"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Even with the super thin threads he uses, there has to be a lot of dots falling on top of threads...
the emulsion almost holds dots in suspension by itself.
Quotethe emulsion almost holds dots in suspension by itself.Yep. I think this is why you can hold so much more on thin thread with the right emulsion/stencil. Your minimum EOM is lower with a thinner overall mesh thickness and your open area is higher. It puts a lot more on the emulsion than standard mesh.
Quote from: Colin on April 06, 2013, 07:34:34 PMEven with the super thin threads he uses, there has to be a lot of dots falling on top of threads...One of the better things I picked up from watching the videos is that EOM help fix that, as he mentioned as long as there is even a partial path, the ink can still fill the whole dot after it gets past the mesh.
Haven't watched this yet but Colin, we run 55lpi on 150/48 and 180/48 S or LX. You will not get dots in certain % ranges of course but it will hold that lpi surprisingly well. This is with a thinner coating of emulsion, 2/1 on the thin edge. Typically done with art that doesn't need the 0-20% or 80-100% dots on that screen. It gets confusing with thin thread mesh b/c they are insanely versatile. That same 150 can be coated all the way as thick as 2/2 round edge and throw down a plastisol ink deposit that rivals any 110 out there. 135/48 holding 60lpi?....hmmm, it could work. Theoretically it could work just as well, better in fact than the 150 or 180 as they all share the same thread size and lowering the mesh count only leaves you with higher odds of not landing a dot on a thread. You would need an emulsion with fairly incredible bridging properties to get a thin, even stencil that will hold out for you through resolution and printing. Done right I bet you could get 20-80% on the 135 with the thinnest possible EOM and excellent, I mean imagesetter or near imagesetter, films. But I'm also presuming that was misspoken.