Author Topic: Degreasing and removing ghost images  (Read 4275 times)

Offline 3Deep

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Re: Degreasing and removing ghost images
« Reply #15 on: October 11, 2012, 04:38:29 PM »
I use a haze removal I forget which company, but I let the screens sit for about 15 mintues and those jokes were ripped down the middle.  Right now I,m using  the green Zone dehaze 669 and its really not that good..might try what you guys are using.

Darryl
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Offline Nick Bane

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Re: Degreasing and removing ghost images
« Reply #16 on: October 11, 2012, 04:48:59 PM »
I use CCI Envirohaze.  were pretty happy with it, and our CCI rep Jaime is awesome, takes super good care of us.
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Offline tonypep

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Re: Degreasing and removing ghost images
« Reply #17 on: October 12, 2012, 07:47:14 AM »
Of course you don't have to, but consider purchasing all your screen chemistry including emulsion from the same manufacturer. True, you can usually "mix and match" till to you find the products that work best for you. But I find comfort in using products that were specifically designed to work with each other. Then thers the added bonus of better technical support.
Just a thought

Offline Ryan

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Re: Degreasing and removing ghost images
« Reply #18 on: October 12, 2012, 09:01:32 AM »
I don't dehaze at all any more. I think because I truely don't know the difference between haze and a stain and the more you dehaze, the more damage you are doing to the mesh. I found that if there were "stains" in the screen after reclaim, I would wash with ink remover again and that would take care of most of the stuff and if it didn't, well it was truely stained, degrease then done. I use CCI degreaser, can't think of the name but its red and mixes 30/1

Offline Frog

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Re: Degreasing and removing ghost images
« Reply #19 on: October 12, 2012, 10:32:01 AM »
I use a haze removal I forget which company, but I let the screens sit for about 15 mintues and those jokes were ripped down the middle.  Right now I,m using  the green Zone dehaze 669 and its really not that good..might try what you guys are using.

Darryl

I thought that I had replied to this yesterday, but, apparently not, so here it is again


The "ripper" sounds like the old caustic lye-based pastes that were commonly used for years. The absolute worst (or best) is Autohaze from McDermid Autotype or whatever they are called now-a-days.
They were the reason I started a quest about ten years ago that eventually found me my Liquid Reni-it.

And yes, stains or ghost images are more of an issue than "haze" per se. Stains, though can actually affect exposures, especially of fine halftone areas.
Actual haze, I experienced much more when we used Xylene as a cleaner, and the screens were probably underexposed. Sometimes, the haze was ghosts of previous images.
That rug really tied the room together, did it not?

Offline Squeegie

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Re: Degreasing and removing ghost images
« Reply #20 on: October 12, 2012, 10:53:48 AM »
ebscreen wrote: "That GR70 is great stuff too. A little harsh for everyday use"

I just had a discussion with dottone during a get together in Orlando that I have some screens, N300 mesh, that are 10 years old.  I use GR70 on every screen, every reclaim.  If I have mesh that lasts ten years I feel that the GR70 is in no way "a little harsh".  These are screens that get used an average of 3 times a month.




Offline Rockers

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Re: Degreasing and removing ghost images
« Reply #21 on: October 12, 2012, 11:20:20 AM »
I also used this   http://www.silkscreeningsupplies.com/product/CCGREEND-P  and I like it too.

Same here, CCI. The green stuff. Works very well without causing any damage to the mesh. Right now we are trying Easiway's Screen Perfect which is a degreaser and general mesh prep. Not sure about it yet.

Offline ScreenFoo

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Re: Degreasing and removing ghost images
« Reply #22 on: October 12, 2012, 11:56:59 AM »
I use a haze removal I forget which company, but I let the screens sit for about 15 mintues and those jokes were ripped down the middle.  Right now I,m using  the green Zone dehaze 669 and its really not that good..might try what you guys are using.

Darryl

I thought that I had replied to this yesterday, but, apparently not, so here it is again


The "ripper" sounds like the old caustic lye-based pastes that were commonly used for years. The absolute worst (or best) is Autohaze from McDermid Autotype or whatever they are called now-a-days.
They were the reason I started a quest about ten years ago that eventually found me my Liquid Reni-it.

And yes, stains or ghost images are more of an issue than "haze" per se. Stains, though can actually affect exposures, especially of fine halftone areas.
Actual haze, I experienced much more when we used Xylene as a cleaner, and the screens were probably underexposed. Sometimes, the haze was ghosts of previous images.

Curious as to the terminology here, as I have understood it, "haze" was from emulsion and "ghosts" from ink--i.e. the best way to eliminate haze was proper exposure and stencil removal, and the best way to eliminate ghosts was to use an effective ink remover properly.  Not touching 'phantom haze', but not sure if I'm being a retro-grouch here.   ???

Anyway, as far as ghost/haze remover goes, I played with samples of everything I could get my hands on, some of it was bordering a joke to me--seriously, I got a product to try from a company I respect highly, and it was literally water, water glass, and bleach. 
When I have issues with either type of screen crappiness, I use a sodium hydroxide based product from CCI--LSR-30.  It seems to be easier on mesh than the old pregan paste, and combines a degreasing agent so after a good rinse it's ready to coat.   May need to get a sample of the Renu-it though.

The green stuff sounds great--except it claims the same horrible thing that other similar products say--it degreases, dehazes, and abrades?  Unless you're using cap film, you DON'T want to abrade, and even if you are, you don't want to abrade every time you reclaim.  I got a line from a rep about how it doesn't abrade enough to damage mesh--WTF is the definition of abrade then?   ::)

Offline Frog

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Re: Degreasing and removing ghost images
« Reply #23 on: October 12, 2012, 12:07:14 PM »
I don't know the Green Stuff specifically, but over the years have seen more than one product that combined degreaser with grit for the somewhat outdated and misguided practice of helping cap film and even erroneously, emulsion (due to its "sandwiching" application) to adhere to the mesh better.
However, we learned that the increased wear on the mesh overshadowed any benefit, evem with cap film.

And yes, it was generally just done once, to new mesh.
That rug really tied the room together, did it not?

Offline Prosperi-Tees

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Re: Degreasing and removing ghost images
« Reply #24 on: October 12, 2012, 12:17:35 PM »
I have a bottle of the green stuff and dont care for it. It does not remove stains/haze nearly as well as the Renuit and will probably collect dust and dry out in my shop.

Offline Rockers

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Re: Degreasing and removing ghost images
« Reply #25 on: October 12, 2012, 12:18:46 PM »
I use a haze removal I forget which company, but I let the screens sit for about 15 mintues and those jokes were ripped down the middle.  Right now I,m using  the green Zone dehaze 669 and its really not that good..might try what you guys are using.

Darryl

I thought that I had replied to this yesterday, but, apparently not, so here it is again



The "ripper" sounds like the old caustic lye-based pastes that were commonly used for years. The absolute worst (or best) is Autohaze from McDermid Autotype or whatever they are called now-a-days.
They were the reason I started a quest about ten years ago that eventually found me my Liquid Reni-it.

And yes, stains or ghost images are more of an issue than "haze" per se. Stains, though can actually affect exposures, especially of fine halftone areas.
Actual haze, I experienced much more when we used Xylene as a cleaner, and the screens were probably underexposed. Sometimes, the haze was ghosts of previous images.

Curious as to the terminology here, as I have understood it, "haze" was from emulsion and "ghosts" from ink--i.e. the best way to eliminate haze was proper exposure and stencil removal, and the best way to eliminate ghosts was to use an effective ink remover properly.  Not touching 'phantom haze', but not sure if I'm being a retro-grouch here.   ???

Anyway, as far as ghost/haze remover goes, I played with samples of everything I could get my hands on, some of it was bordering a joke to me--seriously, I got a product to try from a company I respect highly, and it was literally water, water glass, and bleach. 
When I have issues with either type of screen crappiness, I use a sodium hydroxide based product from CCI--LSR-30.  It seems to be easier on mesh than the old pregan paste, and combines a degreasing agent so after a good rinse it's ready to coat.   May need to get a sample of the Renu-it though.

The green stuff sounds great--except it claims the same horrible thing that other similar products say--it degreases, dehazes, and abrades?  Unless you're using cap film, you DON'T want to abrade, and even if you are, you don't want to abrade every time you reclaim.  I got a line from a rep about how it doesn't abrade enough to damage mesh--WTF is the definition of abrade then?   ::)
I can't find anywhere in the product description that the Green Stuff abrades the mesh.

Offline ebscreen

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Re: Degreasing and removing ghost images
« Reply #26 on: October 12, 2012, 12:20:37 PM »
I just had a discussion with dottone during a get together in Orlando that I have some screens, N300 mesh, that are 10 years old.  I use GR70 on every screen, every reclaim.  If I have mesh that lasts ten years I feel that the GR70 is in no way "a little harsh".  These are screens that get used an average of 3 times a month.

I meant for the person(s) using the chemical, not the item being cleaned. It is great, but one whiff and whooooooo

Offline Rockers

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Re: Degreasing and removing ghost images
« Reply #27 on: October 12, 2012, 12:23:55 PM »
I just had a discussion with dottone during a get together in Orlando that I have some screens, N300 mesh, that are 10 years old.  I use GR70 on every screen, every reclaim.  If I have mesh that lasts ten years I feel that the GR70 is in no way "a little harsh".  These are screens that get used an average of 3 times a month.

I meant for the person(s) using the chemical, not the item being cleaned. It is great, but one whiff and whooooooo
How many screens do you get cleaned on average with one gallon of GR70?

Offline ScreenFoo

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Re: Degreasing and removing ghost images
« Reply #28 on: October 12, 2012, 12:43:24 PM »
From link provided--could be Ryonet's misinformation.



From Ryonet, by CCI


What if you could dehaze a screen, degrease a screen and abrade prep your mesh all in ONE step?  What if you could do this with a user friendly product that is environmentally responsible that also happens to smell great and saves you money? If you have The Green Stuff in your washout sink, you can!!!



Offline Squeegie

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Re: Degreasing and removing ghost images
« Reply #29 on: October 12, 2012, 12:45:19 PM »
"How many screens do you get cleaned on average with one gallon of GR70?"

I buy it by the 5 gallon and refill a qt spray bottle.  Depending on the amount of cleaning needed on each screen I would estimate 120-140 per gallon. These are 23 x 31 roller frames.  Also, the GR70 does a great job on the frames as well.  Keeps them looking like new.