Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
110v dryer with a single element? I'm guessing the heat chamber is like 20" long, right? No baffles, skinny belt so shirts are being folded to fit through, etc. We use one of these at live events and set it so exit temp is 400ish with a laser reading. Its not even under the element long enough to scorch in our experience. Dwell time in the whole chamber is like 15 seconds max, which makes controlling the actual cure temp through the whole print basically impossible. One thing on our dryer we noticed and part of why we have it cranked so high is any air movement will cause drastic swings in the surface temp of the garment. Fans, ac kicking on, gusts of wind if you're printing with a door open, event just the act of laying the next shirt down on the belt can cool off the shirt massively in the chamber.
What Mimosa said... 4-5 seconds at cure temp? That should do for a flashbut not a full cure. The backs held up better than the L/C because even thoughthe print was down, it still went through the dryer twice and the L/C only once. Ifyou can't slow the belt any more then at least run them through twice and start savingup for a better dryer.
I originally had this dryer set to have an exit temp of around 400 and I was nervous I was actually torching garments. So I turned it down. I am going to raise up the element, and slow down the dryer even more and do some tests. Thank you for this info!!The back is what rubbed off. I printed the back then the front, so the back did go through twice and the fronts did not. The fronts stayed on perfect. 4-5 seconds at cure temp, I thought with Plastisol it just has to GET to 320, I didn't know it had to stay there. This is news to me!