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2 colors pad printing machine
4 colors pad printing
4 colors pad printing machine
5 colors pad printing machine
130 mm pad printing machine
160 mm pad printing machine
automotive
automotive pad printing
ball screws
brushless motors
caps pad printing
ceramic ring pad printing
Comec Italia
cosmetic pad printing
easy pad printing machine
electrical equipment pad printing
electronically controlled axes
electronic pad printing machine
flaming treatment
glass pad printing
hermetic inkcup
hermetic inkcup pad printing
hermetic inkcup pad printing machine
independent pads
independent pads pad printing machine
KE13
KP08
KP08 Comec Italia
lead nuts
micrometric adjustment inkcup groups
motorized workpiece holder
pad printing
pad printing ink
pad printing machine for lines
photoexposure
photoexposure unit
photopolymer cliché
pieces drying
plastic pre treatment
rotary pad printing machine
RR device
slide system
tampography
tampo machines
XE30
Faq
Q?
Smudged image
A.
Probable Cause | Possible Solution |
Pad | |
Too hard | Use a softer pad |
Too small in relation to the image | Use a larger pad |
Prints over edges | Adjust the pad stroke and/or secure the fixtures |
Cliché | |
Depth too deep | Make a new cliché |
Wrong type of cliché, may need screen | Test a new cliché with a screen or use a different type of screen |
Ink | |
Too thin | Add pure ink to thicken |
Slow drying | Use a fast dying thinner |
Material | |
Very uneven surface | Use special shaped pads or adjust pad position |
Other | |
Fixtures are unstable | Redo them |
Q?
Image appears blotchy
A.
Probable Cause | Possible Solution |
Pad | |
Too flat | Use a more pointed shape pad |
Porous, worn pad | Replace pad |
Cliché | |
Etching depth is too shallow | Make a new cliché with deeper etch |
Wrong type of etch | Make new cliché with screened areas |
Ink | |
Too thick | Add thinner |
Ink dried in etching | Clean the cliché with thinner |
Material | |
Contaminated with oils | Clean with alcohol |
Other | |
Machine speed too low | Increase the machine’s speed |
Q?
Fine lines begin to close up
A.
Probable Cause | Possible Solution |
Pad | |
Too hard | Use a softer pad |
Roughened porous surface | Use a new pad |
Cliché | |
Etch depth is too deep | Make a new cliché with lower etching depth or use pause to allow ink drying in the cliché |
First exposure of plate-making process too long-lasting | Make new cliché with lower exposure time |
Wrong type of etch | Use a different type of cliché with screened image area |
Ink | |
Ink too thin | Reduce the amount of thinner |
Too fluid; ink smears out | Use a fast dying thinner, or pause above cliché |
Material | |
Too smooth (e.g. glass) | Clean thoroughly, to aid the ink cohesion |
Other | |
Pad stroke is too fast. Causes ink to be forced out of etched areas | Reduce the speed of the pad stroke |
Q?
Smears on edges of image
A.
Probable Cause | Possible Solution |
Pad | |
Too flat | Use a more pointed shape |
Cliché | |
Etch is too deep | Redo a cliché with less depth |
Wrong type of screening or no screen | Use a different screen |
Ink | |
Too thick | Add more thinner |
Ink is drying too slow | Use a fast dying thinner |
Material | |
Static charge | Use a ionizer or increase humidity |
Other | |
Air moisture is too low | Increase air moisture up to 60-80% |
Cycle time is too fast | Reduce printing speed |
Pad pressure too high forcing ink outward | Decrease pressure |
Q?
Ink sticks to pad surface
A.
Probable Cause | Possible Solution |
Pad | |
Too soft | Use a harder pad |
Wrong shape | Use a more pointed shape |
Roughened porous surface | Replace with a new pad |
Cliché | |
Etch is too shallow | Etch a deeper cliché if ink is drying on pad |
Etch is too deep | Etch a new cliché with less depth, or use cliché pause to allow ink to partially dry on cliché |
Ink | |
Dried on the pad | Use retarder or more thinner |
Too wet on the pad, does not film well | Use a fast dying thinner or pause on the print stroke |
Material | |
Dirty surface (grease, oil, release agents, hand sweat) | Preclean. Depending on the grade of dirtiness, with alcohol, if necessary. Wear gloves during printing |
Other | |
Room temperature is too high | The room temperature is best at 18 – 20 °C |
Pad speed too low | Increase speed in the case of ink drying on the pad |
Pad speed too high | Use pause on print stroke in case of ink too wet to allow more drying time, or use cool/hot air |
Q?
Mis-registration of colors in multi-color print
A.
Probable Cause | Possible Solution |
Pad | |
Pads are not correctly assembled | Adjust pads so as they pick up images in the exact same place |
Different shapes | Use equally shaped pads |
Different hardnesses | Use pads of the same hardness |
Cliché | |
Images are not in registration | Re-register artwork and etch new cliché |
Ink | |
Image spreads more in one color than in others | Correct ink viscosity to prevent incorrect dot gain |
Material | |
Parts collapse (e.g. plastic bottles) | Use a more supportive fixture |
Other | |
Work piece fixtures are not stable enough | Control. Make new fixtures if necessary |
Conveyor, feeder or turntable move inaccurately | Set carefully the devices movement |
Fixtures are insufficiently attached | Fasten fixture screws |
Q?
Opacity of ink is inadequate
A.
Pad | |
Porous and rough | Replace pad |
Too flat and soft causing insufficient ink release | Use a firmer and more pointed pad |
Cliché | |
Etching depth is too shallow | Etch a deeper cliché |
Wrong type of screen | Test a new cliché with a different screen |
Wrong type of cliché | Use a different type of cliché |
Ink | |
Ink too thin | Thicken ink |
Ink not completely transferred | Use print pause or air blower to partially dry ink for proper release |
Material | |
Image not brilliant enough due to darkness of parts | Use double hit to lay down an additional ink layer |
Q?
Distortion in printed image
A.
Probable Cause | Possible Solution |
Pad | |
Wrong shape | Use a different shape pad |
Too soft or too hard | Use different hardness |
Image too close to pad edge | Move or replace pad |
Cliché | |
Etched too deep | Coupled with thin ink, the smudge caused is often mistaken for distortion |
Ink | |
Too thin + etched too deep | Causes smudging (see above) |
Material | |
Moves or collapses | Use special fixtures or appropriate pads |
Other | |
Unsuitable work piece fixtures | Modify the fixtures to achieve support on all positions of the product |
Fixtures movement | Check fixtures |
Printing on angles | Change fixture grade |
Q?
Uneven ink thickness
A.
Probable Cause | Possible Solution |
Pad | |
Wrong shape | Use a different shape |
Cliché | |
Wrong cliché type | Use steel cliché to prevent ink “scooping” |
Wrong etching depth | Make a new cliché controlling depth |
Wrong type of screen | Test a new cliché with a different screen |
Wrong orientation | Change cliché orientation |
Ink | |
Too thin | Reduce the amount of thinner |
Too thick | Add more thinner |
Insufficient mixing of ink and additives | Mix the ink thoroughly before putting it into the inkcup. |
Material | |
Odd shaped surface | Use suitable pad |
Other | |
Doctor blade too soft | Use firmer doctor blade or convert to hermetic inkcup system |
Q?
Color transfer between pads on multi-color jobs
A.
Probable Cause | Possible Solution |
Pad | |
Porous, worn surface | Replace pad |
Cliché | |
Etching is too deep | Etch a new cliché with less depth |
Wrong percentage and DPI of screen | Test a new cliché with a different screen (higher DPI screen for smaller areas & details) |
Ink | |
Ink contains too much thinner | Add more pure ink |
Ink is drying too slow | Use a fast drying thinner, blow air, or use pad delays/pauses to give inks time to dry |
Material | |
Very smooth surface. Substrates which cannot be notched by the thinner (e.g. glass) are especially problematic | Use hot/cool air on part during the print, or use pauses before printing |
Substrates contaminated with oils | Clean parts before printing. |
Q?
Small pinholes are apparent
A.
Probable Cause | Possible Solution |
Pad | |
Surface is damaged | Replace pad or place it so that damaged area won’t interfere with image |
Pad is too flat | Use pointed shape pad |
Too soft | Use a harder pad |
Cliché | |
Bad etching due to error or dust during exposure stage | Redo the etching |
Ink | |
Ink is too thick | Add more thinner |
Material | |
Rough surface | Use a firmer pad |
Dirty parts | Clean them before printing |
Other | |
Ink contaminated with silicone or oils | Replace with new ink |
Q?
Ink does not meet adhesion requirements
A.
Probable Cause | Possible Solution |
Pad | |
Too much silicone on surface | Clean new pads with alcohol before use |
Cliché | |
Etched too deep | Redo a deeper cliché |
Ink | |
Wrong type of ink | Use the suitable ink according to the technical data sheet |
Probable need for two-component ink | Use two-component ink with hardener |
Incorrect ratio of ink to hardener | Remix ink with correct ratio by weighing ink and hardener |
Material | |
Dirty surface | Pre-clean with alcohol |
Other | |
No/insufficient pretreatment | Check pretreatment procedure. If necessary, repeat it |
Polymerization time not respected | Let the pieces stand for longer time before testing |
No/insufficient after-treatment | Use heat tunnel and in some situations do the flame treatment |
Q?
Blurred print or sharpness problem
A.
Probable Cause | Possible Solution |
Pad | |
Too soft | Use a harder pad |
Wrong shape | Use a different shape |
Cliché | |
Inaccurate etch | Make a new cliché |
Etching is too deep | Etch a new cliché with less depth |
Wrong type of cliché | Use the suitable cliché type (e.g. steel in place of polymer). |
Wrong type of screen | Test a new cliché with a different screen |
Ink | |
Ink is too thick | Add more thinner |
Ink is too thin | Reduce the amount of thinner. |
Slow drying | Use a fast drying thinner or cliché pause |
Material | |
Dirty surface | Pre-clean |
Rough, grainy surface | Switch over to other material, if possible, or try a harder pad |
Printing near edges | Fixtures must support the pad to prevent slippage |
Other | |
Work piece fixtures are not stable enough
High speed causes pad vibration |
Make new fixtures
Decrease speed. If necessary, pause the pad at front position before releasing the ink to avoid vibrations of the pad during printing |