MachServTech
New Member
Artbot is correct. This formula will not damage your machines and can be used with any solvent printer.
DO NOT USE THIS WITH UV CURABLE INKJET.
DO NOT USE THIS WITH UV CURABLE INKJET.
you bought a bottle of butyl carbitol and acetone. i understand. i'll use my stuff for the next few months and do a final assessment of the properties. i've got a lot of experience working with coatings and chemicals developing my printing systems so it's a bit less mysterious. until then i'll be happy to be the guinea pig.
welcome to s101I was wondering if anyone has tested these homemade solvents for a considerable amount of time on any solvent/e-solvent wide format printers.
i would not bring up to that SW location that the correct price is around $60 a gallon. it also can be wiped on the front of old paper backing that won't come off of acrylic. and is great at removing adhesive. ....turns it into rolly polly rubber.
This is the only place online or otherwise that I've found to sell the Roland Eco-Sol cleaning fluid in bottles.
http://www.extremeinkjet.com/Solvent_Cleaning_Fluid_p/solclean.htm
Oops, took the time to look a little further and found it much cheaper, just ordered a 500ml bottle for 29.95.
Hey hey! Just wanted to confirm the "latest best blend" was 1:2 of carbitol : acetone ?latest and best blend is just the carbitol with the acetone. OEMs use the cellosolve as a filler solvent because the carbitol costs twice as much. i've seen vutek msds show that a head maintenance fluid was
100% carbitol. as for the logic in making your own fluid.
Wow a thread from the way back machine. I mix 10% acetone.Hey hey! Just wanted to confirm the "latest best blend" was 1:2 of carbitol : acetone ?
Finally gonna grab these chems and mix up a batch before I pay the Roland dealer $100/litre.
Cheers!
you bought a bottle of butyl carbitol and acetone. i understand. i'll use my stuff for the next few months and do a final assessment of the properties. i've got a lot of experience working with coatings and chemicals developing my printing systems so it's a bit less mysterious. until then i'll be happy to be the guinea pig.
recipe:
80% cellosolve and 20% acetone.
Are you sure its not Butyl Cellosolve Acetate
Two totally different products with different flash points. May sound similar but they are notummm. I'm no rocket surgeon, buuut