Hi Guys !
This is one of those common sense questions.
Think about it. Water-Based ink. Key word - WATER.
What is there A LOT OF in the outdoors? I'll give you a hint - the answer is in the line above this one....
Yes, there is a lot of water outdoors as well as many many colors so water based is great ?
OK, sorry :Oops:
Still though, you have to admit. If someone doesn't understand the differences between eco-sol/solvent and water based inks and their applications, do you REALLY think they are ready to purchase a printer? Really?
You're right, I'm no ink expert and I don't want to be, everybody has his own business... Water / solvents / eco-solvents are just transport media and evaporate... Solvents are toxic and water is not. Solvents are designed for fast evaporation so do the job better... ECO-solvents are trying to emulate the solvent's evaporation capacity with less toxic components with moderate success and water is water, we all know it does not evaporate easily...
But I guess I should have asked about 'new development water based inks' as I'm told this Sepiax is great, prints on anything at a lower cost etc... But it would be pioneering work... (no, not for me)
Something around here that helps in a company's publicity is the ECO aspect... I see some companies around here give themselves an 'environment friendly production label' they swear by eco-solvent just because the're 'ECO' , even though it doesn't seem to deliver the best outdoor quality:
if you're doing outdoor prints that you want to last for an extended period of time, solvent's the way to go.
We have large scale prints that have been outdoors for four years, with very harsh weather, and are just now seeing some fading in them. If we went eco-sol, there's no way we would've got that kind of longevity out of them.
You're right, it shouldn't be in that order, but it happens.... and quite a bit, I might add.... and not always because the person is dumb, but rather mis-informed.... and sometimes intentionally.
When we bought our aqueous printer, we were told it could do everything and anything for outdoor use and durability as the true solvent printers at the time could do. Later, we found we had to use specialty coated media ONLY. Then we found out the added costs to that stuff. There was no such thing as eco or mild solvent printers, so we believed the salespeople that told us this stuff. That was also before there were sites such as this one from which to learn. We were purposely lied to as to what our new purchase could and would do. We asked specific questions and were given twisted replies that we couldn't see through their lies until much later. However, through sheer determination and much research we managed to make that printer do things it wasn't supposed to do. It served us well and is still serving the shop we sold it to 6 years later. However, we told them everything and how we got around obstacles.
Indeed I'm trying to make real-life talk out of salestalk, seen a few very convincing salesguys giving different stories...
No the Sepiax ink is no latex... I think I initially did mention it seems water based inks are improving and this is why I started this thread...
Also not really appropriate to classify Sepiax ink in the same way as other water based inks. It's really nothing like what any of us think of when the term water based ink is used. That may change one day. Sepaix is a different beast - somewhat new resin based pigment technology and while some of the early reports of it sounds very promising there are not a lot of success stories regarding it's use - not many sotires good or bad for that matter. Just not many installs of it out there yet to make any sort of reasonably informed decision or opinion on it.
Sepiax does mention on their website
The flagship product of Sepiax Ink Technologies is the “aquares ink”, a water based resin ink, designed for printing through Epson DX4 / DX5 printheads.
So I thought maybe someone here might have tried it... But I get SightLine's point, it is too early, not enough installs out there yet to get feedback.
Lol But if you decide against it and you absolutley want a printer then give me a call and I will get you going in the right direction.
Not deciding anything yet but looking at possibilities... For now I am just looking at setting up a short ticklist of what the printer should be able to do... I'm not afraid of new technologies but don't want to be a Guinea Pig either...