Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
We all keep saying it prints better and shears better, but what does that mean? The shearing is happening on the top of the screen and the print is underneath. That sounds like we are not really shearing it! Or are we?
How would one test if the ink long or short bodied?What about the fact that we are shearing on the top?Pierre
OK, so many good points, but I am going to try to reel this in and return to the less practical and more theoretical discussion. We all keep saying it prints better and shears better, but what does that mean? The shearing is happening on the top of the screen and the print is underneath. That sounds like we are not really shearing it! Or are we?Pierre
I was thinking today about spaghetti on a fork while printing today.If we are shearing with the squeegee, it means we are shearing at where the emulsion touches the squeegee. Which means there is an ink thickness from the mesh to the top of the emulsion. Now would this ink thickness be thick enough to give us ink release problem?If it does for long bodied ink, wouldn't it be better to have a low EOM on the ink side of the screen, so the spaghetti ink is thin enough to just break apart.
I'm trying to understand what makes it long or short.. Do you mean the ingredients? Or the measurement.Sent using Tapatalk
Quote from: abchung on May 19, 2014, 05:48:30 AMI was thinking today about spaghetti on a fork while printing today.If we are shearing with the squeegee, it means we are shearing at where the emulsion touches the squeegee. Which means there is an ink thickness from the mesh to the top of the emulsion. Now would this ink thickness be thick enough to give us ink release problem?If it does for long bodied ink, wouldn't it be better to have a low EOM on the ink side of the screen, so the spaghetti ink is thin enough to just break apart.Getting the ink thin enough has to do with the amount of force applied to the ink to get it at it's fluid state. (It's plastic viscosity). Your thought towards lower eom will suggest distance the ink has to travel to transfer (it's shortness ratio-how it resists flow) if it's too low then higher force will also have to be applied for transfer to occur but the ink may not hold it's shape once it's deposited on to the shirt.Sent using Tapatalk
Pierre, after reading some of your post I see what your asking about whats going on at the bottom of the screen. From what I see it all depends on whats happen at the top..short body long body don't matter if the inks are not warm,correct squeegee, squeegee angle, print pressure, print speed, tight mesh, mesh count to me all that plays a big factor in how a ink will work. I would almost bet you and I could use the ink and it might be the root to boot in your shop and might print like crap in my shop from the way I set it up, I know all this still does not explain a long and short body ink and why it happens, but I know some inks print great for me and some don't.Darryl