PinkPrintingPixie
New Member
Good morning everyone,
We ordered this new material for a project (Courtwrap), and it says it's Latex compatible, but there is absolutely no information on profiles, starting temps, pass number or anything. I was hoping someone on here either had experience with this material or similar.
It's a polypropylene based adhesive repositionable film, 3mil with a plastic 5mil liner. Very thin, VERY staticky.
Tried running it at 194 F and 6 Passes and it was simultaneously not curing while also sticking to my cure bar/ popping up near the platen (because of sticking in the cure bar) as well as curling pretty badly. After it came off the printer after curing, the whole print was nice and fully cured, but the top half was smeared to hell sometime between printing (it was fine) and feeding for the final cure passes (it was hitting that damn cure bar)
I've devised part of my solution is "low and slow", but not a damn soul will tell me where to start. 150F? 170F? Should I up the interpass delay?
I have extensive experience working with HP Latexes but nothing we printed on was specialty material that needed custom profiling so I'm frustrated and a bit lost. They only ordered 100ft and I need 60 for this job. I'd need to web it up to help with feeding flat so any "testing" I do without a good starting point is just wasting material I need. My old job ALWAYS printed polypropylene on our Z series inkjets so this is a new zone.
Thanks in advance for anyone who can direct me.
We ordered this new material for a project (Courtwrap), and it says it's Latex compatible, but there is absolutely no information on profiles, starting temps, pass number or anything. I was hoping someone on here either had experience with this material or similar.
It's a polypropylene based adhesive repositionable film, 3mil with a plastic 5mil liner. Very thin, VERY staticky.
Tried running it at 194 F and 6 Passes and it was simultaneously not curing while also sticking to my cure bar/ popping up near the platen (because of sticking in the cure bar) as well as curling pretty badly. After it came off the printer after curing, the whole print was nice and fully cured, but the top half was smeared to hell sometime between printing (it was fine) and feeding for the final cure passes (it was hitting that damn cure bar)
I've devised part of my solution is "low and slow", but not a damn soul will tell me where to start. 150F? 170F? Should I up the interpass delay?
I have extensive experience working with HP Latexes but nothing we printed on was specialty material that needed custom profiling so I'm frustrated and a bit lost. They only ordered 100ft and I need 60 for this job. I'd need to web it up to help with feeding flat so any "testing" I do without a good starting point is just wasting material I need. My old job ALWAYS printed polypropylene on our Z series inkjets so this is a new zone.
Thanks in advance for anyone who can direct me.