"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Our I Image sits in a room in the front half of our building, so it is fully climate controlled for heat or AC. In other words its in a low humidity environment at all times. Our typical humidity level is in the low 20's. I know for a fact if it was kept in the printing half of the shop it would be dripping with moisture because its always humid here. Regardless it works for us with little fuss so no complaints. We use the T6 ink that it shipped with and do not want to bother trying to change ink types and potentially have issues to deal with. Our emulsion is Ulano QTX, a high solids fast drying emulsion. We never coat a hundred screens at a time, at most 30 at a time with about 50 screens ready to go. It is what it is, its not a deal breaker, love the machine but environment is a quirk one has to deal with.
Quote from: inkman996 on March 24, 2021, 08:10:46 AMOur I Image sits in a room in the front half of our building, so it is fully climate controlled for heat or AC. In other words its in a low humidity environment at all times. Our typical humidity level is in the low 20's. I know for a fact if it was kept in the printing half of the shop it would be dripping with moisture because its always humid here. Regardless it works for us with little fuss so no complaints. We use the T6 ink that it shipped with and do not want to bother trying to change ink types and potentially have issues to deal with. Our emulsion is Ulano QTX, a high solids fast drying emulsion. We never coat a hundred screens at a time, at most 30 at a time with about 50 screens ready to go. It is what it is, its not a deal breaker, love the machine but environment is a quirk one has to deal with.You are twisting things a little. I am not having issues with the ink and humdity since I have a solution that is very easy and fast. If I was always struggling with humidity issues or inkspreading on the emulsion then yes I would consider an ink change, but there is no practical intelligent reason to do so now. As for moving the machine, that is a non starter, there is no room for it in the print area so it has to live where it lives. Again I will stress the environment issue is not as trivial as you may imply. Imagine a customer bought the machine new, tech arrives does install and humidity is far to low and a new ink has to be sent and changed. Thats not an ideal situation, it wasn't ideal when I had to try two different humidifiers and not have it work. But again its NOT a deal breaker.And BTW the Douhit base model and the I Image base model are not tens of thousands apart in price, the douhit was fairly close to the I Image after shipping and tech install cots. If I remember the reason we chose the M&R had to do with head replacement cost, I forget the numbers but I know it was quite high on the wax. I also was given a few numbers to call of Wax owners because I wanted to get a rough idea from actual owners the print life of the heads and from what I gathered the wax heads had a lower life expectancy than the ink head if well maintained.
But let me point out, THIS situation is where WAX sellers say (Oh, how horrible, look at all of the issues the WET ink can give you). But it’s not really the WET INK that is the issue.Moving it out near the production area (could be the simplest answer). The issue (from what your are saying). is LOW humidity, causing the dryness of the screens...and therefore, you must use a dampening cloth). It’s controlled up there in that front office area (for the comfort of humans) and not necessarily for the operation of the equipment. For example, from what you are saying, it’s (more dry up there). “10%” less than a typical minimum should be for running the equipment. A RH of below 30 is leaning towards (too dry), so having it in a room at 20% is pushing it beyond a comfortable range for the machine. A common range of RH is above 30% and as high as 55. I’ve seen 60 or above but those worked with other inks or even from a Tech adding in some accommodations in the settings. As a result, for you, you must add moisture (dampening cloth) to your screens for the screen to have some stick’m. You currently have issues, but don’t want to switch inks...that could be (and commonly is) your answer...to clear up that issues? Ok. Understood. You don’t want to potentially introduce additional issues. But as another answer/alternative, you may want to relocate your machine away from that dryer area and have less dry screen issues and not have not dampen your screens. You can also, keep it as is, and continue to just dampen the screens. At least you know, you have choices. But now, we know, there is no need to blame “the machine”.
Again I will stress the environment issue is not as trivial as you may imply.
"And BTW the Douhit base model and the I Image base model are not tens of thousands apart in price, the douhit was fairly close to the I Image after shipping and tech install cots. If I remember the reason we chose the M&R had to do with head replacement cost, I forget the numbers but I know it was quite high on the wax. I also was given a few numbers to call of Wax owners because I wanted to get a rough idea from actual owners the print life of the heads and from what I gathered the wax heads had a lower life expectancy than the ink head if well maintained.[/size] [/size]
honestly, I think for 75% of us wax vs ink doesn't matter as much as DTS VS Film.... Anyone would be miles ahead of film snagging Pierre's Rocket do-hickey....just in tape alone, I mean..Come'on man
I was told by an M&R employee that the S is slower than the ST 1 head.
should M&R just stop selling the machines now, because you like to keep your machine where it is and dampen the screens?