Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Yes Frog, I've always had issues with getting halftones to wash out when exposing fully. We usually have to back off of the exposure time by a light unit or 2 with really fine halftones. I'm sure our film density has a lot to do with this, our emulsion being PP and not dual cure, and maybe other factors I'm not aware of.
Have you noticed how many out there selling, hawking, and pushing products are ignorant of correct procedures, exposure, coating, positives, and art production? (Or lying for whatever reason?)
Underexposure is the MAIN problem for new people in this industry, I find many of the suppliers promoting underexposure and it directly harms many of the new people in their early quest for efficient procedures an quality printing.
Cheap units tend to have long exposure times, so it takes 10 minutes just to produce the underexposed screen with soft edges. Washout is inconsistent. The need for especially dark film is a symptom of an out of control exposure process.
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.