"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I use an 1100, but found this for you. It also jibes with settings I've seen folks post on another forum.
I also use the 1400 and have a spare ready to go. But without a rip, I can't really help much. I wish I could. I printed some hoodies and sweatpants yesterday and I skipped the spray tac thanks to Mr. Moosey. I DO have the "Ditto" Inkjet Film Feeder (multi-sheet feeder) that is mounted on to my 1400 and I sure do like it. When my 1400's finally both croak, I might look on ebay for another, I like them so much.I've got 2 Epson 3000's in storage, both were functional when idled. I never really liked them for jobs with tight registration, and they were pretty fiddly with lots of plugged nozzles along the way. But they were sure nice for 17" wide films. If someone wanted them pretty bad, I'd probably let them go. I can use the space.
You need a RIP, either commercial or GhostRip. We ran through 3 1400's running AccuRip, films were excellent.Steve
I use the Ultra premium photo paper setting and the Photo PRM. It gives a good dense black. No rip.
Quote from: thinkdesign on December 21, 2014, 02:00:28 PMI use the Ultra premium photo paper setting and the Photo PRM. It gives a good dense black. No rip.But, what about halftones?Steve