"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
What's the pre treat like for the M-Link?
Very nice, I am wanting to see that in AC this spring. I know that the M&R version is not the exact same version lawson was selling so I am interested to see how it holds up. Also, I am assuming M&R spent a good bit of time working on the rip. When using the white ink, does the cost compare similar due to ink costs or is brother a loose/loose as far as ink costs being high per CC and use more?I am still a believe in Epson heads running slower at high resolution, but this machine may change that.
Try heat pressing before the pretreatment. Seems to helps us keep the fibers down. Think roller squeegee on press.
Quote from: easyscore on December 16, 2015, 11:01:20 AMTry heat pressing before the pretreatment. Seems to helps us keep the fibers down. Think roller squeegee on press.We may but now we'd be heat pressing a shirt 6 times (assuming a front and back print). I think at some point that is a bit much to expect. In other news as of right now that shirt above was about $.60 in ink, the brother was around $4. Keep in mind plus around $1 each for pretreat. He's re-calibrating the machine now as we are seeing some alignment issues and even with clean heads we are seeing some banding on the blue of the white shirt printed previously. The Brother had VERY light banding on that print as well but honestly if I didn't point it out to you, doubt you would notice.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on December 16, 2015, 11:09:20 AMQuote from: easyscore on December 16, 2015, 11:01:20 AMTry heat pressing before the pretreatment. Seems to helps us keep the fibers down. Think roller squeegee on press.We may but now we'd be heat pressing a shirt 6 times (assuming a front and back print). I think at some point that is a bit much to expect. In other news as of right now that shirt above was about $.60 in ink, the brother was around $4. Keep in mind plus around $1 each for pretreat. He's re-calibrating the machine now as we are seeing some alignment issues and even with clean heads we are seeing some banding on the blue of the white shirt printed previously. The Brother had VERY light banding on that print as well but honestly if I didn't point it out to you, doubt you would notice. Pre-treatment should average around .25-.30. At least that is what we see on our unit. There should be no banding and you should not have to manipulate the file in almost all cases. The quality of the shirt is a major player when it comes to ink jet. Contact Alex or Geoff Baxter to get better information on the type of shirt. Also the ink we use is curable down the dryer but not at screen speeds so that will need to be addressed later.