Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
I have been pondering the whole flash/heat source thing....IR panels are slow-ish to flash, but definitely more stable then quartz...Engineering wise, can we put a cover in front of the bulbs that changes its wavelength? Like we do for safe lights in the dark room. We would still be getting the intense heat from the bulbs so, obviously adding some forced air would help, like has been added to newer quartz flash units. At that point we would also want to run very close - shorter distance between bulbs and substrate...It would potentially help with flashing of black AND the more delicate fabric blends out there. Specifically, there are carbon colored fabric blends that looooooooove to melt under quartz bulbs... its obviously to much to ask for from fabric makers right? It may not be a miracle cure for mankind.... but a huge assist for Printerkind Anyways.... its a thought.
A thicker deposit will always help.... there is more volume to cross link and that takes more time. So from a visual perspective, that works for not torching the delicate fabrics.Printing a layer of anything on top would again slow down the crosslinking, but kinda defeats where the black is in the print order..... You and I both don't want a heavy deposit, but we want a durable deposit for wash durability ( i know wet on wet black doesn't help this that much ).If the assumption is that black absorbs all wavelengths, if reducing some of that helps to slow down the crosslinking.... The core idea is, will reducing light as a factor, leaving just the bulbs as a heat source with fans creating an active heating area, create a better flash environment for dark inks that crosslink faster under quartz bulbs.We know that infrared flashes do just fine with black ink - but are slower than most people want and are also Always On. Can we re-create some of that environment with a more active heat zone?Just a thought - I could be way off base
What's the effective difference between a heating bulb that emits no light and nichrome wire?It sounds like a joke, but I have no punchline. Sorry.