Briansos
New Member
Greetings
The focus of my interest is how to get clean, solid prints on a translucent material that is being applied to acrylic/tough glass for used in backlit signs. Our printers are Mimaki JV33-160s, if this is better moved to the Mimaki section, mods please feel free to do so. Here are the bulleted points:
• We use Mimaki JV33-160
• We use Wasatch Softrip ver 6.3
• We print on Orajet 3850-010 translucent
Now the "problem's" we are having are two main things:
• A regular pass print looks fine, but washes out when lit up
• Despite the print looking nice- minor to no banding, maybe a few tiny spots of something like dirt or solvent residue, when the print becomes lit up, it highlits all these minor things and suddenly they are "big" problems.
My boss wants me to be an "expert" on how to get this stuff running like a dream, and I could go into detail on the lack of true understanding of how printers really run vs how he thinks they should run, but I wont. So, my questions can best be focused into:
• What is a good way to get prints to look like they should, yet not wash out? We currently run a double pass of ink, which darkens the print to the normal daylight, but comes out looking like it should, more or less, when lit.
• Is the highlighting of inperfections just a natural problem when working with translucent material and backlit signs?
If any more information is needed, please let me know. Thank you all for your time.
The focus of my interest is how to get clean, solid prints on a translucent material that is being applied to acrylic/tough glass for used in backlit signs. Our printers are Mimaki JV33-160s, if this is better moved to the Mimaki section, mods please feel free to do so. Here are the bulleted points:
• We use Mimaki JV33-160
• We use Wasatch Softrip ver 6.3
• We print on Orajet 3850-010 translucent
Now the "problem's" we are having are two main things:
• A regular pass print looks fine, but washes out when lit up
• Despite the print looking nice- minor to no banding, maybe a few tiny spots of something like dirt or solvent residue, when the print becomes lit up, it highlits all these minor things and suddenly they are "big" problems.
My boss wants me to be an "expert" on how to get this stuff running like a dream, and I could go into detail on the lack of true understanding of how printers really run vs how he thinks they should run, but I wont. So, my questions can best be focused into:
• What is a good way to get prints to look like they should, yet not wash out? We currently run a double pass of ink, which darkens the print to the normal daylight, but comes out looking like it should, more or less, when lit.
• Is the highlighting of inperfections just a natural problem when working with translucent material and backlit signs?
If any more information is needed, please let me know. Thank you all for your time.