It depends on the specifications of your flood lamp. The important part is that the light gives off the proper wavelength to harden the emulsion. Time wise you would need to experiment with your particular light to get it just right. This link has a little cheat sheet for our emulsions on specific lights we have tested with. shorturl.at/2pfLK
It's not, it's actually our own emulsion called Tex-Red. It's super easy to use and great for those that need an emulsion that will expose on an entry level exposure unit/ light and using plastisol ink.
So you can’t use a flood light with this emulsion?? Or should I burn it for longer time to make up for the difference
It depends on the specifications of your flood lamp. The important part is that the light gives off the proper wavelength to harden the emulsion. Time wise you would need to experiment with your particular light to get it just right.
This link has a little cheat sheet for our emulsions on specific lights we have tested with.
shorturl.at/2pfLK
@@screenprintdirect I tried a handful of diffrent burn times and exposures but still can’t get I right I’ve ruined 4 screens so far 😭
Bro is that baselayer emulsion for plastisol ink? Im using a flood light would you happen to know how long I have to burn for?
It's not, it's actually our own emulsion called Tex-Red. It's super easy to use and great for those that need an emulsion that will expose on an entry level exposure unit/ light and using plastisol ink.
@@screenprintdirectthanks for the response, turned out the emulsion was just a bad batch