Dam you green heat resitant tape!

Can't find the right section? Discuss it in here!
Jason
Posts: 169
Joined: 07 Jan 2011, 00:21
Contact:

Re: Dam you green heat resitant tape!

Post by Jason »

I have some green heat resistant tape that depending on its mood, sometimes leaves a green stain on mugs or garments or sometimes its absolutely fine, this element of uncertainty and risk was quite novel at first but its costing me now, can anybody recommend a heat resistant tape/supplier that doesn't leave any marks on clothing or other sublimation blanks.

Cheers

Jason
User avatar
Justin
Site Admin
Posts: 12090
Joined: 23 Jan 2026, 13:12
Location: Derbyshire
Has thanked: 11 times
Been thanked: 9 times
Contact:

Re: Dam you green heat resitant tape!

Post by Justin »

I used to get this sometimes so I switched to the bronze coloured tape from Coralgraph. I believe this is rated for higher temps and works perfectly.
User avatar
Paul
Posts: 8557
Joined: 28 Sep 2009, 05:00
Contact:

Re: Dam you green heat resitant tape!

Post by Paul »

sam here. i always used brown tape and never had one problem.
http://www.howtoprintstuff.co.uk <-- How To Print Stuff BLOG
Charlie_
Posts: 532
Joined: 25 May 2012, 16:08
Contact:

Re: Dam you green heat resitant tape!

Post by Charlie_ »

Makes a note not to use the grren tape.....
User avatar
JSR
Posts: 2303
Joined: 28 Oct 2009, 04:00
Contact:

Re: Dam you green heat resitant tape!

Post by JSR »

I think there was a discussion about this before. Green tape (and blue, etc) are polyester tapes which will withstand a maximum temperature of 204°C. That's on the edge of sublimation temperature - so if you press for a long time, or your temperature gauge isn't entirely accurate, or you're pressing at a slightly higher temperature, then you're going to get problems at some point. The brown/bronze tape is a polyamide tape which will withstand temperatures up to 400°C.

You should not be using a green, blue, someothercolour tape if you want the best results.
bigj2552
Posts: 2263
Joined: 02 Feb 2012, 20:31
Contact:

Re: Dam you green heat resitant tape!

Post by bigj2552 »

i havnt had any probs with the green tape...so far.
but after reading this - i,ll just be getting the brown stuff lol :tongue:

keep the green for a back up, in case i run out of other stuff
User avatar
JSR
Posts: 2303
Joined: 28 Oct 2009, 04:00
Contact:

Re: Dam you green heat resitant tape!

Post by JSR »

bigj2552;48775 wrote:i havnt had any probs with the green tape...so far.
but after reading this - i,ll just be getting the brown stuff lol :tongue:

keep the green for a back up, in case i run out of other stuff
The coloured tapes can be useful (if they work out cheaper) for use on items for which it doesn't matter - like coasters, or mousemats, or anything in which the tape isn't in direct contact with the item (as it would be for a mug). Trouble is that they often don't work out any cheaper, sometimes they're more expensive, than the polyamide tape.

If you're pressing at 180°C (or lower as may be the case with a Ricoh), then the coloured tape probably won't be an issue 99% of the time. But if you find yourself on the edge of the temperature, then you'll be glad of the wider margin afforded by the polyamide tape. I tend to get mine off ebay (4 rolls for £10, or 6 for £13 - browse around and seek out the best price).
bms
Posts: 4391
Joined: 26 Oct 2009, 04:00
Contact:

Re: Dam you green heat resitant tape!

Post by bms »

JSR;48778 wrote:The coloured tapes can be useful (if they work out cheaper) for use on items for which it doesn't matter - like coasters, or mousemats, or anything in which the tape isn't in direct contact with the item (as it would be for a mug). Trouble is that they often don't work out any cheaper, sometimes they're more expensive, than the polyamide tape.

If you're pressing at 180°C (or lower as may be the case with a Ricoh), then the coloured tape probably won't be an issue 99% of the time. But if you find yourself on the edge of the temperature, then you'll be glad of the wider margin afforded by the polyamide tape. I tend to get mine off ebay (4 rolls for £10, or 6 for £13 - browse around and seek out the best price).
From memory isn't the brown tape 33m (green tape is 66m in length)? We've sold green tape for years now and as an example, one customer of ours who prints mugs with Epson printers buys this 20 rolls at a time and prints 10s of thousands of mugs without an issue.
User avatar
Paul
Posts: 8557
Joined: 28 Sep 2009, 05:00
Contact:

Re: Dam you green heat resitant tape!

Post by Paul »

Yes they are longer. But if you ruind one or two Tees this cost you like £8. So they more expensive.
http://www.howtoprintstuff.co.uk <-- How To Print Stuff BLOG
Charlie_
Posts: 532
Joined: 25 May 2012, 16:08
Contact:

Re: Dam you green heat resitant tape!

Post by Charlie_ »

Thats a very very good point there Paul, and note taken ...
Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests