"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
So John, you like that CCI disc over the Matsui? I'm still making my decision on what to start one. Sounds like Matsui is great but CCI is greater so far.
I was blown away by it.. just put the ink in a cup, added the activator to that, stirred up. Let it sit while I taped and reg'ed the screen. Gave it a stir and into the screen.. a flood and a medium speed stroke was all it takes for the brightest white I've seen from any discharge white.The difference is the thickness.. this is like a really creamy thick white that likes to cling to the blade. i can see myself wanting to thin it down just a tad to get some flow but that might goof the opacity.
It seems like this is a common problem but its kinda bs that a machine wouldn't be made for better longevity from the factory you know? 14ga on high-wattage IR panels doesn't sound to straight to me. Our vastex, bless it's little heart, has run faithfully for years, not a single issue with the panels. So has our flash which was essentially built as a short-run or maybe a prototype from shelf parts. I'd be a cranky sob if the dryer panels were popping on me in the middle of runs. So John, you like that CCI disc over the Matsui? I'm still making my decision on what to start one. Sounds like Matsui is great but CCI is greater so far.
Quote from: ZooCity on February 03, 2012, 09:02:47 PMIt seems like this is a common problem but its kinda bs that a machine wouldn't be made for better longevity from the factory you know? 14ga on high-wattage IR panels doesn't sound to straight to me. Our vastex, bless it's little heart, has run faithfully for years, not a single issue with the panels. So has our flash which was essentially built as a short-run or maybe a prototype from shelf parts. I'd be a cranky sob if the dryer panels were popping on me in the middle of runs. So John, you like that CCI disc over the Matsui? I'm still making my decision on what to start one. Sounds like Matsui is great but CCI is greater so far. Moving to 10 gage wire will solve a lot of your problem. 14 gage in a heat environment is not a good idea regardless if it meets the amp rating. As far as the stakon to be used you should use a nickel plated steel stakon with stainless bolt,nut,and washers. When stripping the wire use a professional wire stripper, not the cheap units. If you mar the wire while stripping the insulation you are already destined to fail. The high temp wire is plated to prevent heat fatigue and if marred will be a place where the problem begins and as others have said use the proper crimping tool. A proper connection and wire gage should last the life of the element which in our elements is usually in excess of 10 years.