Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
ELI5: Explain it Like I'm Five.Sorry for the silly question. The shop has been run this way since before my time - I'm not real clear what the steps/processes are for doing it otherwise:We have a safety-kleen auto-shop parts washer that is refilled with clean mineral spirits (?) once a month, right next to the press. When a job is done, squeegees go inside it, screens de-inked with a spatula, de-taped and stacked next to it. Wash everything 1-2-3 times a day as needed. Screens go back to the screen room to be reclaimed when dry and squeegess go back to the press table.The problem is image burn in on the mesh. Hardcore. Haze remover does nothing to dent it. (doesn't help, I hear, that we use 480 as an on press screen cleaner)What are my other options for a ink-degradant (on press and off) that is much gentler (and probably a bit cheaper than the Safety-Kleen to boot)?Do you wash the results down a drain?
So does this chem only really work/shine with a heated parts washer?I have a parts washer in use already, currently running PCS 1000 from Tractor Supply... it works pretty well with the flow through brush we have rigged up.
What's the point of press wash and screen opener anyway...I've never used either or needed them.
OK, so what are the costs on the unit and "juice"?