"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
to be honest with you, I don't really know! I can tell you that when you push the fingernail into the 65 it is considerably softer then the 75. I can also tell you that when we switch between 55/90/55 to 75/90/75 it lays down about 30-40% less ink. The difference between those two is more than we can gain by changing the angle of the squeegee. Am I the only one seeing the value in this? Imagine being able to increase or decrease the ink deposit by 30% just by turning the squeegee around! Anybody? Beuler? Bueler?pierre
I would be on board but I really need to try them first. I would hate to get that many blades and new not like them. I think I would like a 60/90/75. I have a 80 here and it is way too hard for me. I like my 55/90/55 and my 65/90/65 and the straight 70s. I think the 80 side of a triple would just be too hard. Pierre do you use alot of 80s??? Remember I am a newbie in the auto world.
Quote from: Screened Gear on February 10, 2012, 03:43:28 PMI would be on board but I really need to try them first. I would hate to get that many blades and new not like them. I think I would like a 60/90/75. I have a 80 here and it is way too hard for me. I like my 55/90/55 and my 65/90/65 and the straight 70s. I think the 80 side of a triple would just be too hard. Pierre do you use alot of 80s??? Remember I am a newbie in the auto world. I had some single duro 80's and we used them all the time. We have 75/90/75 triples now and use them a lot. When the blades are molded, from what I understand they have a plus minus 5 duro tolerance. If both were on the wrong end of it, the 60/90/75 could actually end up being a 65-90-70 which would not really give it much of a range. So 60-90-80 seems like a good combination to me. I have some that are 65-90-75 and could cover the whole gamut with it.95-90-75 is available at multicraft and you can order one to try it out. They have a warehouse in Phoenix which is hopefully not too far away.http://www.multicraftink.com/You will have to call them though . . .pierre