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Jacob D Registered: Mar 30, 2009 Total Posts: 1201 Country: United States |
I was given a "Seal Commercial 210m" dry mounting press recently. I don't know much about dry mounting; I'm just starting to do some research on the web. If anyone has experience to share it would be appreciated, especially regarding mounting board and tissue selection. |
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tomrock Registered: Dec 15, 2003 Total Posts: 1851 Country: United States |
I have one. I use ColorMount tissue to mount prints from an Epson 3800 (and now 3880). Works great. |
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Jacob D Registered: Mar 30, 2009 Total Posts: 1201 Country: United States |
Thanks, I came across that tissue, I think on B&H. Do you use a fairly low temperature when mounting prints from your Epson printers? |
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papageno Registered: Jul 03, 2003 Total Posts: 3437 Country: United States |
SEAL USED TO MAKE TEST STRIPS FOR TEMPERATURE. iF THEY STILL EXIST, THEY ARE A GOOD INVESTMENT AS THE THERMOSTATS IN THESE MACHINES GET DUBIOUS OVER THE YEARS. |
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tomrock Registered: Dec 15, 2003 Total Posts: 1851 Country: United States |
ColorMount tissue is designed for pretty low temp. I think it's like 190F? |
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chesapeake Registered: Aug 14, 2008 Total Posts: 681 Country: United States |
I have used the commercial Seal Mount Systems for years. The low temperature mounting tissue is what you need for todays papers. Try 165 degrees on a test paper and mounting board. You can increase your time a bit if the temperature is too low. If after approx 1 minute you still are not getting good adhesion, increase your time at 15 sec intervals until the tissue binds to the board. By the way, the Color Tissue Mount is removable. A second important tip, place your mounting board in the press and close the press for 1 1/2 minutes before placing the print and tissue on it. You do this to drive out the residual moisture which will cause the board to curl otherwise. Also, try and get a sheet of silicone treated "mounting release" paper to place between the print surface and the platten of the mounting press. This will prevent the mounting tissue from sticking to the platten and the texture of the paper surface unaltered. If you can get a tacking iron to tack down the tissue before mounting this will also help. You can use foam board or regular standard single or double weight mount board. |
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mcbroomf Registered: Mar 18, 2003 Total Posts: 1505 Country: United States |
Chuck gave some great advice. The only other thing I'd mention is to keep things super clean. It's horribly easy to get a bit of grit between the press and the print and make a small dent that can't be recovered. |
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Robert Snow Registered: Jan 24, 2004 Total Posts: 433 Country: United States |
I agree that you really need a tacking iron. |