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screen printing => Waterbase and Discharge => Topic started by: alan802 on May 22, 2013, 02:23:57 PM
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Well, I ran out of the Rutland discharge activator and we got a job this afternoon with discharge white ink. I have plenty of CCI's activator and no CCI D-white, and plenty of Rutland DC white with no activator. I've never mixed different manufacturers activators/inks before and now I need to know if I'm safe using the CCI's activator in the Rutland white ink? I'm pretty sure this has been done and all the activator I've dealt with looks and feels the same but I don't know the chemistry well enough to know if the activator is all the same.
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if both are ZFS activators - it should work.
we used union ZFS with CCI D-White - seemed to be no difference
check the MSDS to compare chemistry beforehand.
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We have CCI and Sericol here and just keep a gallon bucket on hand of the CCI activator, no issues.
I sincerely doubt there is a difference between the ZFS crystals form one ink mfg or another, they probably get them from the same places.
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they are different, but work the same. Look at Sericols activator, it looks like cocaine. CCI, and Magna are more like little crystals, but I have mixed all three and they all work the same. I prefer Sericols, because its easier to mix.
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I tried to find the MSDS on Rutland's activator but couldn't find anything about it. I found CCI's activator info easily and figured all of the ZFS powders were virtually the same. I'm going to run this job in an hour or two and I'll let everyone know how it goes.
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According to the CCI rep that came to our shop all of the ZFS activators are the same so feel free to use whichever one you have.
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I just now realized I hijacked your thread...oops! Is there a way to delete this so I can start a new thread? I added this using modify but have no idea how to delete it. Sorry Alan.
Our CCI D-Flo kit came in today, looking forward to some playtime on the press when time allows. Anyone else tried it yet?
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I certainly don't care about a hijack, I do it all the time. Thanks everybody for helping me out. I pushed this job back to tomorrow morning so that I could coat the right mesh counts for this instead of just using what little we had laying around. We are short handed and slammed to the max. I need some good help but it's proven to be very hard to find.
And thanks to that guy who PM'd me who shall remain "nameless" :).
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wish i kd rply bt y r all gd
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I just now realized I hijacked your thread...oops! Is there a way to delete this so I can start a new thread? I added this using modify but have no idea how to delete it. Sorry Alan.
Our CCI D-Flo kit came in today, looking forward to some playtime on the press when time allows. Anyone else tried it yet?
that cci d flo kit ROCKS THE HOUSE! Did tests with Gary Fox earlier this week and I can say they are better than ANYONES FLOs. And they offer more colors. IMO that is.
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wish i kd rply bt y r all gd
Sound the alarms!! Information leak alert! Information leak alert! Warning! Warning!
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If it's ZFS you are all good.
The only difference you will find between them is particle size. I like the one CCI resells through Ryonet, it's a finer particle and mixes in easier.
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We have used the Union, CCI and Texcharge interchangeably when we had all three here. They all worked fine.
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I just mentioned on the "favorite DC white" thread about my first print run with the Rutland white. I am impressed. I will wait to see the final print washed but as of this second, I think it's a few shades brighter than the CCI before it was washed. I will post again after I wash these samples and then do a side by side comparison between the CCI and Rutland.
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I have washed the sample I printed yesterday and of course it's not as bright as it was before the wash but it still looks a shade or two whiter than the CCI samples I have. It's still not white enough for our sales people to like but me and the artist think it's a better option than thick plastisol for most types of designs. I might see if I have some time to take some pics of the sample prints side by side and let y'all look at them.