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Common Issues in Pad Printing Plastics Decorating

The document discusses common issues in pad printing, highlighting challenges faced by printers, such as improper doctoring of clichés, poor ink adhesion, and print quality problems. Industry consultant John Kaverman identifies specific causes for these issues, including maintenance problems, incorrect ink selection, and inadequate pad characteristics. Solutions are provided to address these challenges, emphasizing the importance of proper equipment maintenance and material preparation.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
78 views5 pages

Common Issues in Pad Printing Plastics Decorating

The document discusses common issues in pad printing, highlighting challenges faced by printers, such as improper doctoring of clichés, poor ink adhesion, and print quality problems. Industry consultant John Kaverman identifies specific causes for these issues, including maintenance problems, incorrect ink selection, and inadequate pad characteristics. Solutions are provided to address these challenges, emphasizing the importance of proper equipment maintenance and material preparation.

Uploaded by

Ajay Kumar D
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

04/07/2024, 18:40 Common Issues in Pad Printing » Plastics Decorating

Common Issues in Pad Printing


Ask the Expert is a resource sponsored by SPE’s Decorating & Assembly Division

11/11/2019

Complicated substrates, irregular shapes and surfaces, greater versatility – these are
only a few reasons why pad printing has been, and continues to be, a popular process
across a variety of industries. However, while this process has been around for decades,
it still poses issues for many printers seeking to utilize its benefits.

Plastics Decorating sat down with industry consultant and Pad Print Pros President John
Kaverman to address some of the challenges regarding the pad printing process that he
has encountered over the years. According to Kaverman: “While the theory of operation
for every pad printing cycle is exactly the same – regardless of whether it’s three parts
per minute or 300 being printed – the list of variables that create problems with the
process is extensive. As a consultant, I address common misunderstandings of the
impact on the process these variables have daily.” When asked about some of the most
common issues found in pad printing, Kaverman noted three main issues and their
potential cause.

Issue 1: The machine isn’t doctoring the clichés


There are several potential causes for this particular problem, including:

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04/07/2024, 18:40 Common Issues in Pad Printing » Plastics Decorating

Example of poor doctoring

The doctor ring on the ink cup is worn. Most doctor rings are ceramic. When properly
handled, they should last several hundred thousand cycles. It is when the sharp end of
the doctor rings wear to a flat edge of 0.25mm (~ 0.010″) that they stop shearing and
start smearing the ink. Replace the doctor ring.

Poor ink cup maintenance. In most cup designs, a flexible O-ring creates an interference
fit between the ink cup body and the doctor ring. This feature allows the doctor ring to
stay in intimate contact with the surface of the cliché as it traverses the cliché and
changes direction during the cycle. When the cups are not properly cleaned and
maintained, the doctor rings lose their ability to “float” or “flex,” and leaks occur.

Example of poor ink cup/doctor ring maintenance

Skimping on ink. Ink acts like a lubricant for the ink cup during doctoring. With most ink
cup designs, there is a minimum amount of ink that will allow the cup to doctor the cliché
efficiently.

When people have short run productions, they tend to skimp on ink – especially when
using a two-component ink – because two-component ink must be discarded after the
pot life has expired. The ink level within the ink cup needs to be enough to completely
wet the cliché over the entire inside diameter of the ink cup on each cycle. Without
sufficient wetting, the ink cup cannot clean the surface of the cliché sufficiently. To use
an analogy, it’s like driving in a light mist, and the windshield wipers smear the
windshield. Once it starts raining harder (more lubricant), they clean efficiently – unless
they’re worn out or misaligned.

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Example of ink cup “scooping”

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04/07/2024, 18:40 Common Issues in Pad Printing » Plastics Decorating

Scooping. Scooping sometimes happens with magnetic ink cups on thin photopolymer
and laser engraved clichés. Depending on the cup design, the magnetic pull on the 
clichés can deflect the cliché, causing the doctor ring to “scoop” ink out of the image area
where the magnets cause the highest degree of deflection. Sometimes, this can be
alleviated or eliminated by using a spacer on the ink cup to increase the distance from
the magnets to the cliché surface.

Issue 2: The ink isn’t sticking to the parts


The surface energy of the material is too low. For ink to adhere to a part, the surface
energy (dyne level) needs to be 38 dyne/cm minimum. Forty-two or better is optimal.
Polyolefins such as polypropylene and polyethylene are typically below the minimum and
need to be pre-treated to raise the surface energy. Sometimes an adhesion modifier can
be added to the ink, but it is only effective when the material has a borderline minimum
surface energy.

Contamination is another culprit. Residual oils from upstream processes, mold-release or


even oils and perspiration from human handlers can act as a barrier to efficient ink
transfer and adhesion. Stay away from mold-release agents and avoid touching the
image area of parts in handling.

Using the wrong ink and/or testing too soon. It is imperative to test inks and associated
additives for adhesion, as well as chemical and mechanical resistance, long before
production is initiated. No single pad printing ink sticks to everything or meets all
performance requirements across the board. Printers should ask their suppliers for help
with conducting test prints for evaluation.

Testing too soon is a common problem, especially when two-component inks are part of
the equation. All inks are post-curing, meaning that while they might be dry, they have
not cured to the point of having maximum adhesion and/or chemical and mechanical
resistance.

Even UV-cured inks can post-cure for 24 hours or more after being applied. Two-
component inks can range from 72 hours to five days or more, depending on the specific
formulation. Follow the ink manufacturer’s drying and curing recommendations before
performing quality control tests.

Issue 3: Print quality is poor

Example of air blowers on part/pads to aid transfer


efficiency
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This can be a tough one to diagnose without photos of the defects and, preferably, video
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of the printing cycle and information about ink, additives, cliché specifications and pads.

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04/07/2024, 18:40 Common Issues in Pad Printing » Plastics Decorating

Some of the most common issues include:


Proper manipulation of solvent evaporation. The clever manipulation of solvent
evaporation is what makes pad printing work. If the ink is too wet (has too much thinner
or a thinner that evaporates too slowly), it won’t pick up and transfer efficiently.
Depending on the machine’s capabilities, it might be possible to program short delays
within the cycle to allow the ink more time to undergo the physical changes necessary to
allow it to transfer completely.

If it’s not possible to program delays where necessary, speed up the evaporation of
solvent by blowing low-pressure, low-volume air at the pad(s) between image pick-up
and transfer. Blowing low-pressure, low-volume air at the part is also helpful when
double printing or printing multiple color wet-on-wet within the cycle. If neither delays
nor air are an option, try using a thinner that has a faster evaporation rate. When fast
(45 ppm) or really fast (100+ ppm) cycles are required, air and fast thinner might be
needed, along with a specific cliché etch depth.

Cliché is incorrect. A bad cliché can cause a multitude of issues. Etch depth and
consistency are important. A typical straight etch is between 22 and 25 microns. If
deeper than 28 microns, there will probably be issues with too much ink film thickness
on the pad. If it is below 18 microns in depth, the ink might dry in the cliché before it is
picked up or on the pad before it can be transferred (unless using a UV-curable ink).

If using a photopolymer cliché, the line screen might be wrong. Typical line screens are
150, 120, 100 and 80 lines/cm. 120 lines/cm are used about 90% of the time. If a little
more ink film thickness is needed, use 100 line/cm. If there are finer details, use 150
line/cm for better resolution.

With laser engraved clichés, the angle with which the beam engraves and the frequency
with which it removes material can cause issues. If the laser is fixed, the further it goes
out from 90° vertical, the higher the potential for the laser to create sidewalls within the
etch that are off vertical. This makes it difficult for the doctor ring to cleanly shear the
ink at the edges of the image during doctoring and for the pad to pick up the image
without the sidewalls of the etch interfering.

Incorrect or worn pad. When picking a pad, try starting with the pad that has the most
mass, steepest angle and hardest material, then work down. More mass equals less
distortion. The pad’s image area should be at least 20% larger than the image in all
dimensions. Of course, if the machine cannot efficiently compress a pad, it is too large.

The higher the angle with which the pad compresses during transfer, the more efficient it
is at displacing air from between the ink and the product. This is especially important
when printing textured substrates and products having spherical, cylindrical and
compound angled geometries.

Hard pads provide sharper image resolution (less distortion, better displacement of air),
a more consistent ink film thickness and better penetration of textured surfaces than soft
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pads. Soft pads, having more oil, are more pliable and, therefore, last a little longer. So,
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try to save moving toward a softer pad as a last result when out of printing force to
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compress a harder pad with the same geometry.

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04/07/2024, 18:40 Common Issues in Pad Printing » Plastics Decorating

The softer the pad, the more silicone oil it contains. There is no magic number for how
long pads last. With each cycle, the pick-up and transfer of the ink depletes silicone oil 
from the pad. It is entirely possible for a pad with no visible wear (cuts, abrasions, etc.)
to be worn out due to the depletion of silicone oils having reached the point where the
surface energy of the pad is high enough that the ink won’t want to leave the cliché
during pick-up or the pad during transfer.

When in doubt, change the pad (break it in first).

John Kaverman

John Kaverman is president of Pad Print Pros, an independent consulting firm specializing
in pad printing. Kaverman, who holds a degree in printing, has 32 years of experience in
the plastics decorating industry in capacities including production, supervision, process
engineering, technical training and sales. For more information, visit
www.padprintpros.com.

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