"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Is it just the cheap nail polish I'm using but ours doesn't like to let go when reclaiming.
A startup clothing line.
Quote from: Gilligan on October 15, 2013, 03:42:34 PMIs it just the cheap nail polish I'm using but ours doesn't like to let go when reclaiming.Another thought Gilligan, WE are talking about getting the polish off screens.... My guess is you are having a hard time getting it off your nails after the weekend Quote from: ebscreen on October 15, 2013, 04:32:08 PMA startup clothing line.There is your answer right there.
I'd like a floodbar or even better a squeegee type blade for our fill stroke/flood stroke that when there is no longer ink in the well it will make some sort of a sound so the operator can hear that he's running low on ink. Once every few weeks one of my guys will come to my desk with a shirt that was pulled from the press that is missing ink in the middle of the print area. Would you guys believe me if I told you this happened with a one color black ink on red shirts, ON THE MANUAL PRESS the other day? How in the hell does that happen? Out of all the dumbest things I've ever seen that takes the cake. He flooded, didn't notice, printed, didn't notice, lifted the screen and apparently didn't look at the print and didn't notice, then pulled the shirt!!! I'm still amazed by that one. #DUMB
Winged flood bars do whistle when dry but if you can't see a dry screen on a manual who is gonna listen to a flood bar?
Quote from: sweetts on October 15, 2013, 02:32:05 PMI thought I saw block out pens or you could use nail polish which come in a pencil like applicatorFor the registration marks why not change your registration color in your program ? Nail polish doesn't breathe, and eventually does what tape does. (discharge seeps around it, making odddischarge marks and ruining garments)The printed color of the reg mark would have to be different, not in the art itself. RIPs treat everything as black.Ahhh mist my discharge has been 100 or less so this is good to know. I see your Rip point, for 80% of the stuff I run straight from Corel with no issues. Thanks for making it clear to me. Quote from: Jon on October 15, 2013, 02:37:07 PMOk I will add one. A database of bad customers. Guys that don't pay, that are pain in the ass, one that quote all the time but never order, ones that after the job is printed complain about anything and everything to try to get a discount. It would be a industry website that all screen printers could post to.I have about five I could add to the list right now.Dude no foolin'. We're pretty lucky with not having the after the fact guys, but we do have a few effing weirdos that request 17 quotes once a month or so,never ordered anything. One guy calls just about every week, and after getting his estimate says "this is great, I'll call back later today to place the order!" and never has. This industry attracts some strange ones.Quote from: Parker 1 on October 15, 2013, 02:39:52 PMKiwo Blockout WRBeen using it for a few months and works very well. Ran 1,000+ with no problem. Thanks! I though I remembered someone mentioning one, I'll have to see if I can get it in.
I thought I saw block out pens or you could use nail polish which come in a pencil like applicatorFor the registration marks why not change your registration color in your program ?
Ok I will add one. A database of bad customers. Guys that don't pay, that are pain in the ass, one that quote all the time but never order, ones that after the job is printed complain about anything and everything to try to get a discount. It would be a industry website that all screen printers could post to.I have about five I could add to the list right now.
Kiwo Blockout WRBeen using it for a few months and works very well. Ran 1,000+ with no problem.
Sometimes you can hear when a screen is dry but most of the time you don't hear it at our shop. Maybe it has something to do with our fill/flood techniques, emulsion, ink, etc. My guys probably wouldn't notice it anyway if we did have something that was loud enough, they aren't very observant.
A solvent dishwasher. A place I can put all of my squeegees, floodbars, ink knives, mixing trays and so on in and get them all cleaned. This is more important for ink knives frankly, but something that would take 15-20 minutes maybe to clean ink off a load of stuff. I am a huge fan of automation, something that an employee can start, walk away from and come back to them ready to use. Something similar for screens would be great too, i know they exist, but the price tag is just a little too high for most shops.