Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
come on guys, somebody in texas has to have a Starlight that they can load in the back of their car and take to Alan's shop... (or even let him bring some screens to image in their shop)Anybody in my neck of the woods (chicago) is more than welcome to bring your screens, film, emulsion, etc to our shop to test with.
Exposure calculators, test strips, percent dot held & lost, D-max, all that crap doesn't mean anything right now based on THAT picture. That's just unacceptable unless the emulsion is bad.
I'll chip in on the new machine.
We were a little curious with the rub test on the squeegee side of the screen so we threw a screen outside in direct sunlight for 2.5 minutes with Murakami Aquasol. I rubbed 3 times with relatively light pressure. The photo attached is what we ended up with. Luckily we have a nice, sunny day today to give this a shot. Nothing came of on the shirt side that was directly facing the sun. This was by far any kind of scientific test, but we wanted to put it out there anyway.-Paul
Quote from: Vastex on February 29, 2016, 04:37:08 PMWe were a little curious with the rub test on the squeegee side of the screen so we threw a screen outside in direct sunlight for 2.5 minutes with Murakami Aquasol. I rubbed 3 times with relatively light pressure. The photo attached is what we ended up with. Luckily we have a nice, sunny day today to give this a shot. Nothing came of on the shirt side that was directly facing the sun. This was by far any kind of scientific test, but we wanted to put it out there anyway.-PaulI have done this test (and others like 21 step test) a few times exposing HV outside before I had my large vacuum frame when it was my only option for exposing my flag screens. With Aquasol HV exposed outside under film and a sheet of 1/4 plexi (all I had at the time to hold the film down) here in Austin on a "normal" sunny day I got zero rub off full exposure after around 30-45 seconds of exposure. I was usually able to get usable screens anywhere from 15 to 45 seconds, but going for a full minute or longer would almost always cause issues with washout of the image as the UV would simply expose through the dark areas of the film. I was hardly scientific about it as the art was massive spot colors (not a halftone or fine line in site) and printed purposefully distressed on rough canvas, but rub test results did not result in blue at 30ish seconds or more (usually). I can't imagine a 2.5 minute exposure outside on a sunny day resulting in that kind of rub test failure. I wouldn't even get that kind of rub test failure on my DIY flo bulb unit after 2.5 minutes...Not doubting your results or implying anything, just commenting that the HV is a fairly fast exposing emulsion in my experience, especially in direct sunlight.