re: post-processing workflows: I posted a bit about this a few pages back, but our workflow is:
- Form Wash, first pass in the 'dirty' bath, 3-5 minutes
- Form Wash, second pass in the 'clean' bath, 2-4 minutes
- A quick rinse with fresh IPA squirted from a lab wash bottle, washing the parts off while they're still dripping from the second clean bath.
- For implants/models with holes or cavities, parts with very tough to clean resins like denture teeth, nightguards that must be 100% spotless, we'll often squirt alcohol through the hole/cavity with the wash bottle tip, and/or use a fine hair brush and a dish of fresh alcohol to manually target any problem areas. With careful wash operation and part orientation, though, you can avoid almost all manual detail work.
The Form Wash units are a nice upgrade from the hobbyist-tier Anycubic/Elegoo etc combined wash-cure units, they clean a lot more effectively (the impeller switches directions once a minute to help reach every crevice + the flow is a lot stronger than with hobby units) and they automatically lift the wash basket out of the bath once the timer runs down, so parts never soak in the bath if you forget about them and they'll "dry themselves" if you start the job and walk away. The build quality is also nicer, they're not exactly "commercial-grade" but we've been running ours for almost two years, 14 hours a day 5 days a week, and they're still going strong with no maintenance needed.
At home, for my hobby printing, I use an Elegoo 2-in-1 wash/cure unit, and bought an extra wash tub for the unit, so I can run two baths by just switching the tubs on top of the base. Almost as good as the $2500 form unit, in terms of wash quality, and I don't need those little production quality-of-life features like you want if you're running parts all day for your job.