Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Quote from: jvanick on February 24, 2016, 02:20:16 PMI have one of those...When exposing for best resolution, I was FAR under cured.And then delamination!Resolution excellence is nothing if it all falls off at 10 impressions!Mesh count and thread thickness also play a part in useable resolution, you have to have threads to hold the dots in place and the emulsion stencil has to survive the required number of impressions or... well fail and that costs money.
I have one of those...When exposing for best resolution, I was FAR under cured.
Quote from: DouglasGrigar on February 24, 2016, 02:24:21 PMQuote from: jvanick on February 24, 2016, 02:20:16 PMI have one of those...When exposing for best resolution, I was FAR under cured.And then delamination!Resolution excellence is nothing if it all falls off at 10 impressions!Mesh count and thread thickness also play a part in useable resolution, you have to have threads to hold the dots in place and the emulsion stencil has to survive the required number of impressions or... well fail and that costs money.10... try 2 lol. We could hear it failing on the first print. You havent lived until you hear the emulsion crackling with the squeegee stroke.
Quote from: jvanick on February 24, 2016, 02:25:54 PMQuote from: DouglasGrigar on February 24, 2016, 02:24:21 PMQuote from: jvanick on February 24, 2016, 02:20:16 PMI have one of those...When exposing for best resolution, I was FAR under cured.And then delamination!Resolution excellence is nothing if it all falls off at 10 impressions!Mesh count and thread thickness also play a part in useable resolution, you have to have threads to hold the dots in place and the emulsion stencil has to survive the required number of impressions or... well fail and that costs money.10... try 2 lol. We could hear it failing on the first print. You havent lived until you hear the emulsion crackling with the squeegee stroke.And we have officially dragged the thread off topic, but it’s nice to see some good come of all of this.Good customer service, points on some anomalous problems and I get to “spread some technical love” as it were. Win-Win.
Quote from: Rockers on February 23, 2016, 06:49:16 PMExposure times would have been above the recommended ones by the emulsion manufacturer but I can promise you there would be no useable fine details left on a screen. All I`m saying is I can hold a lot more fine lines on a 150-s by exposing it on a MSP3140 then on the LED unit. And believe me we have not changed the way we make film positives over the last few years.Is not the point right there? You are apples and orange-ing this...I have a brand new truck and it is the same brand (UV exposure) but one has dual back wheels and and a big block and the newer less expensive one is small block standard - but I don’t get why they won’t do the same job...Tubes 15-17% loss (but I can still get more and better halftone imaging than 60% of the industry with base level equipment)LED - 7-8% lossMH - 3-5% lossThen the size, features, active life, maintenance, price, energy use....All different - not bad just different.I cannot expect my Jeep to be able to keep up with a Mustang now can I? Does that make my trashy Jeep bad?
Exposure times would have been above the recommended ones by the emulsion manufacturer but I can promise you there would be no useable fine details left on a screen. All I`m saying is I can hold a lot more fine lines on a 150-s by exposing it on a MSP3140 then on the LED unit. And believe me we have not changed the way we make film positives over the last few years.
Quote from: DouglasGrigar on February 24, 2016, 10:58:56 AMQuote from: Rockers on February 23, 2016, 06:49:16 PMExposure times would have been above the recommended ones by the emulsion manufacturer but I can promise you there would be no useable fine details left on a screen. All I`m saying is I can hold a lot more fine lines on a 150-s by exposing it on a MSP3140 then on the LED unit. And believe me we have not changed the way we make film positives over the last few years.Is not the point right there? You are apples and orange-ing this...I have a brand new truck and it is the same brand (UV exposure) but one has dual back wheels and and a big block and the newer less expensive one is small block standard - but I don’t get why they won’t do the same job...Tubes 15-17% loss (but I can still get more and better halftone imaging than 60% of the industry with base level equipment)LED - 7-8% lossMH - 3-5% lossThen the size, features, active life, maintenance, price, energy use....All different - not bad just different.I cannot expect my Jeep to be able to keep up with a Mustang now can I? Does that make my trashy Jeep bad?If that is the case why not being told so right away before the purchase and have the equipment shipped half around the world. Why not say right away you have to expect loss in image quality or you can`t hold as fine detail as on your MH unit, and I`m not talking only halftones here but as well lines which I would expect to hold on a 225-s yellow mesh. Unless of course everyone in my shop`s gone totally stupid coinsidently around the same time as we installed this unit.
This is all educational (to a small few I suspect} but I prefer to come in and get product out the door. Sorry but this thread has little to do with the 99% of shops that have figured it out long ago. I'm all for process improvement but theres laboratory, and boots on the ground. I prefer the latter. To be sure, I am open to beta test products and equipment but with a high degree of reservation. Sorry but its not rocket science.
Quote from: tonypep on February 25, 2016, 07:33:15 AMThis is all educational (to a small few I suspect} but I prefer to come in and get product out the door. Sorry but this thread has little to do with the 99% of shops that have figured it out long ago. I'm all for process improvement but theres laboratory, and boots on the ground. I prefer the latter. To be sure, I am open to beta test products and equipment but with a high degree of reservation. Sorry but its not rocket science.That’s not exactly fair, it is similar to “nuff said” to try and end any conversation.I know you remember all the grief Don Newman got for his ideas and frames, how he had to fight for just about every inch, at a time when "boots on the ground” was wooden frames. A time when rope and groove screens were still common and we both remember how that was back then.I have been telling people that just like the massive contribution Don had for our industry, the LED technology (regardless of who) is going to have an impact as similar as that was.
Rockers, the LED unit is different from the standpoint that when compared to MH it will have a very small amount of undercutting. Adjusting your RIP to compensate for this should sort out your thin line issues.Alan, when I reported, I clearly said that it "was very close to MH and for 99% of the shops it will not make a difference." Only thing we could see in testing was the we were holding a 3% dot with MH and 5% dot with LED. As mentioned above, adjustment in the RIP should address that.ScreenFoo, Lou's LED units are the only ones I am aware of that have all the features properly designed unit should have. Most manufacturers did not disclose all the details he did so it is possible they have them too, but as of right now I know of faults in many other units on the market that he (and Vastex) are addressing in their design. While I don't know anything about the manufacturer of the LEDs and their standards, information Lou shared on the wavelength, power supply, cooling, proper light field distribution and so on is on par or better than anything else I've seen. While many other units might have equivalent or even one feature that is better than the LDTronix/Vastex setup, every one of them I've measured and tested had at least one significant (at least to me) downfall.
Quote from: blue moon on February 25, 2016, 01:36:07 PMRockers, the LED unit is different from the standpoint that when compared to MH it will have a very small amount of undercutting. Adjusting your RIP to compensate for this should sort out your thin line issues.Alan, when I reported, I clearly said that it "was very close to MH and for 99% of the shops it will not make a difference." Only thing we could see in testing was the we were holding a 3% dot with MH and 5% dot with LED. As mentioned above, adjustment in the RIP should address that.ScreenFoo, Lou's LED units are the only ones I am aware of that have all the features properly designed unit should have. Most manufacturers did not disclose all the details he did so it is possible they have them too, but as of right now I know of faults in many other units on the market that he (and Vastex) are addressing in their design. While I don't know anything about the manufacturer of the LEDs and their standards, information Lou shared on the wavelength, power supply, cooling, proper light field distribution and so on is on par or better than anything else I've seen. While many other units might have equivalent or even one feature that is better than the LDTronix/Vastex setup, every one of them I've measured and tested had at least one significant (at least to me) downfall.First off, I didn't mean to imply the guy hadn't done his homework on the EE/ME side of the issue. It was just another pitch that sounded to me just like the "Sell your presses, DTG is here" BS that we've all read a million times now. Second, when you say "Light field distribution" do you mean you measured how close the light is to collimated, or that you measured to make sure one area of LED's wasn't brighter than some other area of LED's? IMHO the former is at least as important as the latter for a quality stencil.Anyway, keep up the R&D guys.
I'm all about hyperbole but I'm going to have to step in here and disagree A LOT.
First off, LED could very well be great...one day, and some units may be close to greatness but some are not.