"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Just as it sounds. Transparent enough to position the transfer very accurately and quickly. Prints fairly well and we never had an issue curing it either.
It's called PET - release/heat transfer film.. Although most would point to it's transparent attributes, It's main feature is it's stable cahracter in the production environment- No contracting and expanding like pulp from a tree.. Sent from my SM-N950U using Tapatalk
Casey@jbscreenprinting.comChinese girl, she will look after you. Install whatsapp on your phone as she's easier to get a hold of. She's basically a sales bot for a company called "kenteer new material and science". You can google them and see a little of what they do.The product you want is "1185B" in 640x480mm sheet size. 100um weight.
Forget about printing transfers the way you are. Sure it gets it done but it's inefficient and obviously a high reject count.Correct, flatbed press, pre shrink the sheets first then flash down the dryer on a faster belt speed after printing each colour. Final cure belt speed/temp should be the same as your initial pre shrink pass down the dryer.The media is PET, or silicone coated polyethylene. Very stable.As for a dryer, I've used a small vastex econored with good results, and have actually just purchased a two chamber Lil red X2 also from vastex, specifically for this system.Adhesive, best results are with Wilflex transfer printable adhesive and if you use crystals, also only the Wilflex variety. They'll have one weight of crystal so you can't go wrong.I have a Thieme 4 poster press so production is very fast, but also I have an atma clamshell. Both very good modern presses. You could get away with an old American cameo, I have one of these too,a tempo actually, basically a large cameo withheld benefit of air pressure for the squeegee carriage. 1185b at 100um weight is the best media. It takes plastisol, waterbased, also solvent.
Group buy? I'm in for a few thousand sheets.