece, I may compensate for the "smush" and strart with a bolder line on reverses and like compensating for dot gain, a smaller line when printing the line itself.
Hello Action, Yes, I'm aware of the product. I'd be interested in one if I knew it would fit correctly unlike the last floodbars and pallets I purchased from you which were not made to the same specsas either the OE or the previous sets I purchased from you.Anyone have any non-sales advice?
EB we use one on every dark print we run. It works best on more open areas but we are not smashing the crap out of it either. For the best results its a delicate dance to get it perfect. Are you running it directly after the flash?
The "nub pinch points" that the pallet locking mechanism grabs are quite a bit thinner than both OE and the boardsI ordered several years ago. This allows the board to slide back and forth on the arm, never really locking.I was told that basically I need to adjust the locking mechanism on all arms of both my presses to accommodatethe one pallet that isn't correct, this advice led me to assume they had encountered this problem before.They didn't know how to make this adjustment but according to them it is an easy process. (it isn't)Same thing with the winged floodbars. Original equipment is at a certain height, this is very important and maybenot apparent to folks that don't print. First floods I ordered matched this height. Then the design changed,and the next set I ordered, one was at a completely wrong angle, ripping a screen before the rear of it wouldeven make contact. They replaced that one after I sent pics and the floodbar back.The rest of the floodbars in that set, though at the correct angle, were not at the same height as the OE or first floodbars I ordered from Action. This creates problems when switching floodbars out. Say you have your flood depthset for the new style floodbar (they're shorter) and then put in the old style (taller). Ripped screens again.the new shorter one's do not allow a hard flood either, usually not a problem (waterbase) but comes upoccasionally.The height is adjustable to an extent (about 1/8") but I've decided to just have the brackets made so that allof my floods are the exact same height.I just want uniformity in my machine accessories. For what I've paid I can expect it.
Quote from: JBLUE on December 11, 2012, 04:21:05 PMEB we use one on every dark print we run. It works best on more open areas but we are not smashing the crap out of it either. For the best results its a delicate dance to get it perfect. Are you running it directly after the flash?Hasn't been done here in awhile, but yes, when we were it was right after the flash.