"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
14 years of M3 use here, for the last 4 I switched to S mesh Statics, doubt I would ever go back to rollers. However, if you retension and stay on top of rollers they probably are better, but it takes alot of time. S mesh statics hold decent tension and last a long time with zero upkeep, right now, thats where I will stay.
You will discover that the number is not as important as a standard and consistency to it if you are going to ignore the number and let it slide then just stay with statics.
Quote from: dirkdiggler on February 08, 2015, 08:34:41 AM14 years of M3 use here, for the last 4 I switched to S mesh Statics, doubt I would ever go back to rollers. However, if you retension and stay on top of rollers they probably are better, but it takes alot of time. S mesh statics hold decent tension and last a long time with zero upkeep, right now, thats where I will stay.This. I have nothing bad to say about roller frames, but don't know if we will ever go back.Murphy37
There must be one heck of a learning curve for success with Newman Frames. I have used them for years and to this day I'm scared to go over 25 Nm even with Newman Mesh. If I have 20 usable screens I've popped 10 to get there. I have read and reread, watched the stretching videos numerous times and the only thing I can think of going wrong is the alignment clips are damaging the mesh and creating a weak spot. I just received some mesh panels so hopefully that will help. I understand the theory of screen tension and agree that retensionable screens are better, but dang they create a lot of tension. I don't know if I'd get MZX again unless you have side clamps. To me they seem to have a lot of flex when mounted by the square bar.
Quote from: mooseman on February 08, 2015, 10:01:47 AMYou will discover that the number is not as important as a standard and consistency to it if you are going to ignore the number and let it slide then just stay with statics. Those numbers are actually very important and are specific to different types of mesh one can use. Check with the manufacturer and you'll find that a single mesh count can have 3 different tension levels based on how the end user stretches the mesh. Yes the numbers are important and it should be obtained from the mesh mfg BUT the point is even if you are say 10% short of mfgr suggested value the idea is to hold consistency in the screen condition and not let it slide to the "soft side"mooseman
the idea is to hold consistency in the screen condition and not let it slide to the "soft side"