Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Trying to dial in my new LED light and having a bugger of a time exposing dots under 6%.Currently using Ulano Orange 1 and 1 sharp side on 300 mesh 55 lpiMaybe I just need to spend the weekend making screens until I find it? Ugh.Any recommendations on emulsion?Edit: printing plastisol
Quote from: farmboygraphics on November 01, 2024, 10:23:46 AMTrying to dial in my new LED light and having a bugger of a time exposing dots under 6%.Currently using Ulano Orange 1 and 1 sharp side on 300 mesh 55 lpiMaybe I just need to spend the weekend making screens until I find it? Ugh.Any recommendations on emulsion?Edit: printing plastisolTo me, I don't know why people don't just use the same emulsion they have been and adjust their halftone output. I mean, if what you are not getting is only 5%, 4% and 3% and knowing that 3% is the most feasible small dot to achieve, then you are only talking about adjusting between 7 and 3%. In the curves in the RIP, make your 3% a 6 and slowly ramp up and level out apples to apples at 10%. I mean, who's going to turn your order down for holding too much in the highlights? This is what shops do or should do, when they have a weak or not so strong of an exposure unit like flo bulbs. You don't fight the bulb or change emulsions but compensate in the output so that what your bulb does hold, is there. Like taking a 65lpi down to a 55 in order to hold more small dots. Or even a 55 down to a 50. Or beefing up your small dots (in the adjustment) at the 10% range and below so that you can still hold a 55 or 65 across the board but the smallest, hardest dots are more able to be held.