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  1. #1
    RVNG is offline Member
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    Feb 2010
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    96

    Default PCX Developer Recycling System

    Hello Folks:

    I was hoping to get some comments from people using the PCX Dev. Recycling System with their plate processors. It boasts reduced chemistry usage, allows the processor to run cleaner and with less maintenance… basically all the benefits make it a no-brainer but of course I would like to enquire about its performance in the real world. Has this system delivered on all it’s promised?

    cj

  2. #2
    VladCanada's Avatar
    VladCanada is offline Senior Member
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    Sep 2008
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    Ontario, GTA, Canada
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    Default

    In a couple of years... who will remember that problem, when 90% start use chem-free and low-chem plates?

  3. #3
    RVNG is offline Member
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    Feb 2010
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    Default

    Very good point. And because of that I hope to save money now so that I may spend in the future... a future hopefully where chem-free plates are a closer match in quality to traditional plates.

    cj

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
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    95

    Default

    Plates will never be chem free, as long as you have a "reaction" on plate. Call it semantics but there will always be some sort of plate reaction with the co-polymer compound.

    That is until they release the plateless press.

    Or

    When the likes of Ricoh and other copier manufacturers develop a similar product that can integrally bind and run 60+K and hour and the ROI & cost per page comes down.

    It's coming folks make no mistake! but me thinks the new electronic paper will be the killer


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