"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Wilflex and forget about it
Quote from: dirkdiggler on June 29, 2016, 04:00:48 PMWilflex and forget about it I couldn't agree more.
we are nearly through our first 5er of Synergy NexGen base and have been much happier with it than with Amazing Base (which we were very happy with). The Synergy base seems to disperse the PC pigments far faster than the amazing base, flashes faster with pretty much no tack, and has some seriously excellent coverage properties.FYI, on the wilflex PC colors, you can email their tech services department and you can request a custom mix with less FL pigments... I had a gallon of Red PC which is discontinued but I wanted to use up, Steve Hedge was able to get me mixes to use that PC for 185 and 199, I'm not near our ink computer, but I seem to remember that there was basically no FL pigments in it, and it prints better.
Quote from: jvanick on June 29, 2016, 09:05:49 AMwe are nearly through our first 5er of Synergy NexGen base and have been much happier with it than with Amazing Base (which we were very happy with). The Synergy base seems to disperse the PC pigments far faster than the amazing base, flashes faster with pretty much no tack, and has some seriously excellent coverage properties.FYI, on the wilflex PC colors, you can email their tech services department and you can request a custom mix with less FL pigments... I had a gallon of Red PC which is discontinued but I wanted to use up, Steve Hedge was able to get me mixes to use that PC for 185 and 199, I'm not near our ink computer, but I seem to remember that there was basically no FL pigments in it, and it prints better.End of the month at MEG we are going to cover in detail "ink build-up" Jason. The onus is on the ink maker as such we formulate based upon sorting the causes of build-up into four categories; 1) Temporal Absorption, 2) Phase Separation, 3) Critical Pigment Volume and 4) Thermal Response. We do this because the "solutions" to ink build-up for each of the four categories differ. Fortunately each of them can be identified by their occurrence, appearance and location. For example Phase Separation will build-first and foremost at the perimeter of the screen on a warm flashed underbase and will exhibit peaking prior to building-up on the subsequent screens. The prepress solutions are a higher fluid flow mesh. The on-press adjustments include reduced angle with a softer blade at optimal speed. Ironically if we were to take the same steps with Temporal Absorption the problem would get worse. But as was implied and explicitly stated above, the ink must serve to make WOW possible. See you in a few weeks, I think it will be a useful discussion.