guymark
Printing Ninja
Hi.
I have an Epson R285 and I am trying to find out if water based pigmented ink will print onto untreated PVC.
I tried searching on Google but for once found very little help.
I tried a search on here but the word "PVC" is too short a word for the system. PVC inkjet worked but didn't seem to generate results about pvc.
I have an ID card printer that works well but is not very good at true "edge to edge" printing - the Epson with a card tray DOES provide edge to edge printing but needs specially coated cards at around £1 each instead of around 7p for uncoated ones. Not an issue for the odd membership cards perhaps but makes printing lots of "giveaway" cards far too costly.
With dye based ink, a regular card just has the ink sit on top in a pretty puddle. I have heard conflicting ideas as to whether water based pigmented ink would work or not. Some folks seem to think pigmented ink will print on plastic (though slow to dry) and others seem to reckon that it cannot work.
Does anyone happen to know if pigmented ink would print a "plastic card" made of PVC - OR any way of pre-treating an ordinary card OTHER than simply buying specially coated ones at £1 each?
Would really appreciate an idea from someone who REALLY knows about pigmented inks or someone who has tried to print on PVC and knows first hand if it works, "kind of works" or simply doesn't work!
Kind regards
Mark
I have an Epson R285 and I am trying to find out if water based pigmented ink will print onto untreated PVC.
I tried searching on Google but for once found very little help.
I tried a search on here but the word "PVC" is too short a word for the system. PVC inkjet worked but didn't seem to generate results about pvc.
I have an ID card printer that works well but is not very good at true "edge to edge" printing - the Epson with a card tray DOES provide edge to edge printing but needs specially coated cards at around £1 each instead of around 7p for uncoated ones. Not an issue for the odd membership cards perhaps but makes printing lots of "giveaway" cards far too costly.
With dye based ink, a regular card just has the ink sit on top in a pretty puddle. I have heard conflicting ideas as to whether water based pigmented ink would work or not. Some folks seem to think pigmented ink will print on plastic (though slow to dry) and others seem to reckon that it cannot work.
Does anyone happen to know if pigmented ink would print a "plastic card" made of PVC - OR any way of pre-treating an ordinary card OTHER than simply buying specially coated ones at £1 each?
Would really appreciate an idea from someone who REALLY knows about pigmented inks or someone who has tried to print on PVC and knows first hand if it works, "kind of works" or simply doesn't work!
Kind regards
Mark