"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I use the stuff sonny sells and manage my own tank. So, you circulate the "stuff" with the pump with no problems? I had read somewhere anything other than solvent has a fire risk. What is the name of Sonny's product? Thanks.
Seen some pictures of Alans shop. Had a few questions for ya. I saw you have a safety kleen parts washer. Is this the one you have? http://bit.ly/pInZwjDo you use the solvent that comes with it? I see they offer a Aqueous washer too which are safe and biodegradable according to their website. Can you use this without gloves? How is the smell? Do you own or lease? Do you have them come swap out the solution? Do you need to rinse squeegees and floodbars with water after using this? Or can they be dried and used back on press again? I also noticed you have a giant shop towel dispenser. Where did you get that and do you like it? Thanks!
This is a good thread, thanks! We've tried to get Safety Kleen out to our shop a few times, and it's just not happening. I think we're going to look into that Crystal Clean company.We bought a parts washer at Home Depot or something for around $150 and that thing works well.
Quote from: inkbrigade on August 12, 2011, 06:07:37 AMSeen some pictures of Alans shop. Had a few questions for ya. I saw you have a safety kleen parts washer. Is this the one you have? http://bit.ly/pInZwjDo you use the solvent that comes with it? I see they offer a Aqueous washer too which are safe and biodegradable according to their website. Can you use this without gloves? How is the smell? Do you own or lease? Do you have them come swap out the solution? Do you need to rinse squeegees and floodbars with water after using this? Or can they be dried and used back on press again? I also noticed you have a giant shop towel dispenser. Where did you get that and do you like it? Thanks!We have the parts washer on the far left. We use their solution, I don't know which one it is, we do it on a lease basis, they come out every six weeks to swap out the solution. They give gloves to you and the smell isn't bad if you have decent ventilation in the shop. If you're in a confined area, it might get pretty hard to handle. After we clean our blades and floodbars we put them in a bucket to dry, then you can wipe them down with a rag if they aren't completely dry. We get those boxes of shop towels at Sam's Club. We have since moved to the blue rolls of shop towels that I put on a clothes hanger and hang those all around the shop. I love the shop towels in the box, we glue them down so you can just grab one and tear it off without the box flying. We started using the rolls on hangers because they are almost have the price of the box towels and over the course of a year, we'll save probably $500 this year by changing to the rolls. They aren't as good and convenient as the box towels but the price makes it worth it.I'm sure there are better and cheaper ways to do it than the Safety Kleen, and I feel like I'm not doing my job by not looking at those other options, but this thing works so good, it's so convenient and it's something that I never have to worry about so I haven't tried to do any better. It takes less than a minute to scrub a dirty squeegee clean and floodbars are even faster than that, so we never have to wait for clean tools to do our job, it's been worth it for us.
Even "safe" cleaners may end up with unsafe contaminants.
I use the stuff sonny sells and manage my own tank. It is cheaper than safety kleen. You can dispose of the solids easily with my method...an oil filter for a solvent filter and toss those in a toaster oven to cure the ink, or use P's method of outside under a black tarp.I don't change out my solvent, I only change out my filters, 3 years going now.The kicker with those companies if you read their contracts is you still own the solvent. So if the driver hits a school bus, and the drums break open and leak everywhere, you are still liable for the cleanup costs of those solvents. That is really crappy to me. THAT is what I am paying for is a responsible disposal of my products, not "expensive disposal, with all the risks of doing it yourself.