"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I made my last statement of being a waste of time... (as a waste of “my time” and my money to “prove” anything to anyone that doesn’t want to be proved to. Some of you are so head strong over things that you don’t really see and becomes futile. They’ve proved it time and time again. So I’ve posted about things and you blew it off. I’ve shown a few pictures and you’ve blown it off..
Well I can say day in day out we produce high end graphics 12-14 colors with heavy halftone screens. We produce upwards of 300 screens per day for a lot of retail clients and do it on a I-Image with no issues or downtime. That accounts for something.We do use the original ink.
Quote from: RICK STEFANICK on July 01, 2019, 10:50:12 AMWell I can say day in day out we produce high end graphics 12-14 colors with heavy halftone screens. We produce upwards of 300 screens per day for a lot of retail clients and do it on a I-Image with no issues or downtime. That accounts for something.We do use the original ink.Yes, it does account for something. It’s a strong endorsement for wet ink but says nothing about it compared to wax. Shops can say the same thing about wax. What I’m interested in is shops that have actually compared and tested both and are willing to share the results. I respect your opinion but taking your last post at face value would be the same as blindly buying wax because another shop said it’s better. Sure you may not think we ‘need’ it but if equipment is going to sit here for years then I’d like to make sure we’re considering all options for quality, and longevity. If another machine at a similar cost produced a cleaner dot with less headaches then it’s pretty likely you’d have chosen it at the time. And that’s what I see here, that wax produces better screens with less headaches. Some are claiming otherwise but examples have only been shown that makes wax look better. Or well, apparently Dan has posted the contrary but I’ve never seen or it been able to find it. Would appreciate a link! Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I’ve never claimed wet ink dots look “better”. What I can prove is that your “pretty dots” mean nothing over a wet ink ugly dot. That I can prove, but not just yet. I’ve posted picture, but you need to see the proof on the shirt at the end of the video. It’s a “when I get to it”. If you don’t like that, sorry.it really comes down to “if you can win awards off of both wet ink and wax ink, is your pretty dot under the loop, an important deciding factor?I’m far more coming to have no issues with either, than to have one.
I really cannot believe their is enough difference between the two machines dot quality to be important. It is already well known from both sides they produce great enough dots to easily cover the most demanding shops. I don't think I ever heard anyone say an Epson film printer is better than a wax or ink DTS. Besides look at the product from someone like Serj, he does that with just a film printer, so if he can do that with film surely that can be done with any reputable CTS machine out there.
Quote from: inkman996 on July 01, 2019, 12:57:55 PMI really cannot believe their is enough difference between the two machines dot quality to be important. It is already well known from both sides they produce great enough dots to easily cover the most demanding shops. I don't think I ever heard anyone say an Epson film printer is better than a wax or ink DTS. Besides look at the product from someone like Serj, he does that with just a film printer, so if he can do that with film surely that can be done with any reputable CTS machine out there.Exactly! So if the dots are the same on a shirt then you’re paying for other factors. Other shops have claimed better quality with the wax though. I just don’t understand why the finally print quality and dot quality gets mentioned if it’s the same on the shirt though. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
You guys kill me, every year something new comes out or something that's been out for years is debated on, and in most cases the tried and true method wins out. I can see were wax would save money in the long run and inkjet printers over using film, and yes both might even do a better screen with more detail than film, but how does that relate to the customer? better looking prints bring more profit? can you tell a big difference in prints or is it just a step that helps speed up production. Either way this is a good thread for people looking into wax vs inkjet machines.