to alcohol or not to alcohol
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Re: to alcohol or not to alcohol
Well guys the man does have a point. I had some vinegar mixed with water that i used for a few things here. I pour some out and put some triflow minus the garlic and again the man has a point. The only thing is the inclined chemist will have to analyse if the chemistry would do any harm to the rubber.
but seriously this works great, it cleans those white pinch rollers like butter.THE ONLY THING FOR EVIL TO TRIUMPH IS FOR GOOD MEN TO DO NOTHING..........edmund burkeComment
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Re: to alcohol or not to alcohol
Well guys the man does have a point. I had some vinegar mixed with water that i used for a few things here. I pour some out and put some triflow minus the garlic and again the man has a point. The only thing is the inclined chemist will have to analyse if the chemistry would do any harm to the rubber.
but seriously this works great, it cleans those white pinch rollers like butter.
An emulsion is a suspension of two liquids that normally do not stay mixed, like oil and vinegar. Normally, if one pours oil into vinegar, the oil will float on top of the vinegar. Oil is less dense than vinegar. However, the main reason why this happens is because oil is a non-polar substance, and vinegar is a polar one. Substances with dissimilar molecular structures do not interact easily.
In order to keep this separation of liquids from occurring, it is necessary to whisk the oil and vinegar together, forming a temporary emulsion. Still, the temporary emulsion will eventually separate into two layers of the original liquids. For a permanent emulsion, an emulsifying agent is necessary to molecularly hold these immiscible liquids together.THE ONLY THING FOR EVIL TO TRIUMPH IS FOR GOOD MEN TO DO NOTHING..........edmund burkeComment
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Re: to alcohol or not to alcohol
An emulsion is a suspension of two liquids that normally do not stay mixed, like oil and vinegar. Normally, if one pours oil into vinegar, the oil will float on top of the vinegar. Oil is less dense than vinegar. However, the main reason why this happens is because oil is a non-polar substance, and vinegar is a polar one. Substances with dissimilar molecular structures do not interact easily.
In order to keep this separation of liquids from occurring, it is necessary to whisk the oil and vinegar together, forming a temporary emulsion. Still, the temporary emulsion will eventually separate into two layers of the original liquids. For a permanent emulsion, an emulsifying agent is necessary to molecularly hold these immiscible liquids together.
=^..^=If you'd like a serious answer to your request:
1) demonstrate that you've read the manual
2) demonstrate that you made some attempt to fix it.
3) if you're going to ask about jams include the jam code.
4) if you're going to ask about an error code include the error code.
5) You are the person onsite. Only you can make observations.
blackcat: Master Of The Obvious =^..^=Comment
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Re: to alcohol or not to alcohol
Well guys the man does have a point. I had some vinegar mixed with water that i used for a few things here. I pour some out and put some triflow minus the garlic and again the man has a point. The only thing is the inclined chemist will have to analyse if the chemistry would do any harm to the rubber.
but seriously this works great, it cleans those white pinch rollers like butter.
not all believe in simplicityThis only have I found:
God created mankind upright,
but they have gone in search of many schemes.Comment
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Re: to alcohol or not to alcohol
True ?
Garlic is sulphur based,Vinegar is water + acidic acid, and olive oil is a natural hydrocarbon base oil.
In simple terms ,you have a miscible water+acid mixed with a non-miscible oil ????
Once the water and acid have cleaned the area, you will be left with an oily residue. The oil will make everything look shinny new.
You might be better off using grandma's cleaner. ie. cup full of vinegar mixed with half a cup of bleach (Sodium-HypoChloride). If it's a mouldy area, add a couple of drops of clove oil.
Well you never know till you give it a go, it might work on natural rubber compounds... I might even try it one day....Inauguration to the "AI cancel-culture" fraternity 1997...
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Re: to alcohol or not to alcohol
I have two flip cap bottles of cleaner in my tool case.
1. 1 x bottle of Methylated spirits.
2. 1 x bottle of Spray-an-Wipe (Ammonia based) cleaner.
Use of the above cleaners depends on which machine I'm working on.
It all depends on the roller I wish to clean. I will often use water with a squirt of alcohol to speed up my work day.
I will sometime use water and alcohol on a coarse scour pad to clean really grubby rubber rollers.
In saying the above. I would like to know the MFD rubber compounds used for various climates and different countries. I live in a warm tropical climate. The rubber compound used in other climates might make a major difference to the cleaner I would use.Inauguration to the "AI cancel-culture" fraternity 1997...
•••••• •••[§]• |N | € | o | M | Δ | t | π | ¡ | x | •[§]••• ••••••Comment
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Re: to alcohol or not to alcohol
I have two flip cap bottles of cleaner in my tool case.
1. 1 x bottle of Methylated spirits.
2. 1 x bottle of Spray-an-Wipe (Ammonia based) cleaner.
Use of the above cleaners depends on which machine I'm working on.
It all depends on the roller I wish to clean. I will often use water with a squirt of alcohol to speed up my work day.
I will sometime use water and alcohol on a coarse scour pad to clean really grubby rubber rollers.
In saying the above. I would like to know the MFD rubber compounds used for various climates and different countries. I live in a warm tropical climate. The rubber compound used in other climates might make a major difference to the cleaner I would use.
The MSDS sheet for menthylated spirits is quite alarming.THE ONLY THING FOR EVIL TO TRIUMPH IS FOR GOOD MEN TO DO NOTHING..........edmund burkeComment
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Re: to alcohol or not to alcohol
I actually use in most part "Ethanol" not "Methanol". Very near the same solvent properties though.
Methylated spirits is a mixture of both Ethanol and Methanol in various ratios, depending on the manufacturer.
Your right about the statistics for "Ethanol" use it is quite alarming, especially when mixed with Coke & ice cubes in a glass...Inauguration to the "AI cancel-culture" fraternity 1997...
•••••• •••[§]• |N | € | o | M | Δ | t | π | ¡ | x | •[§]••• ••••••Comment
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Re: to alcohol or not to alcohol
I actually use in most part "Ethanol" not "Methanol". Very near the same solvent properties though.
Methylated spirits is a mixture of both Ethanol and Methanol in various ratios, depending on the manufacturer.
Your right about the statistics for "Ethanol" use it is quite alarming, especially when mixed with Coke & ice cubes in a glass...
Well, Mr. matrix, was just looking out for you there when i saw the MSDS for the stuff, just had to push the red button. You know the saying, if it works for you, then by all means.THE ONLY THING FOR EVIL TO TRIUMPH IS FOR GOOD MEN TO DO NOTHING..........edmund burkeComment
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Re: to alcohol or not to alcohol
The reason i stay away from oil based cleaners for the rollers are, if they are not completely cleaned off the rollers, then the oil can be transfered to the drum, dev, transfer belt and it make a simple cleaning job into a troubleshooting print quality problem. Most of the guys seem to like wd40, so i guess it works well. Has anyone tried KRUD CUTTER ?.Hey what ya doing? - just screwing around.Comment
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Re: to alcohol or not to alcohol
thanks everyone for all your input and suggestions and your time to respond. I think I have enough info to make a decision and majority rules . I am going to say no to alcohol and only keep a small supply for those one off times when its actually needed.
we need to remember and treasure those special moments at work when we really enjoy what we do...trade those old machines in and smash the crap out of them...
Hey what ya doing? - just screwing around.Comment
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