Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
We're revamping reclaim here and I want to either fully automate it or semi-automate it. I'm open to the argument that manual is best as well but my goal is to minimize labor time in this area.Is full automated reclaim a reality for under 100k? It seems far-fetched that these units will be effective, fast enough and reliable. Do these units actually work in the field?I've attached a concept for semi-automated reclaim. It utilizes a pair of these http://www.nwgraphic.com/family.php?id=SYS-19010 which are air powered recirculation/filtering units. These units could also be another type that utilizes electric press washers, open to whatever, but the air units struck me as simple and reliable by nature. One unit would be for de-inking and they come with a gong brush and pump. The de-ink unit would be lifted for better ergonomics and this would be the only point that a human would scrub the screen- once on the ink side. I believe de-inking is the only place that mechanical brushing is required in this process. (aside from dehazing, if needed)The second unit would simply be there to rinse ink remover before dunking in emulsion stripper tank and then again to blast emulsion off after soaking in tank. Hopefully that makes sense in the layout. It's a hop back to the clean water rinse after the emulsion dunk tank. The degrease dip to the right of the inspection booth would be for a literal dunk, in and out, to neutralize the ph and get surfactant into the crevices of the roller frames to loosen up any errant chem trapped in there, and then a top down rinse with an overhead spray a la restaurant dish pit before going to dry. The rinse could also be done in a third semi-automated unit. Conveyorized drying sounds good to me. Minimize wet screen time and thus contamination. Feed the screen room a steady supply of screens ready to coat. Reduce a racking and transportation step. Not a necessity though, rinsed screens could simply be racked and go to a drying area. In this model, the reclaim worker is putting inks away, cleaning tooling, etc. with any down time as screens move through the semi auto units and tanks. The semi-auto model attached takes up about as much room as a fully auto solution. Cost is about half of full auto. I'm not really concerned about cost here so much as having the most effective and reliable system. The semi-auto is attractive because it still only takes one employee, is very simple and modular and allows the "full" reclaim process to happen using dedicated chems for each step. Auto is attractive because your one employee operating it needs very little hustle to maintain throughput but is unattractive by it's more complicated machinery and therefore less reliable nature. I also don't like the idea of mixing chems within the auto systems. Thoughts?
Greg, from Mindseye should chime in on this one, I spent the better part of the morning watching his system. Man its fast...I'd talk to him before heading to automated...just my two cents worth.
Boris, those chem usage figures look high but has it been worth it for the reduction in labor? It sounds like your unit has never really performed to your satisfaction? Also, do you think it's related to not using Grunig's recommended chemistry?
Greg, how many screens can you process in a hour?Ink removal, stencil removal and degrease.
I see automation as a benefit for the reason that the manual labor associated with screen processing is an ergonomic and PPE nightmare.