Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Quote from: Steve Harpold on March 12, 2015, 08:56:35 AMHey, A photopolymer is a very fast exposure and will expose with several wave lengths. Many of which are commercially available. Dual cure emulsions are not as sensitive to such a large band of wave lengths. They preform the best when exposed to a wave length shift the NM up by 10 and they will no longer perform at all!!!! Many of the led EXPO units have a disclaimers, they will expose a photopolymer in 30 seconds or less. And for some emulsions it could be 1-5 minutes or higher. These exposure units are using commercially available sources. Simply upping the wattage without the correct wave length will not help. Under Cutting: The use of reflectors is counter productive to this concept. The goal is to get the cleanest light and not bounce light all over a enclosed box. However in the chase for speed many have chosen to bounce the light of reflectors as to not waste any energy. We used s light modeling software placing a led in a pattern taking into account the angle and cone that the LED produces the each beam of light covers a 4" x 4 " area. Of course there is always a small overlap, with the modeling software we are able to ensure that where that small overlap occurs the intensity of light is +/- 10%. I will post the graph on what it looks like once the light is measured. Side note: The wattage of our system to expose a dual cure that fast is: 560 watts (in this case you have worry about proper heat sinks. Try a diazo, let me know how fast you can expose it and how clean. Also send me a message with your info and I will send you a screen back exposed. Please mail the art with the below picture to: Brown Manufacturing Attn : Steve 4661 StaffordGrand Rapids, MI 49548 ThanksSteve,of the two commercially available units I tested (with spectrometers), light field was at 5% and 1% fluctuation. If you are saying that you have a 10% variance in the strength of your light field on the glass, that is too much. Did I misunderstand something?pierre
Hey, A photopolymer is a very fast exposure and will expose with several wave lengths. Many of which are commercially available. Dual cure emulsions are not as sensitive to such a large band of wave lengths. They preform the best when exposed to a wave length shift the NM up by 10 and they will no longer perform at all!!!! Many of the led EXPO units have a disclaimers, they will expose a photopolymer in 30 seconds or less. And for some emulsions it could be 1-5 minutes or higher. These exposure units are using commercially available sources. Simply upping the wattage without the correct wave length will not help. Under Cutting: The use of reflectors is counter productive to this concept. The goal is to get the cleanest light and not bounce light all over a enclosed box. However in the chase for speed many have chosen to bounce the light of reflectors as to not waste any energy. We used s light modeling software placing a led in a pattern taking into account the angle and cone that the LED produces the each beam of light covers a 4" x 4 " area. Of course there is always a small overlap, with the modeling software we are able to ensure that where that small overlap occurs the intensity of light is +/- 10%. I will post the graph on what it looks like once the light is measured. Side note: The wattage of our system to expose a dual cure that fast is: 560 watts (in this case you have worry about proper heat sinks. Try a diazo, let me know how fast you can expose it and how clean. Also send me a message with your info and I will send you a screen back exposed. Please mail the art with the below picture to: Brown Manufacturing Attn : Steve 4661 StaffordGrand Rapids, MI 49548 Thanks
Quote from: blue moon on March 12, 2015, 09:35:21 AMQuote from: Steve Harpold on March 12, 2015, 08:56:35 AMHey, A photopolymer is a very fast exposure and will expose with several wave lengths. Many of which are commercially available. Dual cure emulsions are not as sensitive to such a large band of wave lengths. They preform the best when exposed to a wave length shift the NM up by 10 and they will no longer perform at all!!!! Many of the led EXPO units have a disclaimers, they will expose a photopolymer in 30 seconds or less. And for some emulsions it could be 1-5 minutes or higher. These exposure units are using commercially available sources. Simply upping the wattage without the correct wave length will not help. Under Cutting: The use of reflectors is counter productive to this concept. The goal is to get the cleanest light and not bounce light all over a enclosed box. However in the chase for speed many have chosen to bounce the light of reflectors as to not waste any energy. We used s light modeling software placing a led in a pattern taking into account the angle and cone that the LED produces the each beam of light covers a 4" x 4 " area. Of course there is always a small overlap, with the modeling software we are able to ensure that where that small overlap occurs the intensity of light is +/- 10%. I will post the graph on what it looks like once the light is measured. Side note: The wattage of our system to expose a dual cure that fast is: 560 watts (in this case you have worry about proper heat sinks. Try a diazo, let me know how fast you can expose it and how clean. Also send me a message with your info and I will send you a screen back exposed. Please mail the art with the below picture to: Brown Manufacturing Attn : Steve 4661 StaffordGrand Rapids, MI 49548 ThanksSteve,of the two commercially available units I tested (with spectrometers), light field was at 5% and 1% fluctuation. If you are saying that you have a 10% variance in the strength of your light field on the glass, that is too much. Did I misunderstand something?pierreHey Pierre, how does the 3140 compare?
Pierre, what would you need to measure my results, interested in doing. Willing to pay for your time if you have it.
I haven't figured out how to include other peoples message in the purple box.
Holy chit, actual science from a manufacturer! Brown from the backfield!Why no diazo emulsions with LED? Under cutting too much of an issue at the exposure lengths necessary? Or just that much time isn't saved over metal halide?
Holy chit, actual science from a manufacturer! Brown from the backfield!
Steve,Great info!The measurements were taken by Richard Greaves and myself over last year or so. We used three different instruments, one of which is a laboratory grade $2k+ UVA/UVB meter. Richard also has a meter by Chromaline, I think, and I have a generic 365nm UV meter by General Instruments. They all have sensing elements in the head, attached with a cable to the main unit. Readings were taken in one inch increment across the field. All the readings were taken right on top of the glass while trying to keep the sensor flat against it. Considering all the meters read similar field uniformity, I would venture to guess the readings are right. I would NOT bet my life on it, these, after all, we're not laboratory conditions, but uniformity of the results, both at my shop and ISS floor leads me to believe we did OK.
Quote from: blue moon on March 13, 2015, 12:03:29 AMSteve,Great info!The measurements were taken by Richard Greaves and myself over last year or so. We used three different instruments, one of which is a laboratory grade $2k+ UVA/UVB meter. Richard also has a meter by Chromaline, I think, and I have a generic 365nm UV meter by General Instruments. They all have sensing elements in the head, attached with a cable to the main unit. Readings were taken in one inch increment across the field. All the readings were taken right on top of the glass while trying to keep the sensor flat against it. Considering all the meters read similar field uniformity, I would venture to guess the readings are right. I would NOT bet my life on it, these, after all, we're not laboratory conditions, but uniformity of the results, both at my shop and ISS floor leads me to believe we did OK. It was pleasure to speak with you today on the LED concept. I believe I have an understanding of your proposal and it seems logical. Thanks for taking the time to illustrate the concept. I have run the simulation, if you have time tomorrow stop by, the results are intriguing!! Thanks