"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Working our way through some Wilflex Quick right now, and am less than impressed after using One Stroke's whites.
Quote from: Prince Art on October 11, 2017, 10:52:15 AMWorking our way through some Wilflex Quick right now, and am less than impressed after using One Stroke's whites.Really? I switched from Union LB whites to Wilflex about 6 months ago and like them a lot better. A lot easier to work with IMHO. What are you liking more from the One Stroke versus the Quick? If One Stroke is that much better I might have to give it a go.
Quote from: Biverson on October 12, 2017, 10:16:38 AMQuote from: Prince Art on October 11, 2017, 10:52:15 AMWorking our way through some Wilflex Quick right now, and am less than impressed after using One Stroke's whites.Really? I switched from Union LB whites to Wilflex about 6 months ago and like them a lot better. A lot easier to work with IMHO. What are you liking more from the One Stroke versus the Quick? If One Stroke is that much better I might have to give it a go.I'm having trouble with cured Quick breaking apart when stretched. May be related to our short electric dryer, but it isn't because the ink hasn't hit cure temp - last batch hit well above cure temp, & was sent through twice & we still had problems. (It technically passed a 120%-130% stretch, but just barely.) Or it could be due to some other shortcoming in our process. BUT- I haven't had that problem with previous inks. I'm used to inks simply not breaking, unless you're playing Hulk Hogan with the shirt. ELT-S in particular can go on pretty thin, and still stretch like crazy. (Obviously has stretch additive, hence "S". But combined with low cure temp, I don't ever worry whether customers will have washout or cracking probs.)
Quote from: Prince Art on October 13, 2017, 01:10:38 AMQuote from: Biverson on October 12, 2017, 10:16:38 AMQuote from: Prince Art on October 11, 2017, 10:52:15 AMWorking our way through some Wilflex Quick right now, and am less than impressed after using One Stroke's whites.Really? I switched from Union LB whites to Wilflex about 6 months ago and like them a lot better. A lot easier to work with IMHO. What are you liking more from the One Stroke versus the Quick? If One Stroke is that much better I might have to give it a go.I'm having trouble with cured Quick breaking apart when stretched. May be related to our short electric dryer, but it isn't because the ink hasn't hit cure temp - last batch hit well above cure temp, & was sent through twice & we still had problems. (It technically passed a 120%-130% stretch, but just barely.) Or it could be due to some other shortcoming in our process. BUT- I haven't had that problem with previous inks. I'm used to inks simply not breaking, unless you're playing Hulk Hogan with the shirt. ELT-S in particular can go on pretty thin, and still stretch like crazy. (Obviously has stretch additive, hence "S". But combined with low cure temp, I don't ever worry whether customers will have washout or cracking probs.)Thanks for the info! Can I ask what dryer you're using? I've got an Econored 2. Now that you say that there has been times where that's also happen for me. Ink was hitting 350 and in there for around 35 seconds. I just assumed it cracked as I just got an auto and it laying down a thinner layer of ink? I'm not one to cut corners so I'm going to get some OS in and try it out.
I have a 4 foot tunnel, no forced air. I put the temp on 1000 and the surface of the ink reaches around 420-430 before it exits. That's helped improve the stretch on Wilflex Perfect white. 370 on the surface might not be enough to get the bottom layer to 320 in a smaller chamber.
Quote from: Nation03 on October 14, 2017, 12:41:23 PMI have a 4 foot tunnel, no forced air. I put the temp on 1000 and the surface of the ink reaches around 420-430 before it exits. That's helped improve the stretch on Wilflex Perfect white. 370 on the surface might not be enough to get the bottom layer to 320 in a smaller chamber.Point taken. However: Much above 380 on our temp gun usually means scorched shirts. And, we don't have to get other inks that hot, even with a thicker ink deposit. With other inks, if temp gun peak reads at about 40 degrees higher than required cure temp, we're good. Also, Quick White is supposed to cure at 300 - so I'd expect a reading of 70-80+ degrees over should be way more than adequate. (It would totally ruin most of the blend fabrics we print on.)