Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
I recently bought a few of 102's flash panels of the Newman Roller Mesh and have them stretched to 45 newtons and coated with Saati PHW Red, with a EOM on one of them at about 50 microns, and another at 70 microns. My goal with this particular mesh count was to try and find a mesh that we could use for doing some of our "one hit" jobs. We have one particular job that we print almost weekly that uses the Union Khacki ultrasoft ink on a gildan military green shirt, and we've been able to accomplish a one hit print on it recently but it's hit or miss sometimes and it's also borderline on the opacity every once in a while. I think with the right stencil, tension and extreme open area of this mesh count (55%), and some new techniques on press I can get a nice thin layer of perfectly opaque ink with one stroke. I'm always looking for the right mesh for a particular print and I've been very pleased with the Murakami Smartmesh S threads, but wish that they could hold higher tension. I plan on buying additional mesh counts of the Newman mesh and testing it out as well, but thought I'd start with this lower count for a few specific jobs that we've achieved the one hit approach on using sefar 1500 regular thread and high tension. I think this mesh will allow us to print more jobs with one stroke, no flashing or pfp. If I'm getting good results with an inferior mesh choice I think with the right mesh I can obviously achieve the one hit more often, and with better quality.Does anyone have any experience with this particular mesh, any count is fine? The threads are thick, the open area seems to be a bit larger than the sefar that we have on most of our screens, and the tension levels are really high. I think I'll have to re-calibrate the press soon to take advantage of the higher tensions of the newman mesh. I've noticed some pallets/printheads are slightly out of whack. One a slightly side note, although it kind of gave me the notion to further experiment with more mesh types, I've been reading some of Joe Clarke's articles at Printwear magazine and although 95% of it is over my head, I think I'm beginning to understand more and more of it. If any of you want to just immerse yourself in some serious technical screen printing information, try reading some of Joe's articles. Hopefully one day I'll be able to read them and understand 100% of it, but right now, my knowledge level is so low compared to what I'm reading that most of it might as well be in Chinese. And if some of you want to be humbled a bit, kind of like reading some of Marks posts, or if you're getting a little cocky with what you think you know about screen printing, try out Joe's writings as well. We are blessed to have some of these guys sharing this kind of info with us less knowledgeable. I'm pretty stoked about some of the stuff I've read this week.
I'm always looking for the right mesh for a particular print and I've been very pleased with the Murakami Smartmesh S threads, but wish that they could hold higher tension.
Quote from: alan802 on May 12, 2011, 04:39:21 PMI'm always looking for the right mesh for a particular print and I've been very pleased with the Murakami Smartmesh S threads, but wish that they could hold higher tension. The S thread uses a thinner thread so it's max tension will be lower. I used to be a high tension only printer. I went for thick threads as they held higher tension because I thought that's what you were supposed to do. Then I learned about mesh open area and stencil thickness and how it effects ink transfer. Now I prefer a thinner thread with a balanced tension level. I'd rather modify my ink slightly to print through a 156 S mesh @ 28n versus forcing an ink through a thick thread 160 @ 45n.
I'd rather modify my ink slightly to print through a 156 S mesh @ 28n versus forcing an ink through a thick thread 160 @ 45n
how about some links to Joe's writing? Anything in particular you liked?pierre
However, I wonder how much better the print process would be if those S threads could go up to 40 newtons or even more? That would be interesting.