Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
It won't put excessive pressure on the pallet or substrate if you use the air pressure regulators to set your pressure. If your squeegee blade is touching the pallet then what do you have to use to regulate how much pressure is being applied? Your air pressure regulator. My squeegee blades are going to touch the mesh just hard enough to overcome the mesh tension and off contact with the pressure I set it at. Just because they'll technically travel further without opposite force doesn't mean I'm applying any added pressure than if I used the squeegee distance to regulate pressure along with the air pressure. Look, either way can work, but I prefer to only have to change one setting instead of two to get the exact same results.Foo, not very hard at all, but what does that have to do with transfering a thick, tacky ink through a woven mesh with tiny tunnels along with tension and off contact? The transfer is technically a capillary action but there are many outside forces/variables to overcome right? I wish screen printing were done with the forces needed to get ink on your finger, that would be great.
Long day(and night) on a 3 color, 40 piece job! Thank goodness I sold my manual press before I printed my first job on the auto, because I would have certainly resorted to it this week! Below is what I learned:*the big revelation: soft screen require much more off contact! (I was focusing on the setting my predecessors used, but realized they were 100% roller frame shop. My statics frames are probably half the tension.*Thick inks need to be reduced*Barrels up, adjust pressure, don't sweat the pallet defection. (although I still feel as though I am printing with too much pressure, as the squeegees is rolling under a good bit......work on that later)*Slowed my stroke speeds on some half tones, which I could not hit twice due to muddy-ing it up.*Rookie mistake...Thin, cheap 5oz tees print differently than 6oz. (without thinking, I keep pulling and mixing 5 & 6oz. scrap shirts for test prints, when in reality, the final shirt would have printed fine at some settings)*Rookie mistake...one had better take the extra time at the washout both and make sure the half tones are good and clear. (still not totally sure if the better choice for a larger area of halftone is a 196 or 160 screen. Reburned and went down to 160, and had success. Heading to the shop now for a 450pc white on navy job. Hoping and praying for a productive day!Thanks to all for the advise and support.Dewey