Spot cleaning is a final-mile quality step in garment and print production. When ink mist, pinholes, overspray, oil marks, adhesive residue, or handling smudges appear, a spot cleaning gun allows operators to remove defects quickly—often saving the garment and protecting on-time delivery. In screen printing workflows, spot guns are commonly used for localized plastisol or transfer-related cleanup, and many factories pair them with a vacuum spot cleaning station to help capture fumes and improve operator comfort and compliance.
Most spot cleaning guns are designed to deliver a focused, high-pressure micro-jet so cleaning fluid can penetrate the fabric surface at the stain point, then flush out the contamination without soaking the whole area. Practical production advantages come from:
• Controlled spray pattern (from mist to stronger jet) to match fabric thickness and stain severity
• Stable, repeatable output for consistent results shift-to-shift
• Compatibility with common spot cleaning fluids/solvents used in print finishing (always follow your chemical supplier's guidance)
When comparing models, experienced buyers typically prioritize the items below because they directly impact uptime, safety, and total cost per cleaned garment:
1) Spray control & nozzle durability
Look for an adjustable nozzle and durable metal components to reduce downtime from clogging or accidental drops.
2) Solvent tolerance & sealing reliability
If you use stronger cleaning agents, you'll want components that hold up under chemical exposure (seals, valves, and internal passages).
3) Production fit: intermittent vs. higher-throughput use
Different lines need different duty cycles. For example, some models are positioned for intermittent/moderate duty where ergonomics matters for operators.
4) Workplace ventilation integration (risk management)
Many facilities prefer using a spot cleaning station with suction/exhaust to remove chemical vapors and reduce exposure while speeding dry-down.
Hanze supplies multiple series to match different fabrics, stains, and line setups—supporting bulk purchasing, OEM branding, and export-ready packaging.
Recommended selection logic:
• Light stains / thin fabrics / detail correction → choose a model with finer control and lighter handling
• Mixed stains / daily line use → choose a balanced model for stable output and easy maintenance
• Higher output / stronger cleaning needs → consider pairing with a vacuum spot cleaning station for safer, cleaner operation
Need help matching a model to your fabric + ink system? Send your stain type, fabric GSM, and daily output—we'll recommend a configuration and spare parts set. Contact us now!
• Screen printing: pinholes, overspray, stray ink marks, fingerprints
• Embroidery/garment finishing: oil/grease marks, handling stains, packaging soil
• Textile workshops: localized stain correction before QC/packing
• Distributors: a high-frequency consumable tool with repeat orders and spare parts demand
To support stable procurement and resale performance, we focus on:
• Batch consistency in assembly and output stability
• Pre-shipment inspection on key functions (spray pattern, sealing, trigger response)
• Spare parts support (e.g., nozzle/consumables depending on model)
• OEM options: logo, label, carton marking, and distributor-ready packaging
| Item | Options / Notes |
|---|---|
| Drive Type | Electric models / Manual models (depends on series) |
| Spray Control | Adjustable nozzle (mist to stronger jet) for different fabrics |
| Recommended Integration | Use with a vacuum spot cleaning station to capture vapors and improve dry-down |
| Common Applications | Ink spots, overspray, oil/grease marks, general garment stain correction |
| Supply Options | Bulk orders, OEM branding, export packaging |
Q1: Do I need a spot cleaning station, or is the gun alone enough?
If your process uses stronger cleaning fluids or you're cleaning frequently, many facilities prefer a station with suction/exhaust to help manage vapors and keep the work area cleaner.
Q2: Can a spot cleaning gun remove plastisol ink mistakes?
Yes—spot cleaning guns are commonly used to remove stray ink marks, pinholes, and smudges during garment printing/finishing (performance depends on the cleaning fluid and the ink/fabric system).
Q3: What should I send you for accurate model recommendation?
Fabric type and GSM, ink type (plastisol/water-based/discharge), stain description (fresh/dried), and daily output target.
Q4: Do you support OEM for distributors?
Yes. We can support branding and distributor-ready packaging for bulk orders (logo/label/carton marking).
Q5: What are common maintenance points?
Keep nozzle passages clean, use compatible fluids, and plan spare nozzles/seals for high-frequency lines.