"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
My only issue with the HV right now is that it has very little tensile strength. If you are not at proper off contact then you can get wear marks along the squeegee edge resulting in breakthrough. Normally, not a problem..... but if you have a hiccup here and there on off contact adjustments then you see it real quick... sigh.
Kelly had talked with the chemist at Saati and he said you had to overexpose your screens for the water resistance to kick in.... We have had much better results with the Aquaol HV.
We did evaluations on the PHU with 50% solids and found we had reclaim problems until we exposed it correctly, I was also coating it way too thick with a 1+2 coating, we were getting EOM of 100% plus. With 1+1 coating and proper exposure we are now getting EOM of 28-30 % consistantly and easy predictiable reclaim. Double your exposure time as a starting point and see what happens.
Quote from: GKitson on March 26, 2013, 07:20:35 AMWe did evaluations on the PHU with 50% solids and found we had reclaim problems until we exposed it correctly, I was also coating it way too thick with a 1+2 coating, we were getting EOM of 100% plus. With 1+1 coating and proper exposure we are now getting EOM of 28-30 % consistantly and easy predictiable reclaim. Double your exposure time as a starting point and see what happens.Just going to bump this really old thread as I just ordered a case of the textil PHU blue. Saati sent me a sample quart and I do like. Much thicker than Aquasol HV goes on smoother with a 1/1 coat. Anything more than that and you're talking super thick stencil. Exposes faster than Aquasol. I haven't done any significant WB testing but it's good enough to give it a shot this winter as opposed to Aquasol turning into crackily glass, I'm hoping the textil won't crack.I'll test on my next wb job, but it'll only be about 50 pieces. I can usually get a good idea though in that time how it would hold up for a few hundred more.