"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Quote from: ZooCity on July 01, 2016, 03:24:32 PMLet me know how it's working out for them. I'm wondering why more shops aren't using these...Unfortunately I think the answer is what we fear. I've seen a lot of variations of the "scanning pressure washer head insidedip tank" idea and have never heard good things. Solid idea, but doesn't seem to pan out in reality.Hell, if the $75k ones worked as well as claimed I'd bet more folks would have one.
Let me know how it's working out for them. I'm wondering why more shops aren't using these...
Quote from: ebscreen on July 01, 2016, 04:50:39 PMQuote from: ZooCity on July 01, 2016, 03:24:32 PMLet me know how it's working out for them. I'm wondering why more shops aren't using these...Unfortunately I think the answer is what we fear. I've seen a lot of variations of the "scanning pressure washer head insidedip tank" idea and have never heard good things. Solid idea, but doesn't seem to pan out in reality.Hell, if the $75k ones worked as well as claimed I'd bet more folks would have one.Well that's a shame. My idea is to dip tank for chems and only use the units to press rinse the screens with plain, warm water. This seems super easy to automate right? Basic press washer array on either side that travels on a rail, maybe a top rinse setup to rinse down any stray chunks of stuff after the press wash passes.
1) tank 1: 50/50 water and CCI IW1072) rinse3) tank 2: Gem-zyme4)powerwash 5) compressed air 6) rack it up.i'll time the next round of screens and compare.
Quote from: Homer on July 01, 2016, 06:38:42 PM1) tank 1: 50/50 water and CCI IW1072) rinse3) tank 2: Gem-zyme4)powerwash 5) compressed air 6) rack it up.i'll time the next round of screens and compare.Awesome, thank you. Any scrubbing needed after the dehaze dip or you just power wash it straight out of the tank?
no dehaze needed 99% off the time. time savings is huge. I guarantee, we doubled our through put going this route. no scrubbing, no spraying. just power washing and rinsing with a hose. With the IW107/water mixture, ink stays on the screen until you hit it with light hose pressure...been using this system for about a year.
Nation, is de-hazing a standard step for you, or is it just some problem screens? Is it "haze" or stains?When I did close to full time screen cleaning, my rule of thumb was if haze either clogged the mesh or could affect coating, or if a stain was obvious enough to possibly affect exposure times of delicate halftone areas, it was de-hazed.
Quote from: Frog on July 03, 2016, 12:08:32 PMNation, is de-hazing a standard step for you, or is it just some problem screens? Is it "haze" or stains?When I did close to full time screen cleaning, my rule of thumb was if haze either clogged the mesh or could affect coating, or if a stain was obvious enough to possibly affect exposure times of delicate halftone areas, it was de-hazed.It has always been a standard step. I currently do not use a dip tank at all so I would add the emulsion stripper, let sit for a little while. Power wash the emulsion off and then spray with dehazer, scrub, and then power wash again. Even when there wasn't terrible stains I will do it because i figured the dehazer acts as a degreaser as well, no? Sounds like dehazing isn't always necessary, so maybe I can save myself some time moving forward.
https://youtu.be/KLx19HD7I6gI have attached a video of the Saati system I have set up, it's really fast and what I like is that it doesn't have dip tanks, you are using fresh chemicals all the time. I had a dip tank but after a while it gets messy especially it you have workers who leave screens in it etc.I'd like to find a way to semi automate the water spraying, maybe a tank with jets on both sides that I can manually drop the screen into.