Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
So I have tried all sorts of stuff with my Aquasol HVP and nothing is helping it stand up to the CCI discharge white for longer than a few dozen prints. I bought SP1400 locally to try instead, added diazo, and began testing. So far it is also failing pretty miserably, though the detail it holds compared to the AqHVP is surprisingly good. I am holding literally every single dot my printer outputs at 55lpi.Here is what I have tested so far:Exposing 225S and 160 mesh, coated 2/1 for 4:45 and 5:20 respectively, based on a stouffer step test to hard 7 soft 8 for each mesh count. Both are yellow mesh.I have tried no post exposure, 10 minute post exposure, 10 minute post exposure with MS hardener. I have also tried, quick air dry by fan and overnight dry in the dry box, both post exposure. All screens are dried overnight after coating.No matter what, the CCI is making the emulsion tacky, then breaking down, then when washing out almost every dot under 5% is simply going away. Clearly the emulsion is breaking down. I have done 30-50 strokes on each test.I have done similar tests with Matsui and Magna discharge whites and even just exposed, air dried, and put on press the SP1400 is holding up perfectly fine for 50 prints with those.Any ideas? I will likely be getting one of the CCI discharge emulsions next, but I really don't understand why it is so much more caustic than the matsui and magna that I have one hand.
I long ago stopped caring about price for products that "just work". I'll pick up some Nova asap. Do you do anything special or just expose and go? If I can cut out the post expose, overnight drying, hardener, etc. it would be awesome. I just want to speed up turnaround on screens while using the CCI if possible. It has such better dry in time and is so creamy out of the can vs the Matsui. It is not quite as white/opaque, but those factors make it worth using to me.I'll pick up some of the WR-14 as well. Does it require any of the post expose, overnight drying, hardener, etc.? Most of my runs are around 100-250 right now. The AQHVP holds up fine at these quantities with post expose and hardener when using Matsui, but it fails on press in like 25 prints with the CCI. The SP1400 is failing on press at around 25 with just expose and go, 30 with post-expose, and 50-55 with post-expose and hardener. All are losing every dot under 5-10% on washout. All of this is unacceptable.
No diazo in the HVP. Screens are as dry as I can make em at each step of the process (in a drying cabinet with dehumidifier and lots of airflow over night). I am using the monster max coater, and both sides are rounder than the sharp side on most coaters, but sharper than the round side, if that makes sense. I am burning with a 1k MH diy unit.The part that is baffling to me is the difference between the CCI and the Matsui/Magna/Sericol/Jantex discharge inks and TW/Speedball/etc waterbased inks I've used without issue on the HVP (post exposed and hardened). Nothing eats at it like the CCI...The SP1400 with diazo only held up marginally better.
Try WR-14 or TX-Discharge for short to medium run discharge ink jobs. Try our C-Tex for long run waterbase / discharge runs for bullet proof stencils. When used with our PermX hardener we have had customers print 150,000 imprints of white discharge ink. We also make a reclaimable hardener called HardenX. The key to hardeners is to let them sit after you wipe it on. Over night dramatically increases the resistance, than just wiping it on and going to press. The hardeners need time to crosslink and it takes hours to do this. Try that next time you make a waterbased screen. Put the hardener on the night before. Let me know if you have any questions.