It did not hit the top of the heater. I believe that it is as SignMeUpGraphics said, that it is a headstrike because it came up right after the printer had printed. I will lower the heat and go from there. I am not sure about how to raise the head on my HP Latex 365 but I will Google it to see if I can do it.Check what is the amount of Vacuum for that profile?
Then add more, lets say +20 to that. You can do it while printing.
To me it does seem like it is touching the top part of the heater so make sure you have a bit of lead before starting the print if this was in the beginning.
If that is the case and the carriage does not seem to be touching/it's not lifting up from the platen, take a few degrees of the heater and follow that it will cure properly. If it doesn't you can add a bit of interpass delay, lets say 100ms.
You can see from the holes that the liner has the same amount of ink as the perf so it's not separating. If it was separated it wouldn't have the ink in the holes like that.+1 to what Sign me up graphics said. Briteline perf is prone to pucker a little off the liner on our SP540i when the heat is too high. Not to discount what balstestrat said but when it happens on ours, only the vinyl puckers, the release liner stays flat so increasing the vacuum doesn't help but lowering the heat does.
You can see from the holes that the liner has the same amount of ink as the perf so it's not separating. If it was separated it wouldn't have the ink in the holes like that.
Briteline is one of our go-tos. Its heat thing. The perf doesn't de-laminate from the backer....the entire thing buckles from the heat.
It's true some do that. Pretty much the usual, the cheaper you go...I stand corrected. I had always just assumed that the vinyl tunneled away from the liner. Now that I think about it, I can't come up a good reason why I thought that...I just did.