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When I pour it in there is a little rush out the bottom, but then a fast drip and then a slow drip. All while the filter is full to the top.
I make sure that there's just enough alcohol to cover the parts which is often less than a third full. Let them soak for a few minutes at most, give them a swirl, another minute or so and another swirl, nothing too vicious or for very long, then rotate from the first wash to the newest, used as a final wash. In the final I might give it a swirl but by then it's not doing much, evidence how long that wash lasts. The fresh, final wash, becomes the first rough wash when it gets cloudy. Sometimes with a lot to do I'll do a third rotation, oldest solvent first.
I know this quote was before you got the wash station, but in my eyes this method would not work at all for me. My first dunk is in a $1 buck container with a lid. I scrub the crap out of the parts with a chip brush. Then I use a compressor with a blow gun to blow it mostly dry. Now I put it into my clean $1 buck container with a lid and scrub the crap out of it again with a chip brush. Then blow it off till it is dry. When I blow it of I can see resin still creeping out of all the little holes. So most of the time I re-dunk it into the clean tub 3 or 4 times and scrub it and blow dry each time. So there are items that can take 4-5 times total of scrubbing and blowing dry before the parts are even clean. If I just put the parts in the tub and swirled it around that would do basically nothing.
I got one a few months ago. I have filtered the 99% IPA through doubled coffee filters twice, as it looked a little gray and have had no trouble with anything after 30 or so washes. The propeller in the wash bottom spins as freely as could be and because of how it's driven with magnets no harm should come from it if it ever did seize. I had some concern about that when reviewing the unit but that concern has been put to bed since I've had and used it.