Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Wrong guy, but amusingly enough, we use warm water in reclaim too. Develops screens a little faster as well, FWIW.I've always wanted to try out one o' them fancy pressure washers you can pipe hot water through, can't imagine NO one has info...
Quote from: ScreenFoo on March 17, 2015, 08:52:48 PMWrong guy, but amusingly enough, we use warm water in reclaim too. Develops screens a little faster as well, FWIW.I've always wanted to try out one o' them fancy pressure washers you can pipe hot water through, can't imagine NO one has info...Most washers are perfectly fine with water as hot as a reasonably set water heater will produce out of the tap. I think going too hot would make a lot of steam but I bet yer right, it would probably just melt ink and emulsion right off the screens.
Here's a little more. Since I spent four hours doing screens last night (can you believe one of my temps didn't make it in yesterday?) I timed myself. Not including carding and untaping, it too right at two minutes a screen. I wasn't killing myself, just a comfortable working pace. I have looked at automated cleaners over the years. I never really saw one that did as good as I'd like to see. I need to look again. I've seen the smaller units, two part systems all the way up to the half a million dollar units. I'm sure some things have improved since I last looked. And then the fun of justifying a purchase like that to my business partner. Ugh.
Be careful with auto recaiming systems.Uses a lot more water if you have high water costs.Uses a lot more chemistry, often specialized chemistry to prevent foaming.
If I was in Dave position doing 150 reclaims a day I'd have whoever break down the setup remove ink and tape right there at the press and as fast as they take a screen off some else would be setting up new screen's