"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I know I am dredging this topic up, but we run the Douthitt here and on a job that we've printed for the last 3-4 years the Douthitt held way more detail.I have to go back into the file to eliminate a faint clipping area around a part of the art. The previous inkjet DTS didn't hold that detail at all. We are doing work that I previously don't think I would have attempted. We are trying to keep Dan busy with our seps.There are some quirks with the machine vs. inkjet, but i think it was money well spent around here. Our screens haven't looked this good since forever.
Quote from: mk162 on June 10, 2019, 11:28:13 AMI know I am dredging this topic up, but we run the Douthitt here and on a job that we've printed for the last 3-4 years the Douthitt held way more detail.I have to go back into the file to eliminate a faint clipping area around a part of the art. The previous inkjet DTS didn't hold that detail at all. We are doing work that I previously don't think I would have attempted. We are trying to keep Dan busy with our seps.There are some quirks with the machine vs. inkjet, but i think it was money well spent around here. Our screens haven't looked this good since forever.If you don't mind, can you share some of the quirks? I was thinking when I can't repair the rocket launcher any longer, I was thinking of going to wax. 1 thing I was thinking of is do you have to worry about clogs as much as you do with ink?
The biggest tip with the Douthit machines is to only add HALF a block of wax at a time. We leave ours on and in standby from 4pm to 7am and over the weekend.