I used Hostman Inks for several years with very good luck. I used there version #1849 until a few years ago, as I understand, Hostman bought a company in India (Micro Ink I think ?) and from that purchase introduced the Inkredible process ink series as I remember there were four different ones in the new series. Soon after their introduction they stopped offering there UK versions here in the southern US. My experinece with with the Reflecta (or Perfecta?) and Rapida I did not have very good results with either. I was running on a Heidelberg 102 and the problem was that the ink seemed to set very quickly on the surface but it was not setting so well underneath which caused us problems in the finishing department. The ink would feel as if it were dry to the touch but if you applied any pressure such as a thumb twist it was not dry. Also the folder operators hands as well as the folder belts would be covered in ink after folding a job.
Bama12, very nice reply and information given on your experiences.
Sir, what you have described with your experiences on the Heidey 102 with the ink setting up and not drying through and underneath is a very, very common problem that will be found with most commercially offered sheet fed process series in today's marketplace.
It is very easy for a printer to recognize these inks. They are what is known as "Stay Open Inks". These inks have only setting properties built into their mechanisms. They do have adequate DRYING formulary smarts built into them, which causes the problems that you have clearly mentioned.
To recognize the problem of set only, no dry inks simply open a container of one of the inks and let it set open in your pressroom, uncovered. Check the ink twice daily to see if a skin has formed on it. If the ink is not skinned within 48 hours every printer that does not aqueous coat will eventually have issues as you have described. Even printers who aqueous coat will also eventually have problems, post press. This is not conjecture, this is a fact. Printers that use these inks are sitting on a TIME BOMB.
You do need inks that have some measure of setting properties, but more importantly you need inks that DRY.
You can also identify these problematic type of sheet fed inks by their selling prices. Usually, but not in all cases, these inks will sell in the $15.00 ballpark range for the total series. STAY AWAY FROM THEM!
Who needs CHEAP PRICED INKS and INKS that DON'T DRY?
Normally, but not always, these inks will have an origin of ink manufactured out of the confines of the United States. 90%+ estimate is a pretty educated guess.
So again in summary, pay more for your offset sheet fed process inks, and you will get a huge return long term for your smart choice. Cleaning a press; the trains, the ink fountains at the end of a day's run time is the remedy that will cure all ills. Please trust my reply. Thank you.
D Ink Man