Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Since I am needling my friend Douglas about his professional 'old school' 24" silver film image setter, I went on record that I miss photographic films for screen making. "I'm a silver film lover from the 1970's", but alas most film use stopped at the turn of the century as film companies stopped making it and EPSON introduced the Photo Stylus 3000 for only US$1,100. Much less than a wet darkroom or image setter.
My memories of silver film is a bit more tarnished. I got involved with prepress with the introduction of a linotronic 300 running postscript level 1 on a 10 mhz rip. At that time, the linotronic was considered one large step backwards in quality. pre-press was accustomed to 4.0 film density, but the first generation of helium-neon film was lucky to get 3.1 on a good day. Put a newspaper on a light table and put lino film on top of it and the newspaper could clearly be read through the film. It was a LONG uphill battle to prove that lino film was usable. Inkjet film is an entirely different animal. With silver, all of the silver starts off on the film, then the laser determines where the silver should be removed. With inkjet, the film starts clear and ink is piled on top of it. In the case of inkjet film, there is such a thing as "too much ink". The Middle Way is the path between the extremes of self-indulgence and self-denial.
Why did Step Wedge Man and Exposure Lad constantly have to come to the rescue on the old board?
getting folks to do a step wedge test, either one step films, or manually moving opaque sheets, opens their eyes at least to what correctly exposed emulsion looks like, compared to over and under exposed. It's just tough to get some folks to sacrifice an otherwise good, usable screen of each common mesh and emulsion combination. They would rather proceed to ruin three others screwing around insread!
Speed was an issue, silver imagesetters are (or were) very fast when up against an inkjet.Amber always sucked, sorry guys, but it always sucked, I have a few samples left over and throw them on the unit every once and a while to show someone how they suck even up against an inkjet (with the special film).
Quote from: Frog on May 23, 2011, 07:12:38 PMgetting folks to do a step wedge test, either one step films, or manually moving opaque sheets, opens their eyes at least to what correctly exposed emulsion looks like, compared to over and under exposed. It's just tough to get some folks to sacrifice an otherwise good, usable screen of each common mesh and emulsion combination. They would rather proceed to ruin three others screwing around insread!Since my first feature article in Screen Printing in the late 1980's "Measuring Diazo Exposure" I have promoted using a US$10 Stouffer T-2115 transmission on every exposure to monitor stencil hardness. No screen needs to be sacrificed. Every screen has the test scarred in the stencil. The math is easy to correct your NEXT exposure. Ready, Fire, Aim. Perfect for fluctuations in emulsion and degrading UV sources.Properly used, a single 5" test positive should last a lifetime. I have them with me always and sell them at shows for US$10 - pretty girls get them for free. You can surprise most Nazdar reps by asking them to lookup "21step".
A single hit of Epson 1400 yellow ink is UV opaque enough to produce screens. (cyan and magenta are UV transparent)