Hello Ulrich,
This would be for silk screening.
Thanks
...What you have to be careful with is the draw down in the vacuum frame when you expose the film to the plate or other media to make sure that the film is in perfect contact for exposure.
With HDS, the terms "Super Fine, Fine, Medium and Coarse" just means the size of the minimum dot.
These are the minimum dot sizes, in microns, for HDS screening on a 2400 dpi device. If you lower the device dpi then the minimum dot size changes even though the same screen has been specified. For example, if you specify "HDS Fine" then on a 1200 dpi device the minimum dot size is 30 microns, at 1800 dpi it's 20 microns, at 2400 dpi it's 15 microns. Same screen but different results.
If memory serves, the minimum dot size happens at the 20% tone. Lighter tones are achieved by removing halftone dots rather than making them smaller.
At 2400 dpi:
HDS Super Fine 1x1 pixel - 11
HDS Fine 2x1 pixels - 15

HDS Medium 2x2 pixels - 21
HDS Coarse 2x3 pixels - 26

HDS Super Coarse 4x4 pixels - 42
For silk screen printing you will probably use, at 2400 dpi, HDS Coarse or HDS Super Coarse. At 1200 dpi you'll probably use HDS Fine or HDS Medium.
I know that doesn't answer your specific question, however, I hope it helps you diagnose what might be happening.
You can certainly use FM screening in a film to plate situation (before CtP Canada's postage stamps were printed 10 micron FM in a film workflow).
Not lab conditions...
bitmapping an 1%-value screen-dot of a 175lpi AM screen exposured with 2540 dpi is a square in a size 0,00057 inch (=1,4 microns), right?
1 line is 0,0057 inch, (the reciprocal of 175, so 1 divided through 175)
to write a 1%-value screen-dot there is needed only the tenth part of that 0,0057 inch width, that means at least 0,00057 inch (1,4 microns rounded)
harrgh!!! i forgot to move the comma from cm to mm in my account...In any case, at 2540 dpi and 175 lpi a 1% dot would be 15 microns.
You sold them larger, already imposed Films?A properly maintained film to plate system should be able to hold a 20 micron halftone dot (which is a 2% sized dot at 175 lpi on a 2540 dpi device.) At least my clients back then had no trouble or they wouldn't have bought film from me LOL!
harrgh!!! i forgot to move the comma from cm to mm in my account...
getting an PANTONE Rubin red face and walking away moving in the rear rows
;-)
Ulrich
You sold them larger, already imposed Films?
Before CTP-times nobody expected 1% and 2% tone-values on the paper, now sometimes they are badly surprised to find them... ;-)
Generally, in silkscreen printing the smallest dots are lost (while at the darker end of the scale the smaller "white" dots get plugged).
Compared to Offset printing, these are limitations inherent to the process.
If Direct Emulsion is used, the smallest dot must be supported by at least 4 threads of the mesh, so mesh count as well as thread type and thickness are the basic limiting factors (thread color too, BTW).
Some other factors are mesh tension, squeegee type, ink consistency (liquidity), as well as many others.
So, using Stochastic screens or any higher LPI screens for that matter, will require a long learning curve...
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