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Discuss the various aspects of screen printing. Inks, speciality printing, print locations, durability, etc.

Ink cleanup



 
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Old September 26th, 2006 Sep 26, 2006 11:35:11 AM -   #1 (permalink)
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Default Ink cleanup

When looking for ink remover I have come across products that mention that they remove plastisol inks, but have not seen anything that says it removes water-based inks from screens. We're looking for both a cleaner for routine cleaning after prints, as well as a product to remove dried inks in a screen.

We have a screen that seems to have gotten a bit of ink dried in it mistakenly and would like to try removing it.

Also, do water-based inks tend to dry faster than plastisol inks in the screen? if so is there a way around this? or is a plastisol ink recomended when doing multiple prints?
 
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Old September 26th, 2006 Sep 26, 2006 3:14:06 PM -   #2 (permalink)
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Default Re: Ink cleanup

From my experience it takes a long time to dry plastisol.

Just today I went to my bench and found a squeegee that I dripped some ink on a couple of days ago. It was still wet.

Whatever they use as a suspention in plastisol, it doesn't dry very fast.

The only time I use water based ink that I got from Speedball it just washed up with water if I got to it quick enough. Otherwise I had to nearly power wash it and once I use Greesed Lightning and just reclaimed the whole screen, taking the ink and emultion off. I'm not sure what would take just the ink off at that point.
 
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Old September 26th, 2006 Sep 26, 2006 9:34:52 PM -   #3 (permalink)
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Default Re: Ink cleanup

Quote:
Originally Posted by ashiver
Also, do water-based inks tend to dry faster than plastisol inks in the screen?
Water-based inks dry in the screen fairly rapidly. Plastisol doesn't air dry at all.

Quote:
Originally Posted by ashiver
if so is there a way around this? or is a plastisol ink recomended when doing multiple prints?
You can get retarders to slow down the drying of waterbased inks, but it's still going to dry out. Plastisol has its own plusses and minuses, but it's probably going to be easier to use for a large print run.
 
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Old September 26th, 2006 Sep 26, 2006 9:37:36 PM -   #4 (permalink)
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Default Re: Ink cleanup

Quote:
Originally Posted by tonym
Whatever they use as a suspention in plastisol, it doesn't dry very fast.
PVC suspended in oil I believe.

Quote:
Originally Posted by tonym
I'm not sure what would take just the ink off at that point.
I don't think anything does. If the ink thoroughly dries in the screen even reclaimer won't get it out. At that point you'll need to be looking at dehazers and so forth (basically escalating the chain of cleaners).
 
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Old October 2nd, 2006 Oct 2, 2006 8:07:58 PM -   #5 (permalink)
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Default Re: Ink cleanup

sorry guys, im new to this forum and me posting here makes some sense...ive got a sweater that has dry ink that i want to remove is there a type of solution to remove ink?
 
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Old October 2nd, 2006 Oct 2, 2006 9:58:35 PM -   #6 (permalink)
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Default Re: Ink cleanup

Quote:
Originally Posted by mingostarr
sorry guys, im new to this forum and me posting here makes some sense...ive got a sweater that has dry ink that i want to remove is there a type of solution to remove ink?
Spot cleaner and a Spot gun...
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