"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
The technique is more about the flash/cure of the underbase. Once that is dialed in, I would slow the dryer speed down and wash test be sure there is proper adhesion..
I have with a Vastex Econored 2 panel chamber and a crawl speed. Not something you want to do a big order on. I do usually run a second time (just to be absolutely sure) and they wash fine. Watching paint dry is about as much fun.
You certainly can, but it isn't ideal. Assuming it is electric, does it at least have forced air?I used to run discharge on a Maxi-Cure with (I think) an 8' chamber. With the heat turned down to avoid scorching,and the belt at it's slowest it would completely discharge most jobs in one pass through.Some would require a second trip through. You aren't keeping up with an auto at any reasonable rate.
I also wanted to add that just because a print *appears* completely discharged does not mean it necessarilyis. Wash testing like Tony mentioned is the litmus test.
Just curious. I find washing is almost a necessity as the prints do not have the "soft feel" out of the dryer. Almost a "slight crusty" feel. Following a wash they develop the "soft feel" I was looking for. That sound normal?
Quote from: screenxpress on December 09, 2022, 03:30:45 PMJust curious. I find washing is almost a necessity as the prints do not have the "soft feel" out of the dryer. Almost a "slight crusty" feel. Following a wash they develop the "soft feel" I was looking for. That sound normal? It can. Technique and additives (softeners/penetrants/even water) can help. Whites can be cut with base if full pigment load isn't needed. I do recall the electric dryer being worse at this than gas, but it's been ten years so don't quote me.