Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
I've used their mesh under the Dynamesh name. Dynamesh is owned by NBC and I've used a few yards of the Alpha series mesh and it was good. It's right on par with Saati and Sefar and I'm pretty sure the 100/55 and 123/55 that I have is Dyna as well. It's hard to remember which mesh I have since I've tried so many. I know which manufacturer's mesh I have in house but I can't remember exactly which mesh counts are from which manufacturer. The 100 and 123 I have is awesome mesh and I can take a look through my notes and find out exactly where it came from. I've used Sefar, Saati, Murakami, Dyna and Accumesh and prefer the Murakami because it's hard to get the mesh counts that I really want (thinner thread) from the other manufacturers. I've gotten thin thread mesh from other manufacturers besides Murakami but only because of someone I knew pulling some strings to get me the mesh counts I need. Most (all who don't sell Murakami) suppliers sell the completely wrong mesh counts that us textile printers should be using. Consider the 156/64 as a very "popular" mesh sold in the states and when you compare printing that mesh to printing with a 150/48 or a 156/55 then you see it's a terrible choice. Yet the 156/64 is all most print shops can get because their supplier doesn't carry the better mesh counts. I refuse to let a supplier dictate what mesh counts I use in our shop. I'm sure you guys could figure it out but follow the money, the mesh counts that are available from suppliers are probably the very cheapest to manufacture therefore they have become the most "popular". STAND UP, DEMAND BETTER MESH COUNTS FROM YOUR SUPPLIERS SO WE CAN MOVE THIS INDUSTRY FORWARD!!! 110/81 sucks compared to a 110/71, 123/81 sucks compared to a 123/55, 195/55 sucks compared to a 200/48, 230/48 sucks compared to a 225/40...my .02
To make matters even worse NBC have one mesh selection chart that lists 3-4 different type of mesh they manufacture for textile printing. I spend a a fair amount of time to find the right mesh. Anyway I do look forward trying it out and comparing it to our roller mesh. To be honest I'm not 100% convinced about the roller mesh, it seems to be fairly inconsistent. And too expensive. The EX will cost us around $6 for a yard at 160 cm width.
It is my opinion that if you stretch a screen, prep it correctly and put it into production and if it makes it through the run the first time without busting, then there is no reason why it shouldn't make it through 100 more times. Now they do get holes in them easily if you bump it up against something, where as some mesh might withstand that same bump, but it's really not that hard to keep that from happening. Our shop is no stranger to screens popping, that's for damn sure, but if the screen makes it through one time, that means it was stretched properly, corners softened right, protected with tape, etc. and it will take human error to make that mesh fail. I've got notes on all of our busted mesh and we have not busted a 135/48 (one of the most delicate of the S threads) in almost a year, a few 150's have gone, but the stronger mesh, the 225/40 seems to bust more than the others have.I'm all about the devil's advocate, I play that all the time so I do appreciate the other way to look at things. Do you think that the S threads, more or less, spontaneously bust easier, without provocation than say the newman roller 205N? I'm just so convinced that although the S thread is theoretically more delicate, it still takes human error to introduce a failure of any type. I could be off in that assessment, wouldn't be the first time.