"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
oh oh..... I need a lot more time to respond to that question Pierre.Let's start with printing the ink at optimal temperatures. Remember all lab testing is done with the ink at 72-75 degrees. Also, right from the mixer. A retain is kept from every batch for at least a year. All ink will body up over time but it usually will follow a curve reaching max body within a few days to a few weeks. But the labs only test the retain if someone has a complaint about the ink. Of course long term testing is always done when a new ink is created.So, one big issue is trying to print white ink is: Printing when it is not at optimal printing temperatures.There are more and I will try to get to them later.Good post to follow!
The only issues I have with white plastisol:1. Gumming up and climbing the squeegee, even on the creamiest inks, more than any other color.2. The way it reacts to static electricity and flings off little strings that pull away from the mesh.The actual printing is pretty straightforward with the right variables.
1: Lack of understanding/control of variables. 2. Understanding and controlling ALL the variables which seriously impact labor and materials costs.3. What's the most important variable when printing white ink? The same as any other ink--all of them.4: I'd rephrase--how much are we falling short of what inks can deliver by not understanding and controlling the variables?That depends--on what variables you understand and control. Tough to know what you don't know you don't know, however.
I'm not sure about counting on the information and suggestions of the suppliers/tecnical support/manufacturers as they have no knowledge of the specifications of the tools used in your operations.
What the ink manufacturers should be providing the printers is the Inks analysis data.. These test are done and then technical support sells the ink as- awsome, creamy, good coverage, nice hand, low flash and a bunch of other adjectives and platitudes..An ink should be selected based on our constructed pump's ability or our pump should be constructed to match the inks personality.. In any case it must be orchestrated..
To understand the personality of the ink we need to Know it's properties:Optical Sepcifications-L, a, BDelta EPeak SpectralGloss percentageOpacity Per MilBleed Resistxy Chromaticity CoordinatesRheological Specifications-Relative ViscosityYield StressPlastic ViscosityShortness RatioThixotropic IndexTack PercentServers ViscosityThermal Specifications-Low ViscosityGel PointFusionRemeltHot Tack (after flash)Physical Properties-GrindEmissivitySpecific GravitySurface TensionCritical Surface TensionPercent PlasticizerShore A
Having this relatively short list of properties made available and technical support (job should be) making sure that printers understand what effect each spec have on the ink, then printers will not have a problem choosing the right ink to match their unique setup.
Great points to understand if you are an ink chemist but will not necessarily make you a better printer.
Dr. Pierre, do have any findings you are willing to share? what has changed where you can print 4x the speed?
Quote from: mimosatexas on April 02, 2014, 11:33:23 AMThe only issues I have with white plastisol:1. Gumming up and climbing the squeegee, even on the creamiest inks, more than any other color.2. The way it reacts to static electricity and flings off little strings that pull away from the mesh.The actual printing is pretty straightforward with the right variables.why is it climbing? do we need the feature that causes it to do that? would you (everybody here, not just mimo) sacrifice printability for less climb, or would you rather there was a lot more to clean up but it printed better?pierre
My main concern is the ink losing viscosity over time instead of gaining it. White ink when properly prepared prints like butter for a while, but tenses up over time, causing it to ride up the squeegee. It clears worse, and loses the sheering qualities that I want.
Quote from: blue moon on April 02, 2014, 09:10:21 PMQuote from: mimosatexas on April 02, 2014, 11:33:23 AMThe only issues I have with white plastisol:1. Gumming up and climbing the squeegee, even on the creamiest inks, more than any other color.2. The way it reacts to static electricity and flings off little strings that pull away from the mesh.The actual printing is pretty straightforward with the right variables.why is it climbing? do we need the feature that causes it to do that? would you (everybody here, not just mimo) sacrifice printability for less climb, or would you rather there was a lot more to clean up but it printed better?pierreI could give a crap about the cleanup in this regard, and am more concerned with consistency. I am probably more concerned with ink that performs consistently over time as I print on a manual and have plenty of other variables to account for on each stroke without worrying about adjusting over time for changing ink characteristics. My main concern is the ink losing viscosity over time instead of gaining it. My experience is likely different from most as I am printing on a manual, but I am still preheating metal platens and pre-mixing, etc. White ink when properly prepared prints like butter for a while, but tenses up over time, causing it to ride up the squeegee. It clears worse, and loses the sheering qualities that I want. This does not happen with any other color/brand/type of ink that I have used, only white (and every brand of white I have tried). I guess my original post described a byproduct of the problem, and not the problem itself. Using S mesh and a triple duro squeegee helps of course, but the ink is the issue.The static electricity thing is something I am noticing more and more and probably deserves its own thread...