"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Yes buy it. It's an invaluable tool for pre-press operations. I've seen many times the tension on a static isn't even enough to get the meter to read it.. 17-19 is pretty high.. most static's end up around the 10-14 range. We put a meter on a BRAND NEW static at the Ft Worth show.. for a 110 it read 16n..High tension is anything over 40n. The optimum range for decent printing is in the 25n to 35n range.
I have always said, that with the exception of off the wall HD printing, that I could print any award winning print on a Precision oval with wood screens with the mesh attached with staples.
Quote from: Printficient on October 17, 2011, 06:28:21 PMI have always said, that with the exception of off the wall HD printing, that I could print any award winning print on a Precision oval with wood screens with the mesh attached with staples.This is true. However, you could print many more per hour, with better registration over the life of the screens, faster setups and less ink consumption leading to higher profits.Just sayin...
Quote from: jsheridan on October 17, 2011, 05:50:37 PMYes buy it. It's an invaluable tool for pre-press operations. I've seen many times the tension on a static isn't even enough to get the meter to read it.. 17-19 is pretty high.. most static's end up around the 10-14 range. We put a meter on a BRAND NEW static at the Ft Worth show.. for a 110 it read 16n..High tension is anything over 40n. The optimum range for decent printing is in the 25n to 35n range.I'll give you 25n. The one glaring omission to this discussion has always been the capability of ones equipment to hold the parameters needed to benefit from anything higher. All I am saying is that make sure the equipment you have can hold the parameters before you go gung-ho on "high" tension.I have always said, that with the exception of off the wall HD printing, that I could print any award winning print on a Precision oval with wood screens with the mesh attached with staples.
Quote from: Evo on October 17, 2011, 06:32:39 PMQuote from: Printficient on October 17, 2011, 06:28:21 PMI have always said, that with the exception of off the wall HD printing, that I could print any award winning print on a Precision oval with wood screens with the mesh attached with staples.This is true. However, you could print many more per hour, with better registration over the life of the screens, faster setups and less ink consumption leading to higher profits.Just sayin...I don't know ...them thar ovals fly...
Quote from: Printficient on October 17, 2011, 06:28:21 PMQuote from: jsheridan on October 17, 2011, 05:50:37 PMYes buy it. It's an invaluable tool for pre-press operations. I've seen many times the tension on a static isn't even enough to get the meter to read it.. 17-19 is pretty high.. most static's end up around the 10-14 range. We put a meter on a BRAND NEW static at the Ft Worth show.. for a 110 it read 16n..High tension is anything over 40n. The optimum range for decent printing is in the 25n to 35n range.I'll give you 25n. The one glaring omission to this discussion has always been the capability of ones equipment to hold the parameters needed to benefit from anything higher. All I am saying is that make sure the equipment you have can hold the parameters before you go gung-ho on "high" tension.I have always said, that with the exception of off the wall HD printing, that I could print any award winning print on a Precision oval with wood screens with the mesh attached with staples.I'd love to see that print. I don't know if you've really seen many award winning prints lately Sonny, because I don't think you'd win even honorable mention with something you printed with those tools, much less an award.
Quote from: Printficient on October 17, 2011, 06:28:21 PMI have always said, that with the exception of off the wall HD printing, that I could print any award winning print on a Precision oval with wood screens with the mesh attached with staples.And I can cook a steak with a blowtorch and a pair of tongs..
It does outperform the sefar and saati mesh we have hands down, in all categories except ink deposit thickness.