"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Quote from: mk162 on April 20, 2015, 11:19:15 AMripcord, while underbasing may seem like a waste of time, printing something 3 times is probably more of a time waster...That's true if you have a multi station press...For me it's extra work to print a two color job with a flash because I only have a single station...
ripcord, while underbasing may seem like a waste of time, printing something 3 times is probably more of a time waster...
I think that if a 16" x 20" flash is not gelling a 10" x 12" print fairly evenly, the panel is suspect (or you are too far away, or you have drafts)And, 16" x 20" is bigger than a lot of manual printers use.
I've been printing a two color job this morning with white as one of the colors (the green isn't an overprint, it's butt registered,) so I tried lowering the flash to two inches. It's not a very big print, only 9" wide so indeed it makes the flash seem more even...but the temp as I read it on the surface reaches over 300 degrees. Maybe I'll get a temperature control for my flash unit like I have on my dryer.So, can you really not print over cured ink or is that something that has been repeated so many times that everyone believes it? It would seem that once in the dryer, the heated ink goes back to a semi liquid state, which is when the bond between ink layers and the final cure happens. I've never understood why it would make a difference if the underbase had been gelled or fully cured.I think next time I print a job with an underbase I'll do an extra shirt as a test and fully cure the underbase with the flash. Then I'll wash it a few times to see if the color comes off.....