"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Manual revolver lol. I am having some growing pains actually. The print was a golden yellow on navy. I initially had an underbase screen in head one choked back 1 pt and the top color in head 8. I got it lined up but the spread of the top color looked horrible where it fell off the underbase. I tried adjusting pressures and angles and just gave up and put the top color in head 1 and sent it around twice. I hated it but the print came out nice after I added some dulling paste to the yellow.
Ours is a 97 as well, Rich said it wouldn't work well on our machines because of platen deflection
Ahh I just finished printing 150 pieces PFP and realized I need to round the edges of the squeegees.
Quote from: Prosperi-Tees on October 30, 2013, 10:52:04 PMOurs is a 97 as well, Rich said it wouldn't work well on our machines because of platen deflectiona little confusion here. The Tri-Loc won't work on series one presses due to flex in the front screen holder. The pallet has nothing to do with it. There was no TriLoc in those years and the deflection of the holders was not an issue. Just a FYI.
Quote from: 244 on October 31, 2013, 08:45:02 AMQuote from: Prosperi-Tees on October 30, 2013, 10:52:04 PMOurs is a 97 as well, Rich said it wouldn't work well on our machines because of platen deflectiona little confusion here. The Tri-Loc won't work on series one presses due to flex in the front screen holder. The pallet has nothing to do with it. There was no TriLoc in those years and the deflection of the holders was not an issue. Just a FYI.Here is a little trick I noticed on ours. Using a waterbase resistant emulsion that has silicon in it has reduced that flex a little bit due to less friction on the squeegee to screen contact area.
Quote from: JBLUE on October 31, 2013, 11:19:48 AMQuote from: 244 on October 31, 2013, 08:45:02 AMQuote from: Prosperi-Tees on October 30, 2013, 10:52:04 PMOurs is a 97 as well, Rich said it wouldn't work well on our machines because of platen deflectiona little confusion here. The Tri-Loc won't work on series one presses due to flex in the front screen holder. The pallet has nothing to do with it. There was no TriLoc in those years and the deflection of the holders was not an issue. Just a FYI.Here is a little trick I noticed on ours. Using a waterbase resistant emulsion that has silicon in it has reduced that flex a little bit due to less friction on the squeegee to screen contact area.Bringo! I was just mulling over with my printer what else we can do to get better with our Gauntlet and I brought up a low rz emulsion as one thing that could help. What emulsion are you using? We're about to trial run a couple new ones in here. Any little thing we can do to minimize this issue is huge. As far as tri-lock/pre-reg not working on the series 1 presses, they do "work", as in you can use a pin-lock or tri-lock system on these presses and it will be dead nuts on every now and then but mostly just close. Both the outer edge of the print arm and the outer edge of the platen deflect, up and down respectively like an alligator opening it's jaws. Unless your blade pressure and a few other factors are identical screen to screen, this is going to frustrate an attempt to get that sweet "lock and load" that's achievable with good pre-reg systems on presses with less deflection. It's more like "lock and groan" sometimes but some days it's right on the money, strike off and go. I would still highly recommend any type pre-alignment setup, even a basic one, to keep you from burning art high or low on screens.
Let us know how it works out.