Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
as we continue to automate other things around the shop, reclaim is one of the last major areas. I'd rather employ awesome press people and artists than a screen cleaner or coater. Plus, at the rates we can afford to pay screen room people, we'll never get better than McDonalds quality. If I can have the same guy (or heck, the press ops) send a screen down a belt and have it come out on the other side ready to dry and coat, while they're doing everything else, I've just won not only production, but more efficiency, and very likely more consistency.That being said, the units I looked at have me concerned... we "de-haze" with ink remover after blowing the stencils out on each and every screen, and we degrease with directPrep2 on every screen. I'll bet I can count on 1 hand how many pinholes we've had in the last year, and our mesh lasts 100's of cycles through reclaim before it fails, and still doesn't have anywhere near the staining I see some people having. If I'm going to build or buy a machine to do this, it needs to run at the same quality, if not better, than a human.
So my question is, is anyone who is running water base screens with hardener or an emulsion that holds up to long water base runs getting fully reclaimed, ready to coat screens at the end of their machine?