"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Quote from: jvanick on August 01, 2014, 07:34:49 PMwould your customers really be happy with a 1-hit white? I've never seen a 'true 1-hit' that looks anywhere near as good as a pfp.For us water base printers discharge works just fine
would your customers really be happy with a 1-hit white? I've never seen a 'true 1-hit' that looks anywhere near as good as a pfp.
Quote from: ScreenPrinter123 on August 02, 2014, 02:38:31 PMBulldog,If you end up getting the 120's ignore Alan and get the 120/48's (60% open area) as opposed to the 120/54's (50 something % open area). Alan doesn't know what he's missing. Ah ok, Alan (Buffington), that makes a lot of sense now. So the 120/48 that ScreenPrinter123 mentioned is a 120S and the 120/54 that Alan mentioned are actually a 120M.Correct? And so the 120S would lay down slightly more ink than the 120M?
Bulldog,If you end up getting the 120's ignore Alan and get the 120/48's (60% open area) as opposed to the 120/54's (50 something % open area). Alan doesn't know what he's missing.
Quote from: bulldog on August 05, 2014, 01:53:59 PMQuote from: ScreenPrinter123 on August 02, 2014, 02:38:31 PMBulldog,If you end up getting the 120's ignore Alan and get the 120/48's (60% open area) as opposed to the 120/54's (50 something % open area). Alan doesn't know what he's missing. Ah ok, Alan (Buffington), that makes a lot of sense now. So the 120/48 that ScreenPrinter123 mentioned is a 120S and the 120/54 that Alan mentioned are actually a 120M.Correct? And so the 120S would lay down slightly more ink than the 120M?They will deposit almost the exact same amount of ink. 47 cm3/m2 for the 120S and 48 for the 120M.
Quote from: alan802 on August 05, 2014, 04:49:40 PMQuote from: bulldog on August 05, 2014, 01:53:59 PMQuote from: ScreenPrinter123 on August 02, 2014, 02:38:31 PMBulldog,If you end up getting the 120's ignore Alan and get the 120/48's (60% open area) as opposed to the 120/54's (50 something % open area). Alan doesn't know what he's missing. Ah ok, Alan (Buffington), that makes a lot of sense now. So the 120/48 that ScreenPrinter123 mentioned is a 120S and the 120/54 that Alan mentioned are actually a 120M.Correct? And so the 120S would lay down slightly more ink than the 120M?They will deposit almost the exact same amount of ink. 47 cm3/m2 for the 120S and 48 for the 120M.Do those numbers actually mean the opposite of what I was thinking? That the 120M would actually be the one to deposit slightly more? I see the ink volume column now...the higher the number the more ink deposited seems to be the trend?Second question, if they're that close, does the advantage then become that the 120M can be tensioned slightly higher?Is there something else I'm missing here?Brandon
Technically speaking we would be able to print with less pressure and faster with the 120S versus M but we are maxed out on both with the M already so we might as well use the more durable mesh count, but they are very similar in that regard as well. Maybe Brian would be generous enough to let me try out a 120/48 so I can see exactly what I'm missing.