"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I tried it a few months ago.Got boards and ink up to print temps (boards at 120 - ink around 90 degrees)...The ink was harder to shear than the Street Fighter Low bleed. Thicker and stringier... I had to work harder to get it to print well. Pulled it out and put the SFLB in, no issues.For an ink that comes in at maybe $2 less a gallon in a 5 gl pail..... I would stick with the SFLB. I was told it was made to compete in the L.A. market at a competitive price point.Now, I also have some gripes about Rutland consistency for the last year or so.... So, my sample could have been bad.
I just got a quart of this from my supplier, going to try it out tomorrow. Any of you guys using it yet? Ill do a write up on my findings later in the week. Ill be running it tomorrow.IMG_5570 by jeffreymcg13, on Flickr
You could just use Quick White and end your search for the best white out there. Rutland whites suck and cant hold a candle to it. When the Rutland Rep tells me he cant touch what we do with it that tells you something. I am not anti Rutland either we use their water base mixing system and am happy with that.
We did try SF white a few years ago. it was terrible to work with. Never touched any Rutland white after that experience.Union got some decent white inks in their line up but still nowhere near as good as some of those Wilflex whites. Getting some Epic Bright Tiger white next week. The Wilflex X Ryonet Lave Cotton white works well too.Anyone still using QCM whites?
Quote from: JBLUE on November 16, 2016, 01:00:16 AMYou could just use Quick White and end your search for the best white out there. Rutland whites suck and cant hold a candle to it. When the Rutland Rep tells me he cant touch what we do with it that tells you something. I am not anti Rutland either we use their water base mixing system and am happy with that.Quick white what we run.. been running it for the majority of 10 years. But when i got here they were running street fighter. I hate that product. We also use the WB pigments and 80 percent of all production here is discharge