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"VRS Lite" Screen Registration System for Smaller Shops

ALLENTOWN, PA — Vastex International has introduced a small-scale, low-cost Screen Registration System called "VRS Lite" that allows film positives to be registered onto screens off-press, and screens to be registered on-press 70% to 90% faster than with conventional methods.

Intended for smaller screen printing shops and start-ups, the tabletop system fits any rear-clamp manual press and is priced under $500.

The user simply aligns all film positives in registration on the pin board, and maintains registration when transferring positives onto each printing screen held against screen stops.

The pin board indicates shirt outlines, pocket placement, distance from neckline, and the

central 12 in. (30.5 cm) "sweet spot" where most T-shirt art is placed.

Once screens are exposed, the pin board doubles as a "pallet jig" that is secured to one pallet of the press, allowing each screen to be held against the screen stops for clamping into each respective print head, maintaining screen-to-screen registration.

According to the company, the system eliminates virtually all of the trial-and-error time associated with registering screens on press, minimizing set-up time, increasing accuracy, and generating significantly higher profit per hour of press time.

The VRS Lite system accommodates wood, aluminum or retensionable screens up to 21 in. W x 24 in. L (53.3 cm W

x 61 cm L), pallets 14 to 17 in. (35.6 to 43.2 cm) wide, and fits virtually all presses with rear clamps up to 15 in. (38.1 cm).

It weighs 21 lbs (9.6 kg) and can ship via UPS, DHL or other carrier.

Also available is a "Total VRS" screen registration system with separate pin board and pallet jig that accommodates 18 to 24 in. (45.7 x 61.0 cm) wide screens used on automatic as well as manual rear-clamp screen printing presses.

'VRS Lite' Screen Registration System for Smaller Shops

VRS LITE screen registration system combines pin registration of film positives with pallet jig registration of exposed screens, allowing press operators to ready each color for printing in tight register in one- to three-minutes per screen.