Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
I'm assuming that was a poly gold/yellow ink right? One thing that will help a lot with printing those thick inks is warming them up and stirring them up a bit too. If you used a 110 mesh base for the solid text then the 230 with the halftone and text you should be able to do one revolution on the press. For shearing that ink better try steeper angle / more pressure if the squeegee isn't buckling over and consider a triple durometer squeegee (65/95/65 is what I use for poly ink). You will probably need 2 passes still to get that underbase cleared and in the weave as well as on top but it would still be a lot better than where you are at, to get it better you will need better screens and the press better.
This thread has been good for sure though! It's very easy for us new guys to not have ANY understanding of not just how but WHY some of these things make the print better and this is helping to explain those things vs "Do this".
Anyone got a good source for cheap tripple?
Quote from: Gilligan on January 16, 2013, 09:52:40 AMAnyone got a good source for cheap tripple?This is the one thing you do not want to cheap out on.
Then who has the best price on GOOD tttrrriiipppllleee duro blades?
Quote from: Gilligan on January 16, 2013, 11:51:40 AMThen who has the best price on GOOD tttrrriiipppllleee duro blades?You can call Saati directly and order all sorts of squeegee by the roll or foot at reasonable prices. Molded or cut style.
Quote from: IntegrityShirts on January 16, 2013, 12:11:29 PMQuote from: Gilligan on January 16, 2013, 11:51:40 AMThen who has the best price on GOOD tttrrriiipppllleee duro blades?You can call Saati directly and order all sorts of squeegee by the roll or foot at reasonable prices. Molded or cut style.+1 call Saati! I stupidly tried the cheapo rubber once and right out of the box it didn't even feel correct, it was more flexible than what it should have been. The edge was far from crisp like you would get from Pleiger ir Saati. I will never cheap out on rubber again.
Quote from: Gilligan on January 16, 2013, 11:51:40 AMThen who has the best price on GOOD tttrrriiipppllleee duro blades?Gilligan if you want to get the best price on all your stuff stick with a supplier that you like. Use them for everything you can. It may be more expensive up front but when they start putting you on a lower pricing tier you will love it.
Heh heh.... "Right out of the box". I should have mentioned that for Nick--Rockstar in Denver is pretty good about keeping decent blade around, and they're reasonable about pricing. IIRC, they are carrying Saati blades (and mesh and chems, for that mattter)