"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Quote from: ScreenPrinter123 on May 30, 2012, 11:23:16 PMGilligan and Printficient,This was recently a discussion I had with someone at my office - about just flipping or turning the screen to the other side -- I kinda sided with Printficient because of a video I saw (maybe it's the one posted here recently on coating) -- but lately, we've just been going the path of least resistance, hoping Giligan is right and that it makes no difference. Has anyone tried both methods with the same amount of coats and noticed any difference in printing opacity?Secondly, is there a point at which I should just give up on trying to achieve halftones with coating many times? I'm going to give a go on 7/7 tomorrow on a 150 s mesh (w/chromablue) because quite frankly I thought a 4/2 -- which someone recommended and which I tried today -- didn't end up creating all that great of a thick stencil - perhaps I'm pursuing a lost cause at trying to get a popping white on a first hit? At any rate, a lot of the halftones shot out on the 4/2, but definitely not all. So I am wondering if it gets to a point that the thicker you go with the EOM, the less likely the halftones will shoot out? Assuming you have your exposure unit dialed in perfectly, I am wondering if the halftones would blow out by the time you were able to remove all the layers of emulsion on the stencil? With the 4/2 the halftones didn't "melt" out like with the thinner EOM -- I had to work at them and then it was either stop and let some of them remain closed or start blowing out the ones that were already shot out correctly if I continued on shooting out the screen. Anyone? Beuller?Thanks.Take everything you said here and dont do it anymore. That will be the start of fixing your problems. You are doing way too many passes on those screens. Unless your trying to stop a bullet you do not need emulsion to be that thick. What screen mesh are you using to try and get halftones to wash out?
Gilligan and Printficient,This was recently a discussion I had with someone at my office - about just flipping or turning the screen to the other side -- I kinda sided with Printficient because of a video I saw (maybe it's the one posted here recently on coating) -- but lately, we've just been going the path of least resistance, hoping Giligan is right and that it makes no difference. Has anyone tried both methods with the same amount of coats and noticed any difference in printing opacity?Secondly, is there a point at which I should just give up on trying to achieve halftones with coating many times? I'm going to give a go on 7/7 tomorrow on a 150 s mesh (w/chromablue) because quite frankly I thought a 4/2 -- which someone recommended and which I tried today -- didn't end up creating all that great of a thick stencil - perhaps I'm pursuing a lost cause at trying to get a popping white on a first hit? At any rate, a lot of the halftones shot out on the 4/2, but definitely not all. So I am wondering if it gets to a point that the thicker you go with the EOM, the less likely the halftones will shoot out? Assuming you have your exposure unit dialed in perfectly, I am wondering if the halftones would blow out by the time you were able to remove all the layers of emulsion on the stencil? With the 4/2 the halftones didn't "melt" out like with the thinner EOM -- I had to work at them and then it was either stop and let some of them remain closed or start blowing out the ones that were already shot out correctly if I continued on shooting out the screen. Anyone? Beuller?Thanks.
When you are coating your print side first (at least I do -- and then the ink side/squeegee side last) do you try to have the coater's edge barely touching the print side to increase your stencil? I've always done that, as I've found that to create a thicker stencil, but sometimes I'm trying to have the coater touch the screen so little that it sags and drips. Is that the correct method or should I be pressing harder against the mesh on the print side on my first coat(s)?Thanks.
You wont have much luck with halftones when coating a 7/7, or a 4/2 for that matter. I've never coated a screen 7/7, I think a 5/5 was the thickest I ever did and the stencil was about 300 microns thick, and I wouldn't have tried any fine halftones with that. To do fine line halftones, generally a thinner stencil is used but you can get halftones to come out on 200 micron stencils, you better have dense film and a powerful exposure system. If you coated a 150/48 with a 4/2 and the stencil wasn't thick, then something is really wrong. That 4/2 should put you close to a 150 micron stencil, 100 micron EOM, which is about as thick as two business cards. Depending on the openness of the artwork, shirt color and fabric thread density, you should have been able to deposit a significant layer of ink. It's hard to say if it could be a one hit white but if you're tring to print really wide open "stop sign" type designs, then you're wasting your time chasing a one hit print. On thinner/smaller designs stencil thickness determines ink deposit but as your stencil's open area increases, it has less affect due to surface tension so you have to defeat that surface tension by having a thicker stencil and higher mesh tension. There comes a point where to defeat that surface tension on a 12" stop sign print, your stencil would have to be very thick (not worth doing) and your screen/mesh tension would need to be extreme (80-100+ newtons, certainly not feasible) and simply doing a print flash print through a normal stencil gives you good results without having to get crazy with your screen specifications. Don't do what I did for a year and chase the one hit ghost and just let it happen when the job specs allow it to happen. It's certainly possible and attainable on many occasions but sometimes you'll waste a ton of time trying to engineer a stencil for a one hit and it's not possible due to other variables. I rounded up a few print swatches today that we're one hit jobs and I'll take pictures of them tomorrow. I think you'll be disappointed when you see just how limited the opportunities to achieve one hit status if you don't specifically pre-engineer every job for it. Most of the time your customer wants a giant open area design so you have to give it to them with as little effort as you can so you can make money.
Quote from: alan802 on May 31, 2012, 01:40:51 AMYou wont have much luck with halftones when coating a 7/7, or a 4/2 for that matter. I've never coated a screen 7/7, I think a 5/5 was the thickest I ever did and the stencil was about 300 microns thick, and I wouldn't have tried any fine halftones with that. To do fine line halftones, generally a thinner stencil is used but you can get halftones to come out on 200 micron stencils, you better have dense film and a powerful exposure system. If you coated a 150/48 with a 4/2 and the stencil wasn't thick, then something is really wrong. That 4/2 should put you close to a 150 micron stencil, 100 micron EOM, which is about as thick as two business cards. Depending on the openness of the artwork, shirt color and fabric thread density, you should have been able to deposit a significant layer of ink. It's hard to say if it could be a one hit white but if you're tring to print really wide open "stop sign" type designs, then you're wasting your time chasing a one hit print. On thinner/smaller designs stencil thickness determines ink deposit but as your stencil's open area increases, it has less affect due to surface tension so you have to defeat that surface tension by having a thicker stencil and higher mesh tension. There comes a point where to defeat that surface tension on a 12" stop sign print, your stencil would have to be very thick (not worth doing) and your screen/mesh tension would need to be extreme (80-100+ newtons, certainly not feasible) and simply doing a print flash print through a normal stencil gives you good results without having to get crazy with your screen specifications. Don't do what I did for a year and chase the one hit ghost and just let it happen when the job specs allow it to happen. It's certainly possible and attainable on many occasions but sometimes you'll waste a ton of time trying to engineer a stencil for a one hit and it's not possible due to other variables. I rounded up a few print swatches today that we're one hit jobs and I'll take pictures of them tomorrow. I think you'll be disappointed when you see just how limited the opportunities to achieve one hit status if you don't specifically pre-engineer every job for it. Most of the time your customer wants a giant open area design so you have to give it to them with as little effort as you can so you can make money.Going after that ghost, Alan... Will post one hit pics tomorrow (hopefully). 5/5 chromablue on 150 s mesh - rounded edge.... "Ka-Chow" (Yes, Cars reference).
But, a one hit with that much open area is going to be tough.
Quote from: alan802 on May 31, 2012, 06:28:11 PM But, a one hit with that much open area is going to be tough. Johnny Raincloud.
I have to agree with Alan. Another thing why did you use a 150 mesh? If the goal is to lay down a one hit you should use the lowest mesh you can and still hold the design. A 150 mesh with a 300 to 400 Micron stencil sounds "wrong". Don't get me wrong I am not beating you up. I do the wrong thing alot. I have printed with 305 mesh when I should have used a 123 because that is the only screen I had. I am always trying things that people say will never work. You know 50% of the time they are right. The other 50% I learn something. Have fun with your thick screen. My guess would be you will have to use alot of pressure to clear it. If you use too much pressure on a screen with that much open area you will not get the advantage of the thick stencil. You will be pushing the stencil into the shirt and your squeegee will close the gap of the screen and the shirt. What is that stencil like 500% EOM.
That is a heck of a stencil.Quote from: Screened Gear on May 31, 2012, 07:06:09 PMI have to agree with Alan. Another thing why did you use a 150 mesh? If the goal is to lay down a one hit you should use the lowest mesh you can and still hold the design. A 150 mesh with a 300 to 400 Micron stencil sounds "wrong". Don't get me wrong I am not beating you up. I do the wrong thing alot. I have printed with 305 mesh when I should have used a 123 because that is the only screen I had. I am always trying things that people say will never work. You know 50% of the time they are right. The other 50% I learn something. Have fun with your thick screen. My guess would be you will have to use alot of pressure to clear it. If you use too much pressure on a screen with that much open area you will not get the advantage of the thick stencil. You will be pushing the stencil into the shirt and your squeegee will close the gap of the screen and the shirt. What is that stencil like 500% EOM. I'm no expert compared to many on here, but it seems to me that the pressure change is in the flooding of the stencil, not so much the printing of it--unless your ink is very thick, and/or you don't 'fill' your stencil.The open area of a 150/48 is a higher percentage than an 125/70 or an 86/100. Printing pressure from my observations is pretty well directly coupled to open area, all other variables (close to) the same. I've been itching to get some of the S thread on to do some testing myself, but getting my ass handed to me right now... (posting while screens are drying. )Looking forward to seeing what the print looks like.