"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
How do you handle cross zipper prints with plastisol? I am not happy with our current method. I have some soft top rubber that works for one color prints but I cannot flash that. I have found some high temp rubber that I am going to try. Now I have to figure out how to secure that to the palette and how to adhere the garments to it. Any ideas?
Ideally, you would have dedicated pallets for this with your rubber adhered with high temp contact cement (although I have done all right with both standard contact cement or spray flash adhesive in the past)The best zipper boards even employ a two level stepped groove.Action, of course, makes and sells specialty boards like this, but one may need some significant orders to justify and offset the expense.
Quote from: Frog on May 11, 2012, 11:13:44 AMIdeally, you would have dedicated pallets for this with your rubber adhered with high temp contact cement (although I have done all right with both standard contact cement or spray flash adhesive in the past)The best zipper boards even employ a two level stepped groove.Action, of course, makes and sells specialty boards like this, but one may need some significant orders to justify and offset the expense.We have 8 of them. There are still issues with them. If the inside zipper lining isn't exactly the same size as the small metal piece on the palette you get a gap still.
Quote from: mattleague on May 11, 2012, 10:17:54 AMHow do you handle cross zipper prints with plastisol? I am not happy with our current method. I have some soft top rubber that works for one color prints but I cannot flash that. I have found some high temp rubber that I am going to try. Now I have to figure out how to secure that to the palette and how to adhere the garments to it. Any ideas?for $100, Rick Roth will send you the sample material you should get and tell you all you need to know to make it happen! But even with all the info, it is a pain in the behind. Printing is easy, but the prep and tear down are just too time consuming for small runs.pierre
Hmmm never thought of shims. I'll try that.
a related question;Do you guys ct the ink where it crosses the opening, or do you leave that to the client or end user?
a related question;Do you guys cut the ink where it crosses the opening, or do you leave that to the client or end user?