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screen printing => Ink and Chemicals => Topic started by: Denis Kolar on July 15, 2011, 10:30:03 AM
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I just wanted to share my experience.
LOVE IT!!!
Easy to print, great coverage, and cures nicely.
I just ran some shirts with a different white that has good coverage too and it is a bit stiff to work with. I decided to add about 4-5% of curable reducer to be able to print easier and I still had coverage issues. After few shirts, and some frustration, I decided to try the sample of Ultimate white I got from my supplier. WOW, that looked almost perfect with one hit. If I did not have big letters that are solid, I would probably be OK with one hit on halftones, but I had to hit it one more time because of the lettering.
If I ever do those shirts again, I will be making two screens, one for halftones and underbase for lettering, and one with lettering only.
BTW, manual press, 155 mesh, newer aluminum frames, 70 duro squeegee
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watch out with "samples" - most of the time what they do is scrape ink off the top of a bucket and put it in a small container. You're not getting a true sample of the ink, sure it prints nice and creamy, but your not getting the true ink.. The minimum you should receive is a gallon, and mix the piss out of it. I just went through this with a supplier for over an hour yesterday, why the sample was awesome but the 5 gallon buckets sucked. Mix your ink -no matter what. We mix with a drill for about 3-5 minutes, everyday. I just got a sample of Excalibur poly white -it's about an ounce of ink. WTF am I going to do with that? ridiculous. . .
WM makes great ink -wait til you see the price of it . .you'll have to change your pants. . .
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Ultimate white is a pretty good ink I used it for years and the only thing I hate about it is, it started to puff a little making it unuseable for a nice flat underbase. I switched to a different brand of ink and like Homer the sample gal was dam good, but the other ink I got fail way short of the sample. Now back to the ultimate white, its a good ink and every now and then you might want to add a little reducer if you don't use over a period of time. QCM makes a very good ink for reds tees stays very white glacier white, stays very flat great for underbase work, but dam its high dollar.
Darryl
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Damn, my experience with this ink was not good. The samples I got of this white were not useable due to the extreme puffing/blowing agent they had in it. A PFP with this ink through a 137 gave me a print that was very similar to a high density print, through an 86 with a 500 micron stencil. Maybe production gallons are ok but I was absolutely blown away by the amount of puff the prints exhibited once coming out of the dryer.
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Alan's experiences pretty much match my own with this ink.