Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
no problem on the spray tack.. in fact if anything there's TOO much web tac now.I tried off contact varying from what I use for my tshirts, (3/16"?) to adding an 1/8" to adding a whole 1/4"... on the good ones.. I'm getting a full clear, on the 'bad' ones.. it looks like a waffle pattern on the screen...I tried adding so much pressure that the squeegee was practically bending over... just to see what happens... it's the weirdest thing I've seen.I'm wondering if it's time to try some triple-durometer squeegee blades... (or maybe a smiling jack or something different)?
press alignment REALLY matters... I might need to rig something with dial indicators for leveling the platens...
so now you've got me curious...if the screen is level to the track that the squeegee/floodbar carriage rides in, shouldn't levelling the platens to the screen work?QuoteYes. But why not skip the middle man, you can end up being out a bit on the print rail to screen, then a bit out between the screen and platen, and then end up out more than a bit overall. The stack-up of tolerances can add up.Quotealso... since you have individual adjustment on each side of the squeegee/floodbar choppers, how do you make sure that you're doing a repeatable leveling?-JThat's a million dollar question, for us, our press is almost perfectly level, so we use a level on the floodbar side to side, then pull a safety cord and move the floodbar back and forth measuring between it and the platen. My main point is that it doesn't matter if your platen is level to the screen if they aren't level to the stroke of the print rail.I had a press operator level a vacuum bed on a Cameo using a bubble level, then set the off contact from there, and the press wouldn't print worth a crap, we couldn't figure it out until I found out how he had done it and looked, the stroke of the press was out more than 3/16" from level from one corner to the other, we leveled the bed to the stroke, set off contact from there and were back in business. the press could have been on a 15degree angle and aside from the ink running one way or another, if the bed is parallel to the print stroke it'll print perfectly.that's just what works for us, I'm not sure how the pro's do it.....
Yes. But why not skip the middle man, you can end up being out a bit on the print rail to screen, then a bit out between the screen and platen, and then end up out more than a bit overall. The stack-up of tolerances can add up.Quotealso... since you have individual adjustment on each side of the squeegee/floodbar choppers, how do you make sure that you're doing a repeatable leveling?-JThat's a million dollar question, for us, our press is almost perfectly level, so we use a level on the floodbar side to side, then pull a safety cord and move the floodbar back and forth measuring between it and the platen. My main point is that it doesn't matter if your platen is level to the screen if they aren't level to the stroke of the print rail.I had a press operator level a vacuum bed on a Cameo using a bubble level, then set the off contact from there, and the press wouldn't print worth a crap, we couldn't figure it out until I found out how he had done it and looked, the stroke of the press was out more than 3/16" from level from one corner to the other, we leveled the bed to the stroke, set off contact from there and were back in business. the press could have been on a 15degree angle and aside from the ink running one way or another, if the bed is parallel to the print stroke it'll print perfectly.that's just what works for us, I'm not sure how the pro's do it.....
also... since you have individual adjustment on each side of the squeegee/floodbar choppers, how do you make sure that you're doing a repeatable leveling?-J