Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
I'm not using one now, but when we did, we just put pallet paper on the print side of the screen and a light mist of adhesive. Threw some base or extender, or even grease in the screen. Soft squeegee, light pressure. Just enough to kiss the garment and pull those boogers off the shirt. (we just call them plugs when they are in the screen). For us, it's not worth the time putting that screen in and out. Even with 16 colors, sometimes we need that head.
Quote from: bimmridder on April 09, 2013, 12:55:43 PMI'm not using one now, but when we did, we just put pallet paper on the print side of the screen and a light mist of adhesive. Threw some base or extender, or even grease in the screen. Soft squeegee, light pressure. Just enough to kiss the garment and pull those boogers off the shirt. (we just call them plugs when they are in the screen). For us, it's not worth the time putting that screen in and out. Even with 16 colors, sometimes we need that head.I adhere the pallet paper with spray adhesive so the tape does the lint pickup. Works beautifully up to 1k shirts. First few uses are pretty tacky so watch out for that / use a shirt to get rid of some of the stickiness.There is really no added setup if you are a bigger shop and use the roller squeegee, have the screen setup ahead of time, throw in (don't even need to tri-loc) put in squeegee, less than 15 secs and done, put pressure to 10-15psi for us.I don't use one often and like deep said, I have a 7 color as well and 1 flash so the flash is 99% of the time in the second head.
I will say we use our roller squeegee's for a lint pickup screen all the time. We just ran an order of over 30,000 prints and the roller squeegee worked great for picking up lint. We keep the teflon sheet on the print side of the screen and use a light mist of albatross waterbase glue. Every 1,000 shirts we do a quick wipe/spray which adds about 20 seconds to every 1000 shirts. We only had to stop once or twice to get lint balls out of the screens that the pickup screen missed. Otherwise we probably would have been stopping every 10 minutes or so. I'm not here to endorse action by anymeans(I pay full retail for everything I buy from them) but the roller squeegee really does benefit "my" shop. Our quality is really good without it but there's certain types of shirts that we print almost daily which certainly come out better using the roller. We've put over 100,000 prints on one of our rollers and it's still in perfect condition so the quality has been good for us. Anyways, to answer the question it works really good for us as a lint pickup and even better for hoodies/shirts that have tons of loose fibers.Danny
total dumb question, but does the teflon go on the inside or outside of the screen?
I adhere the pallet paper with spray adhesive so the tape does the lint pickup. Works beautifully up to 1k shirts. First few uses are pretty tacky so watch out for that / use a shirt to get rid of some of the stickiness.