TSB
General => General Discussion and ??? => Topic started by: Action1 on October 11, 2012, 01:19:07 PM
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A gentleman who was here last week to pick up an MHM Style Double Stroke Squeegee returned today to pick one up for use on his M&R. He said that his team that works on the M&R machine was jealous when they saw how well it worked on the MHM.
Ladies & Gentlemen of TSB - this is what makes us work so hard to develop these products. It's exactly that which has been a key motivator for the last 20 years. That and of course some food and shelter. And let's not forget some new shoes too once in a while. However - the tremendously positive feedback that our customers relay is at the top of the motivation list. Thanks to everyone for giving these new products a try.
Action Engineering, Inc.
www.actionengineering.com (http://www.actionengineering.com)
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Eric you might want to think about shortening one of the channels just a tick for better angle control. I Beta tested these and they yield noticeably better coverage.
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'have one on the way! Very much so looking forward to it!
pierre
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Not to be negative but how do you clean something like that. Do you have to take it apart?
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Not to be negative but how do you clean something like that. Do you have to take it apart?
If I had one I would almost never clean it just use it as a dedicated white. If cleaning needed blast it with the pressure washer.
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I can see this being beneficial for us those rare times we underbase through high mesh counts.
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Looking forward to ours!
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Not to steal Eric's thunder but it was initially designed for a large overseas shop to print waterbase very quickly with one stroke. In that case it would be easy to clean but for plastisol a dedicated whit would be the way to go. Remember this will shorten your stroke by app one inch and you may need to adjust your image placement.
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Tony - the newer design has the blades closer than the one you saw a year ago. There is still a reduction of maximum image length - but more like 3/4" instead of 2". The blades are 3/8" apart now.
Regarding Cleanup - The only area that is challenging to clean is between the blades. I think that the right kind of brush would work. I used to have one that was long and slender i used for brushing away eraser grit from my drafting. That style and shape but with a shorter and stiffer bristle. I've seen brushes on the McMaster Carr website that looked like they would work nice.
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would a toothbrush work? It seems like it might . . .
pierre
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would a toothbrush work? It seems like it might . . .
pierre
Hi Pierre:
I found a brush that would be better than a toothbrush. Go to the McMaster Carr website (www.mcmaster.com (http://www.mcmaster.com)) & enter their item number 6906T1 into the search box in the upper left. It looks like the perfect brush. It's 1/2" wide and 8 inches long and bristle length is 1". It's about $7 before freight.
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would a toothbrush work? It seems like it might . . .
pierre
Hi Pierre:
I found a brush that would be better than a toothbrush. Go to the McMaster Carr website ([url=http://www.mcmaster.com]www.mcmaster.com[/url] ([url]http://www.mcmaster.com[/url])) & enter their item number 6906T1 into the search box in the upper left. It looks like the perfect brush. It's 1/2" wide and 8 inches long and bristle length is 1". It's about $7 before freight.
wow, that looks pretty cool!
pierre