Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Quote from: BorisB on October 23, 2019, 05:41:29 AMTo me, using Roller Frames is an “old school” style.What's old is new again??
To me, using Roller Frames is an “old school” style.
We pay 44$ for 2 yards of S mesh from river city... ( 225S) I get 6 screens ( 23x31) out of that. Mesh costs 7.33$ If I pay a low wage employee to do them they can do them in 15 min each. so 4$ labour per. ( this almost triples with two employees, but well leave that there) Buy them for 20$ used. ( I've been using them for 5 years, so yes I own the frames already. But once they are paid for that cost is out of the question, they dont go bad under normal use) $12.33 per frame,( Once taped ) REGARDLESS of the added advantages of using roller frames... Spot colour is at 35$ before shipping. I don't see how this is even a discussion.... Even with the fact that S mesh sags almost immediately and re tensioning takes barely any time...
Found an awesome product for removing everything but the paint on frames, your press everything. Rapid Remover. It's intended for the vinyl vehicle wrapping to not hurt the finish on cars. Works awesome. My Roq tech told me about it. Also, for mesh panels, we tried the SAATI Hidro, and standard SAATI mesh in the sewn Nortech panels. You can order them direct from SAATI. Same on press outcome as we got from S Mesh, but a lot less expensive, and seem to be more durable. Check them out, you'd be super shocked at the price!!
Quote from: Maxie on October 19, 2019, 12:34:38 AMHave you tried acetone? My go-to solvent for dirty & sticky things (frames, presses, etc) is XYLENE (also known as XYLOL).It's not as volatile as Acetone, so it won't evaporate as fast as Acetone. You have time to scrub it in.It's cheap... about $20/gal at Home Depot*** It does require really good ventilation, gloves, safety eyewear and a respirator. Dirty rags require proper storage and disposal.
Have you tried acetone?
Quote from: Rockers on October 18, 2019, 10:35:39 PMQuote from: lancasterprinthouse on October 18, 2019, 10:25:39 PMQuote from: Rockers on October 18, 2019, 10:12:09 PMQuote from: lancasterprinthouse on October 18, 2019, 03:14:20 PMI swear I saw a thread on this in the past on here but a search turned up nothing of benefit. I just bought a load of used MZX frames and now I realize why I never buy used. Anyways, no reason to cry over spilt milk so I’m looking for the fastest and easiest way to clean them up. My thought was to get a Rubbermaid that fits the longest bars, take them all apart and let them soak for a few days in a cleaner or some kind. Question is, what kind or brand? After that I was thinking power washing them might be the fastest way but I’m looking for suggestions. Anybody ever clean up more than a handful before?Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkWe always clean them once we have to re-stretch them. Right now I have 30 that need re-stretetching. Cleaned them all with spot cleaning fluid plus a quick rinse with the pressure washer. Works like a charmWhen I have to remesh my own frames it doesn’t take long to clean them but you should see these frames. They’ll easily take 30-45 minutes per frame. The photos in the ad didn’t look this bad. Might just put them away for a slow day project and buy some new ones. We’re way too busy to spend this kind of time on these right now Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkI don`t understand how this can happen in the first place. I tell my guys part of cleaning screens is as well the actual frame. I get a minor freak out when I find ink on the frames after they have been cleaned.Same. I can’t stand frames that are dirty. The way these frames are makes me wonder what this shop looks like. I can’t even handle them without getting dirty or sticky from the tape residue. How you produce quality work with frames like this is beyond me. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: lancasterprinthouse on October 18, 2019, 10:25:39 PMQuote from: Rockers on October 18, 2019, 10:12:09 PMQuote from: lancasterprinthouse on October 18, 2019, 03:14:20 PMI swear I saw a thread on this in the past on here but a search turned up nothing of benefit. I just bought a load of used MZX frames and now I realize why I never buy used. Anyways, no reason to cry over spilt milk so I’m looking for the fastest and easiest way to clean them up. My thought was to get a Rubbermaid that fits the longest bars, take them all apart and let them soak for a few days in a cleaner or some kind. Question is, what kind or brand? After that I was thinking power washing them might be the fastest way but I’m looking for suggestions. Anybody ever clean up more than a handful before?Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkWe always clean them once we have to re-stretch them. Right now I have 30 that need re-stretetching. Cleaned them all with spot cleaning fluid plus a quick rinse with the pressure washer. Works like a charmWhen I have to remesh my own frames it doesn’t take long to clean them but you should see these frames. They’ll easily take 30-45 minutes per frame. The photos in the ad didn’t look this bad. Might just put them away for a slow day project and buy some new ones. We’re way too busy to spend this kind of time on these right now Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkI don`t understand how this can happen in the first place. I tell my guys part of cleaning screens is as well the actual frame. I get a minor freak out when I find ink on the frames after they have been cleaned.
Quote from: Rockers on October 18, 2019, 10:12:09 PMQuote from: lancasterprinthouse on October 18, 2019, 03:14:20 PMI swear I saw a thread on this in the past on here but a search turned up nothing of benefit. I just bought a load of used MZX frames and now I realize why I never buy used. Anyways, no reason to cry over spilt milk so I’m looking for the fastest and easiest way to clean them up. My thought was to get a Rubbermaid that fits the longest bars, take them all apart and let them soak for a few days in a cleaner or some kind. Question is, what kind or brand? After that I was thinking power washing them might be the fastest way but I’m looking for suggestions. Anybody ever clean up more than a handful before?Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkWe always clean them once we have to re-stretch them. Right now I have 30 that need re-stretetching. Cleaned them all with spot cleaning fluid plus a quick rinse with the pressure washer. Works like a charmWhen I have to remesh my own frames it doesn’t take long to clean them but you should see these frames. They’ll easily take 30-45 minutes per frame. The photos in the ad didn’t look this bad. Might just put them away for a slow day project and buy some new ones. We’re way too busy to spend this kind of time on these right now Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: lancasterprinthouse on October 18, 2019, 03:14:20 PMI swear I saw a thread on this in the past on here but a search turned up nothing of benefit. I just bought a load of used MZX frames and now I realize why I never buy used. Anyways, no reason to cry over spilt milk so I’m looking for the fastest and easiest way to clean them up. My thought was to get a Rubbermaid that fits the longest bars, take them all apart and let them soak for a few days in a cleaner or some kind. Question is, what kind or brand? After that I was thinking power washing them might be the fastest way but I’m looking for suggestions. Anybody ever clean up more than a handful before?Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkWe always clean them once we have to re-stretch them. Right now I have 30 that need re-stretetching. Cleaned them all with spot cleaning fluid plus a quick rinse with the pressure washer. Works like a charm
I swear I saw a thread on this in the past on here but a search turned up nothing of benefit. I just bought a load of used MZX frames and now I realize why I never buy used. Anyways, no reason to cry over spilt milk so I’m looking for the fastest and easiest way to clean them up. My thought was to get a Rubbermaid that fits the longest bars, take them all apart and let them soak for a few days in a cleaner or some kind. Question is, what kind or brand? After that I was thinking power washing them might be the fastest way but I’m looking for suggestions. Anybody ever clean up more than a handful before?Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: lancasterprinthouse on October 18, 2019, 10:37:13 PMQuote from: Rockers on October 18, 2019, 10:35:39 PMQuote from: lancasterprinthouse on October 18, 2019, 10:25:39 PMQuote from: Rockers on October 18, 2019, 10:12:09 PMQuote from: lancasterprinthouse on October 18, 2019, 03:14:20 PMI swear I saw a thread on this in the past on here but a search turned up nothing of benefit. I just bought a load of used MZX frames and now I realize why I never buy used. Anyways, no reason to cry over spilt milk so I’m looking for the fastest and easiest way to clean them up. My thought was to get a Rubbermaid that fits the longest bars, take them all apart and let them soak for a few days in a cleaner or some kind. Question is, what kind or brand? After that I was thinking power washing them might be the fastest way but I’m looking for suggestions. Anybody ever clean up more than a handful before?Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkWe always clean them once we have to re-stretch them. Right now I have 30 that need re-stretetching. Cleaned them all with spot cleaning fluid plus a quick rinse with the pressure washer. Works like a charmWhen I have to remesh my own frames it doesn’t take long to clean them but you should see these frames. They’ll easily take 30-45 minutes per frame. The photos in the ad didn’t look this bad. Might just put them away for a slow day project and buy some new ones. We’re way too busy to spend this kind of time on these right now Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkI don`t understand how this can happen in the first place. I tell my guys part of cleaning screens is as well the actual frame. I get a minor freak out when I find ink on the frames after they have been cleaned.Same. I can’t stand frames that are dirty. The way these frames are makes me wonder what this shop looks like. I can’t even handle them without getting dirty or sticky from the tape residue. How you produce quality work with frames like this is beyond me. Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkJosh, sorry you aren't happy with the frames you got. You wanted the, black bolt only frames, which in our emails I told you weren't cleaned up, but were only, FIFTEEN BUCKS EACH. If you wanted new frames, well, like I did when I bought them a few years ago, pony up the dough for new frames. When you are running a shop that is literally processing hundreds of screens a week,who has time to , "buff their frames"? If you have that time, then you need more print work. This does kind of agrivate me, since I'v been a member of this forum since it's first day. I've also worked and built relationships with a LOT of members here over the past 15 years that we've been running our shop, so to make some of the jabs you have made over, 30 screen frames, is sort of sad. You got a deal and a half on 23x31 MZX Ultralight frames at 15 bucks each. You even stated in emails, you didn't expect them to be perfect, but now I'm reading jabs about our shop, and what not. Let me paste in some of our emails. You may ask why I'd even take the time to do it, but reputation and relationships being stepped on, over 30 frames, bro, I'll send you your money back, it's not that big of a deal, really! On Oct 14, 2019, at 2:57 PM, mike@evolutionaryscreenprinting.net wrote:Hey Josh, so in between set ups I’ve been grabbing frames. So it looks like I’ve pulled about 75 of the mzx all round tube ultra lights, that have the black bolt/raw aluminum finished rollers.Keep in mind these are coming or have come out of production and I haven’t had time to really scrub and sticky remove them. I’ll at least make sure there isn’t a bunch of wet ink all over them, The frames are all great, but like I said, coming out of production without the ultrascrub I just want you to know they aren’t brand new, hence the big discounted price because as we know, time is money. Let me know if you are still good. Thanks Josh! MikeYour replyFrom: Josh Seacat <josh@lancasterprinthouse.com> Sent: Monday, October 14, 2019 3:19 PMTo: mike@evolutionaryscreenprinting.netSubject: Re: Frames Hey Mike, sounds good. Totally understand. As long as they are mechanically sound. I.e., not dented, stripped bolts, warped bars, etc. I think I will take 30 right now but if it’s OK with you I may be back for some more after I check out the first 30. What’s your PayPal or method of payment? Once you have them boxed up let me know how many shipping labels you need. Thanks!Josh SeacatLancaster Print House717-571-0080So like I mentioned above, at 15 bucks a frame, that there is really nothing but tape glue on them, maybe a little big of ink from anything yanked right out of a pile pre-reclaim. I only wish we had enough time in a day to make screen frames look brand new all the time, but processing the amount of jobs we are doing now, it's all we can do to keep the cycle going. And the big point is, you insisted on only having, "black bolt", which honestly should have been more than 15 each and agreed to accept screens that weren't perfectly clean.
We don`t buff our frames but certainly make sure there is no ink on the actual frame once they have been cleaned. Kind of goes hand in hand with cleaning the mesh, at least in our shop.