"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Well I've decided that next week I will tackle the dark room and try and rebuild the "shelves" the correct way using the materials we have on hand, it shouldn't take me more than a day and since we are pretty much dead anyway it'll give me something to do....FYI I'm loving all the GREAT feedback, I want to thrive in this industry and the more I learn the better off I feel that I'm headed in the right direction!Nick
So with that said....is there a way to accurately measure this with out any fancy tools? What else could be wrong here? Because at this point I don't think flipping them is going to fix that. We coat our screens 2:1 for anything below 230 and 1:1 for anything above that......Nick
Alan gave great advice but make sure when you check the edge of the emulsion its on a developed screen, your looking for a crisp edge where the stencil is, with 110 or even 156 you can see the OEM by eye easily with out feeling the edge. Trying to guage your OEM on a coated non burned screen is hard with out the right tools.
Quote from: Inkman996 on January 07, 2013, 10:55:52 AMAlan gave great advice but make sure when you check the edge of the emulsion its on a developed screen, your looking for a crisp edge where the stencil is, with 110 or even 156 you can see the OEM by eye easily with out feeling the edge. Trying to guage your OEM on a coated non burned screen is hard with out the right tools.Even still, 0% Eom vs 30% EOM is pretty easy to see the difference. I can see our 100% EOM's just by looking at the dry emulsion on the screen. Nice and dark blue.
Wow this was just to much to read and I may be saying something that has already been said, but you hit a key word "sport store" and 20 years old. You just told me that is what your company prints or started out printing and that type of printing was and still to some degree been heavy printing thru low mesh counts with 2 to 3 colors. Sports such as football, baseball, basketball, softball etc tend to lean toward heavy printing for durability (that has change some now because of dryfit which needs a thinner ink or waterbase). I might be wrong but sounds like your company was sports printing and just started taking more detail jobs and using the same process as they did for sports. You might not have a screen tension problem but a problem with the style of printing you all are doing, fine graphics with halftones and thin lines, high detail needs to be printed with higher mesh counts and even your screen coating (EOM) may need to change. We print both styles here in our shop sports and high detail and sports like baseball and football the graphics are 95% spot with only a few halftones on 87,110,137 and I coat those screen a little thicker, High end stuff 110 to 305 mesh, like I said someone may have mention this already, but check your printing process and separate the two..Oh and squeegees, 60, 70 duro standard printing 60/90/60 , 70/90/70 high end printing etc.Darryl