Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
How long can a screen sit in there till its time To develop?Walt at Murakami recommended against this as he thought the emulsion would get to soft and suck up to much water.On a side note I've been tinkering with adding an air hose with a small amount of air to our reclaim dip tank to add Agitation thus making the spray out faster.
It's already been said but I think the second dip tank would be better served as a stencil developing tool than an ink degrader. We remove ink from screens before we dip and it works so much better than not doing it. Our chem has lasted twice as long since we've done it this way. I guess the ultimate would be 3 dip tanks!
I've tried the "ink degrading tank" waste of time, money and chemicals. We do use 2 tanks, one like others is plain water for developing right out of the exposure unit. We de-ink with beeniedoo and then screens are staged for the diptank for final reclaiming. For instance, my guy last week did 44 screens in a 5 hour shift, that was from carding off inks into the proper pails, re-shelving the pails, de-taping, de-inking, dip tanking, pressure washing, and final de-hazing, degressing, and racking. For us, that's pretty good. We still use squirt bottles for ink degrader, stain remover, and de-greaser, but have been thinking about an albatross 3 stage spraying system.