Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Probably not a bad idea. i have printed them before on the auto without a jacket hold down. Single stroke, and a good white and you should be fine, even with the lining isue.
Brad his problem is the lining. With out a hold down it is going to be frustrating to say the least. Every print will lift the outer shell and probably smear. I would bite the bullet and print them all manual with a hold down.
Quote from: Inkman996 on July 09, 2013, 10:12:36 AMBrad his problem is the lining. With out a hold down it is going to be frustrating to say the least. Every print will lift the outer shell and probably smear. I would bite the bullet and print them all manual with a hold down.Greetings TCT - If you do decide that a hold down is the way to go - We have these in stock. The one that we send you for your manual can also work on your automatic. Here's the page if you are interested - http://www.actionengineering.com/Cat-24-1-502/Specialty_Application_Pallets.htm
Take a sheet of 3/8-5/8 plywood, MDF or what-have-you, using a jig saw cut the middle out of it 2" bigger all-around than your print size. Sand the cut edges and double-sided tape it to your platen with the print centered on it and normal off-contact etc. take the outside ring of the board and sand and masking tape the cut edge.put the jacket on the platen over the board center and position it for the print, take the outside ring of the plywood and push it down to clamp the jacket in place. print, lather, rinse, repeat.Depending on how thick the jacket & lining are you may need more clearance than the jig-saw blade left, so you may need to sand the outside ring of the plywood a little more to give the right fit.here is a little more complex home-brew design, same principle though:http://www.screenprince.com/custom/mytoolsofthetrade/jacketholddown.htmFor 900 pcs. spending the time to build a good one should pay off on this job alone.