• I want to thank all the members that have upgraded your accounts. I truly appreciate your support of the site monetarily. Supporting the site keeps this site up and running as a lot of work daily goes on behind the scenes. Click to Support Signs101 ...

HP L115 Printing on oil-slick vinyl

BlackHatPrinter

New Member
Hey everyone, long-time lurker, first-time poster.

I've been testing out various types of vinyl to up my sticker game.
For the oil slick vinyl I'm using, I've been encountering a "spotty" print, but it doesn't look like it's ink that's been scratched off by the print head or anything either.
It seems to happen more noticeably for the black areas. Does anyone know what might be causing this and how to get rid of it? :oops:

209814015_842301163081759_7449850811441463618_n.jpg

213008115_329764388823727_4921665077457979840_n.jpg


This vinyl also seems to curl a lot more than other oil slick vinyls..

Before I go waste more material, my theory on fixing it is:
1. Lowering the curing temperature to reduce curling.
2. Then increasing number of passes to "fill blank spots" (currently at 8 passes).

Thank you in advance!
 

ikarasu

Active Member
Does it even adhere? Put a small piece of tape on it and see if it comes off.

What vinyl is it? Printable at all? My guess is it's not a printable so there is no coating which leaves the spots. Most specialty vinyls don't like heat unfortunately... So I'd try to go higher passes, lower heat and see if that helps.
 

balstestrat

Problem Solver
Looks like bad material with plasticizer migration issue.
You can verify that by cleaning a part of it with ipa and then printing on it.
If it's plasticizer it wont help to increase passes. Only helps to change roll.
 

BlackHatPrinter

New Member
Does it even adhere? Put a small piece of tape on it and see if it comes off.

What vinyl is it? Printable at all? My guess is it's not a printable so there is no coating which leaves the spots. Most specialty vinyls don't like heat unfortunately... So I'd try to go higher passes, lower heat and see if that helps.
It does adhere! It doesn't scratch off and seems to stay even with packaging tape being ripped off of it.
 

BlackHatPrinter

New Member
Looks like bad material with plasticizer migration issue.
You can verify that by cleaning a part of it with ipa and then printing on it.
If it's plasticizer it wont help to increase passes. Only helps to change roll.
I'll definitely try that.
I did think maybe it has to do with the warping from curing -- which might cause some ink migration especially before it's fully dry and set :confused:
 

balstestrat

Problem Solver
I'll definitely try that.
I did think maybe it has to do with the warping from curing -- which might cause some ink migration especially before it's fully dry and set :confused:
Unlikely. Optimizer keeps it in position until cured.
You still clearly have sharp edges which means the ink stays where it should.
 
Top