"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Thanks for the info Pierre--Doesn't sound too bad if it holds up well.It's too bad you didn't get a chance to try 125-200 mesh count screens for all the athletic printers out there, I'd think that would be the sticking point for most start-ups if it takes forever, or just won't cure the whole film.
Real test will be screens for waterbase. If it exposes those in 30 sec thats a game changer.
Quote from: ScreenFoo on February 22, 2013, 10:23:41 AMThanks for the info Pierre--Doesn't sound too bad if it holds up well.It's too bad you didn't get a chance to try 125-200 mesh count screens for all the athletic printers out there, I'd think that would be the sticking point for most start-ups if it takes forever, or just won't cure the whole film.we did test it on a 110, it took only 10 seconds to expose. No problems there. So if it can do 110's and 330's I am sure ti will do fine with anything in between.pierre
Quote from: blue moon on February 22, 2013, 11:08:33 AMQuote from: ScreenFoo on February 22, 2013, 10:23:41 AMThanks for the info Pierre--Doesn't sound too bad if it holds up well.It's too bad you didn't get a chance to try 125-200 mesh count screens for all the athletic printers out there, I'd think that would be the sticking point for most start-ups if it takes forever, or just won't cure the whole film.we did test it on a 110, it took only 10 seconds to expose. No problems there. So if it can do 110's and 330's I am sure ti will do fine with anything in between.pierreIt seems surprising a 110 would be that fast. I'm guessing white mesh coated 1/1? Was 230 the lowest mesh attempted with a diazo or dual cure?Interesting stuff.
Quote from: ScreenFoo on February 22, 2013, 02:00:15 PMQuote from: blue moon on February 22, 2013, 11:08:33 AMQuote from: ScreenFoo on February 22, 2013, 10:23:41 AMThanks for the info Pierre--Doesn't sound too bad if it holds up well.It's too bad you didn't get a chance to try 125-200 mesh count screens for all the athletic printers out there, I'd think that would be the sticking point for most start-ups if it takes forever, or just won't cure the whole film.we did test it on a 110, it took only 10 seconds to expose. No problems there. So if it can do 110's and 330's I am sure ti will do fine with anything in between.pierreIt seems surprising a 110 would be that fast. I'm guessing white mesh coated 1/1? Was 230 the lowest mesh attempted with a diazo or dual cure?Interesting stuff.that's the cool part! It was a 2+1 with 50% EOM and I think 10 seconds was too long!!! We were looking at it and thinking 9 would be about right.the low mesh count with dual cure is looking like several minutes (with similar EOM), but remember, I have not a clue 1 when it comes to dual cure. I think we were coating it too thick, I can't really tell if the stencil is fully exposed just by looking at it and so on. This might be a good question for somebody who is using it with dual cure already.pierre
Quote from: blue moon on February 22, 2013, 02:57:16 PMQuote from: ScreenFoo on February 22, 2013, 02:00:15 PMQuote from: blue moon on February 22, 2013, 11:08:33 AMQuote from: ScreenFoo on February 22, 2013, 10:23:41 AMThanks for the info Pierre--Doesn't sound too bad if it holds up well.It's too bad you didn't get a chance to try 125-200 mesh count screens for all the athletic printers out there, I'd think that would be the sticking point for most start-ups if it takes forever, or just won't cure the whole film.we did test it on a 110, it took only 10 seconds to expose. No problems there. So if it can do 110's and 330's I am sure ti will do fine with anything in between.pierreIt seems surprising a 110 would be that fast. I'm guessing white mesh coated 1/1? Was 230 the lowest mesh attempted with a diazo or dual cure?Interesting stuff.that's the cool part! It was a 2+1 with 50% EOM and I think 10 seconds was too long!!! We were looking at it and thinking 9 would be about right.the low mesh count with dual cure is looking like several minutes (with similar EOM), but remember, I have not a clue 1 when it comes to dual cure. I think we were coating it too thick, I can't really tell if the stencil is fully exposed just by looking at it and so on. This might be a good question for somebody who is using it with dual cure already.pierreA 110 with 50% EOM is crazy thick. If it does that in 10 seconds then there is nothing faster then that exposure unit on the market. The one thing about LEDs is they are instant on. Many of us are comparing this to a Metal Hydride. Unless you have a Metal Hydride with a shutter like my Workhorse Photosharp you are exposing screens with a bulb that is heating up for the first 20 to 30 seconds. (that is if it ever gets to full power before the exposure time is done)
5 seconds seems too short to me. It leaves very little room for adjusting exposure time. I know sometimes if I am running low on screens and I am putting something on a 280 that should be on a 305 I may under expose slightly to make washout of the finer detail easier and then hit with a post expose. Can you set the time on this to 4.72 seconds if you want to do this?
Quote from: blue moon on February 22, 2013, 02:57:16 PMQuote from: ScreenFoo on February 22, 2013, 02:00:15 PMQuote from: blue moon on February 22, 2013, 11:08:33 AMQuote from: ScreenFoo on February 22, 2013, 10:23:41 AMThanks for the info Pierre--Doesn't sound too bad if it holds up well.It's too bad you didn't get a chance to try 125-200 mesh count screens for all the athletic printers out there, I'd think that would be the sticking point for most start-ups if it takes forever, or just won't cure the whole film.we did test it on a 110, it took only 10 seconds to expose. No problems there. So if it can do 110's and 330's I am sure ti will do fine with anything in between.pierreIt seems surprising a 110 would be that fast. I'm guessing white mesh coated 1/1? Was 230 the lowest mesh attempted with a diazo or dual cure?Interesting stuff.that's the cool part! It was a 2+1 with 50% EOM and I think 10 seconds was too long!!! We were looking at it and thinking 9 would be about right.the low mesh count with dual cure is looking like several minutes (with similar EOM), but remember, I have not a clue 1 when it comes to dual cure. I think we were coating it too thick, I can't really tell if the stencil is fully exposed just by looking at it and so on. This might be a good question for somebody who is using it with dual cure already.pierreA 110 with 50% EOM is crazy thick. If it does that in 10 seconds then there is nothing faster then that exposure unit on the market. The one thing about LEDs is they are instant on. Many of us are comparing this to a Metal Hydride. Unless you have a Metal Hydride with a shutter like my Workhorse Photosharp you are exposing screens with a bulb that is heating up for the first 20 to 30 seconds. (that is if it ever gets to full power before the exposure time is done)[/quotThats why there is an integrator.
Quote from: balloonguy on February 22, 2013, 04:17:29 PM5 seconds seems too short to me. It leaves very little room for adjusting exposure time. I know sometimes if I am running low on screens and I am putting something on a 280 that should be on a 305 I may under expose slightly to make washout of the finer detail easier and then hit with a post expose. Can you set the time on this to 4.72 seconds if you want to do this?Agreed! The latitude at such small numbers needs to be infractions of a second! this was one of the things Lou and I discussed and will be implemented in the future. I have a feeling it is not a big deal and can be available right now, but he will have to confirm.pierre