"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I have screens I re use. I don't like storing screens with plastisol on them, prefer washing off color and retaping.Never used hardener, if I have very big runs I sometimes post expose in the sun and use filler to stop pinholes.I use PHU but your emulsion and lamp should be excellent.
Use Murakami A&B Hardener for permanent screens on SP1400. Mix equal amounts and use within 24hrs. Apply to both sides like you are waxing a car and use a hot box or sun to heat the screen. Heat improves the hardener's effect. An 8k lamp? yeah that will definitely give you complete exposure and eliminate a lot of headaches. We had to library many of our jobs and found cleaning the ink off a big plus. Workers liked handling them over ones with ink that eventually migrates everywhere and can pick up a lot of dust during storage.Al
At Andy's, we kept hundreds (if not thousands) of screens for the pre-print line, all cleaned, (many by yours truly), but not with a dip tank.I can not imagine the mess if they were still inky.As a side note, these screens were cleaned using Xylene which I believe also had the off-label effect of hardening screens, especially screens which were a little underexposed.
small tidbit to always remember:If your mesh is not work hardened or close to it, over time it can/will relax and loose more tension. This can make really tight registration difficult as the image can start to distort from the relaxation of the mesh. This is most noticeable on taller designs or with fine dot on dot/fine line type work.