Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Wilflex out out a nice little piece on wet-on-wet printing. Short but succinct. http://www.polyone.com/files/resources/Wilflex%20T_T_WetOnWet_v3.pdfSent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
"Controlling under-base flash temps— Monitoringthe flash temperature for the under-base whitewill help with the wet-on-wet printing. If the flashunit approaches cure temps, the platens canbecome too hot, which can thicken the inks andbuild/dry on the back of the screen. Ideal pallettemperature should be in the 180°–200° range.Build-up image blocking and colorloss will be the result."Anyone run their boards that hot?
Quote from: Rob Coleman on October 17, 2016, 01:09:23 PMWilflex out out a nice little piece on wet-on-wet printing. Short but succinct. http://www.polyone.com/files/resources/Wilflex%20T_T_WetOnWet_v3.pdfSent from my iPhone using TapatalkWhen I first started, we used Wilflex's SSV, then they came out with MCV (multi-color vinyl?) that wouldn't bleed into each other, like black lines against a yellow fill... there was no flashing yet...Steve
105-110 is perfect for us. no hotter.
Quote from: dirkdiggler on October 17, 2016, 07:05:21 PM105-110 is perfect for us. no hotter.Given the gel temp of ink how do you keep your pallets from climbing over 110? Here in New Orleans I am thrilled to keep a 12/14 with 2 flashes in the 130s and often find ourselves around 150 even running both flashes at .6 seconds and at 60% power. If we lower the flash time or power any more then the ink doesn't gel.
Anything over 140* on pallet temp and we start to see phase separation and buildup of our inks. Some colors worse then others but with all my testing 140* or even close to that and you will start to build regardless of how good your ink is. That seems like some mis leading info if you ask me