"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
And recently the Murakami Aquasol HV. It worked amazingly well. I loved it! Only drawback is it's low flexibility/brittleness. The edges of the squeegee can wear through the emulsion within a shockingly few number of print strokes. Regardless of post exposure/hardening/right off the exposure unit. So the search is on for a new emulsion
At the beginning, he was saying something was a dead technology. Was that Aquasol? I couldn't quite make it out and though he was talking about an ink called acrysol or something.
Quote from: StuJohnston on April 08, 2013, 12:17:21 PMAt the beginning, he was saying something was a dead technology. Was that Aquasol? I couldn't quite make it out and though he was talking about an ink called acrysol or something.Mark was referring to the Acrylic "plastisols". He calls them "Acrosols". I never heard that term before. These use No PVC resin - use acrylic resin instead, but still use plasticizers. Many ink companies have dabbled in this technology - the main problem as I see it is the lack of durability to pass some of the major brand strict wash requirements. The surface abdrades much easier than a pvc-based chemistry.I saw a lot of this in my previous life -- did not see on brand that would pass wash, crock, etc. UNLESS you too extra steps.....