We’re updating our site to improve your experience. Thank you for your patience.

BUTLER, WIFlexo-Graphics was having a problem—and it was a good problem to have. Business was growing rapidly, but the company realized its internal processes were not keeping up with production demands. As its business grew and expanded, the need to clean its anilox rolls effectively grew and expanded as well.

Its problem was that the method of cleaning it used to clean its anilox rolls “broke down too often and too fast.” Due to this unreliable cleaning system, Flexo-Graphics employees spent a few hours a day cleaning rolls by hand as well.

Two employees were dedicated to the manual cleaning of not only the anilox rolls, but the trays and parts as well. They used a combination of solvents and other cleaners, but were having a hard time getting everything truly clean. Tim McDonough of Flexo-Graphics said, “Our eyes were really opened when an ink vendor showed us how dirty our ‘clean’ anilox rolls were” despite all the time and effort they had put into cleaning them.

McDonough began chatting with Mike and Patrick Potter prior to Labelexpo and the TLMI Annual Meeting a few years back. “They educated me about the Flexo Wash machine and what it could do.” After measuring their cleaning space, they found that they could fit a Flexo Wash machine there.

They did a demo of their dirty anilox rolls in the Flexo Wash anilox cleaner and found the results to be “remarkable” and that their rolls “were not nearly as clean” as they thought they were, according to John Witmer, operations manager. They learned how just a slight change in the cleanliness of an anilox roll really affects the color. They also determined that “staying at color” was dependent on the cleanliness of the anilox roll.

McDonough explained, “Much of our customer base was moving to tight color tolerances and we felt the Flexo Wash solution would give us the cleanest rollers and best chance to regularly reproduce spot colors within the acceptable Delta.”

Time was also a huge factor in their decision. Before, determining the time to clean the anilox rolls took some planning, because it would mean the press was down for an hour. Figuring out when the cleaning would take place during the day, between jobs and all while trying to keep up with an increased production schedule. Also they could only clean two anilox rolls at a time in their ultrasonic cleaner and it would take one hour.

In 2017, the company purchased its first anilox cleaner, a Handy 2×2. It could clean four rolls at a time with a much shorter turnaround time of 15-20 minutes maximum (sometimes only 10 minutes using the Quick Wash).

In 2018, the company purchased a new press, which was a 17-in. press with 10 colors. This new press, and the fact that the company’s work was much more in the “UV world,” taxed its ability to keep everything clean. Flexo-Graphics went from a negligible use of UV ink to using UV ink 50 percent of the time, in just three short years.

The improvements in its system were evident. “We spent far less time at the sink, which resulted in more time running the press. In addition, clean rolls led to more repeatable color and tones, which is critical in a highly repetitive business. Our ability to easily hit color led to more press uptime due to less time spent dialing in color or changing anilox rolls.”

McDonough also said,“We also improved press run time by not having to clean an anilox roll that was already in the press. Prior to Flexo Wash it was not uncommon for us to run up a job with a “clean” anilox only to see that color was lacking and that we need to give the anilox another cycle to try to get it cleaner. Now a roller is either clean or it is not. There no longer is almost clean.

Here are some statistics of the company’s results:

McDonough said, “In 2019, we added our second UV converting line. We had two helpers cleaning ink pans, blades, rollers per shift. Needless to say, this was becoming a bit time consuming and not a productive use of time in a tight labor market. I called several TLMI friends for references on parts washers and the consensus was that the Flexo Wash parts washer did everything it was advertised to do.”

This expanded UV production also “tipped the scales in the way we cleaned our press parts” and for that reason, 18 months after the company bought the Flexo Wash Anilox Cleaner, it purchased the Flexo Wash Parts Washer, a PK 200 WR. McDonough said, “Upon installation, we were able to free employees to perform more of the press helper role they were brought on to do rather than spending a shift cleaning pans. This led to more productivity on our servo presses and much faster cleaning of press parts.”

Flexo-Graphics has “a history of investing in equipment to improve efficiencies and Flexo Wash fit that bill. The amount of labor and machine time we have saved allowed us to easily realize a return on investment inside of 12 months on both the anilox cleaner and the parts washer.”