"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
i'm going to check our exposure this weekend, but we had it pretty dialed in with the i-image. at least i thought we did.And typically we'll clean off all the ink, put in the dip tank, spray with liquid renuit, then degrease if needed
have you tested exposing a screen and putting it directly in the tank? no ink or cleaning before dipping. That would narrow down the issue. You could also clean little areas with different chems on a single screen and see if any areas are harder to remove post dip.
Quote from: mimosatexas on August 23, 2014, 11:30:44 AMhave you tested exposing a screen and putting it directly in the tank? no ink or cleaning before dipping. That would narrow down the issue. You could also clean little areas with different chems on a single screen and see if any areas are harder to remove post dip.The only way this would narrow down the issue would be a brand new screen. One that hasn't had any chemical on it. I am doing some r&d at a shop here in town that uses Nova the way Eric does. I am trying to replicate the issue. I'll post results. On a side note Nova is a photopolymer not a dual cure. The diazo is added to make the stencil hold up to WB Discharge ink with no added steps. Eric call me today and let me know the parameters you are doing.
Also we tried some citra paste yesterday, and it didn't really seem to help.Another thing we do, once screens are exposed they sit out in the sun to post expose. Sometimes for 15 mins, sometimes for 4 hours. Would it be hardening the emulsion to much that it can't strip down?