"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Does the flood pressure & speed also change with the fast print speed?
There seems to be no angle on the squeegee, is there?Is anyone printing fast using regular mesh?
Quote from: Maxie on May 03, 2016, 07:06:12 PMThere seems to be no angle on the squeegee, is there?Is anyone printing fast using regular mesh?The"speed limit" is based on the fluid flow level of the mesh, the tack level of the ink and the pressure differential created by the blade.So the best case scenario for speed is a high flow rate mesh, (Jason had found a good one) a low tack ink and a blade to create a maximum fluid pressure differential by making a minimum edge, right deal with a profile to maximize the shearing force.
Quote from: Joe Clarke on May 05, 2016, 09:06:18 PMQuote from: Maxie on May 03, 2016, 07:06:12 PMThere seems to be no angle on the squeegee, is there?Is anyone printing fast using regular mesh?The"speed limit" is based on the fluid flow level of the mesh, the tack level of the ink and the pressure differential created by the blade.So the best case scenario for speed is a high flow rate mesh, (Jason had found a good one) a low tack ink and a blade to create a maximum fluid pressure differential by making a minimum edge, right deal with a profile to maximize the shearing force.I think, in english, that means a double bevel squeegee and open S-thread mesh I still haven't gotten back to my gallon of this ink as I have been way too busy with my full time job, but I know that when I do I need to adjust my dryer temps down a bunch to make it just right. I just haven't had the time to actually put into it, but I have all the other pieces to the puzzle. Joe, you even called and left me a message months ago and I appreciate that. Once I get it nailed down I'm sure it will be my next go-to white. That might happen when the bucket runs low on the white I use now though haha
Quote from: Wildcard on May 03, 2016, 06:42:15 PMDoes the flood pressure & speed also change with the fast print speed?It depends if the ink is shear thinning, barely shear thinning or shear thickening. If the ink is shear thinning the flood bar should be proximate to the mesh and speed should be maximum. If the ink is shear thickening it is best to leave a gap between bar and mesh greater than the wet film thickness and run the flood as slow as practical not to detract from throughput.
Quote from: Joe Clarke on May 05, 2016, 08:57:30 PMQuote from: Wildcard on May 03, 2016, 06:42:15 PMDoes the flood pressure & speed also change with the fast print speed?It depends if the ink is shear thinning, barely shear thinning or shear thickening. If the ink is shear thinning the flood bar should be proximate to the mesh and speed should be maximum. If the ink is shear thickening it is best to leave a gap between bar and mesh greater than the wet film thickness and run the flood as slow as practical not to detract from throughput.Any chance of getting some of this fine white to try in my shop here in Japan?
Revisiting this and had a question:Does anyone know how to get an M&R press to print this way? i.e., drop the squeegee blade all the way first and then stroke fast? No matter how I adjust our timers I can't get our press to do this. It "skims" over the top of the image and won't clear it. Leads to double stroking and other work arounds.
2013 AC/Servo Sportsman. Blade flys over the top portion of the print. When you are printing really fast the stroke begins before the blade hits mesh, depending on squeegee angle. I would love to set it like Alan has in the vid: flood, drop, wait, print stroke.