"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Whats the latest word on the DLP machines?
How long is a little bit?
Quote from: Colin on October 10, 2016, 01:31:13 PMWhats the latest word on the DLP machines?That you have to sell a Kidney to afford one, and they are slower than wax or inkjet, and when printing on garments DPI's over a certain amount are moot anyhow.Still like to see technology, if they could make the laser the width of a textile screen, so it just has to do one scan and it's exposed, that would be legit, but currently it is slow, no consumables is nice though.There is also that guy who talks about LED tv screen exposure, which would actually be cool if it worked, especially with like a 4K screen, but getting the right wavelength and no undercutting, would take lots of R&D for such a niche product, can't see it happening anytime soon.
Quote from: zanegun08 on October 10, 2016, 02:20:35 PMQuote from: Colin on October 10, 2016, 01:31:13 PMWhats the latest word on the DLP machines?That you have to sell a Kidney to afford one, and they are slower than wax or inkjet, and when printing on garments DPI's over a certain amount are moot anyhow.Still like to see technology, if they could make the laser the width of a textile screen, so it just has to do one scan and it's exposed, that would be legit, but currently it is slow, no consumables is nice though.There is also that guy who talks about LED tv screen exposure, which would actually be cool if it worked, especially with like a 4K screen, but getting the right wavelength and no undercutting, would take lots of R&D for such a niche product, can't see it happening anytime soon.It already works and did when I first posted about it. I was only posting about it because I had already proven it works.I will be making videos soon of how to make one and expose screens with it. It takes about 10 minutes at the most to take apart an LCD computer monitor/TV and re-arrange the parts so it lays flat on the glass and you have the power and video cables attached to the control unit. Comparisons need to be made testing undercutting, but actually it may have less undercutting than other methods.... It might have zero undercutting since the LCD channels are forcing the light in a particular direction.The wavelength you need is the same as your emulsion needs.I think people are confused... I am not using the backlight from the panel or monitor itself, only the LCD panel which is already transparent. The contrast ratio may even be higher than film or other methods, it only needs higher power or longer exposure times compared to exposing the same screen without the panel there like with just film. Basically it is like if you printed to a tinted piece of film.... the ink areas would still be "that much darker" than the clear/tinted area, so the ratio would be similar and you only need more power or longer time to get the same exposure result as you would get with your film or DTS etc. And yes, it is super cool.
Quote from: Full-SpectrumSeparator on October 10, 2016, 06:14:53 PMQuote from: zanegun08 on October 10, 2016, 02:20:35 PMQuote from: Colin on October 10, 2016, 01:31:13 PMWhats the latest word on the DLP machines?That you have to sell a Kidney to afford one, and they are slower than wax or inkjet, and when printing on garments DPI's over a certain amount are moot anyhow.Still like to see technology, if they could make the laser the width of a textile screen, so it just has to do one scan and it's exposed, that would be legit, but currently it is slow, no consumables is nice though.There is also that guy who talks about LED tv screen exposure, which would actually be cool if it worked, especially with like a 4K screen, but getting the right wavelength and no undercutting, would take lots of R&D for such a niche product, can't see it happening anytime soon.It already works and did when I first posted about it. I was only posting about it because I had already proven it works.I will be making videos soon of how to make one and expose screens with it. It takes about 10 minutes at the most to take apart an LCD computer monitor/TV and re-arrange the parts so it lays flat on the glass and you have the power and video cables attached to the control unit. Comparisons need to be made testing undercutting, but actually it may have less undercutting than other methods.... It might have zero undercutting since the LCD channels are forcing the light in a particular direction.The wavelength you need is the same as your emulsion needs.I think people are confused... I am not using the backlight from the panel or monitor itself, only the LCD panel which is already transparent. The contrast ratio may even be higher than film or other methods, it only needs higher power or longer exposure times compared to exposing the same screen without the panel there like with just film. Basically it is like if you printed to a tinted piece of film.... the ink areas would still be "that much darker" than the clear/tinted area, so the ratio would be similar and you only need more power or longer time to get the same exposure result as you would get with your film or DTS etc. And yes, it is super cool. something to remember here is that the polarized glass of the LCD display will stop 50% of the light from coming through. This is not visible to the naked eye, but it is how the LCD displays work. As mentioned above, it will cause the exposure times to be significantly longer. Also, I would be concerned with undercutting more than anything else. Putting vacuum on the LCD panel will distort the Liquid Cristal and make it not work. Keeping it away would allow light to spill around the mask.pierrepierre
Anything new and you attack it without even trying it.
Lots of issues with using an LCD to expose like that. Heat and UV will also hurt the LCD over time.
Quote from: Full-SpectrumSeparator on October 11, 2016, 05:37:00 PMAnything new and you attack it without even trying it. yea, umm. no.I think there is plenty of enlightened criticism when it comes to ideas like this though, considering the issues with it are obvious... your "proof of concept" was comparable to people exposing screens using projectors, aka unusable...Want a much higher quality $200 exposure setup? By an inkjet printer. Done.