The commercial use of the sieve systems involves steam drying of the Zeolites. The secret to correct use lately is the manner of injecting the steam into the vessel slowly, actually converting the remaining water into vapor and venting it into a different holding system.
You can hit it too fast and break the Zeolites, but it does a better job than the Antifreeze extraction method, leaves less unfavorable components in the ETOH, and is relatively cheaper. You have the steam already from distillation and the fumes are relatively clean as well.
Reboiling does a good job for small levels of production. But achieving 100% ETOH is sometimes difficult as bumping from minerals leftover in the vessel for the column can disturb the vapor separation. This isn't such a big problem as 1-2% water isn't enough to really hurt the Ethanols use as a fuel.
That 1% level may even be desirable to increase the vapor pressure sufficiently to efficiently combust the Alcohol.
Otherwise, the product from Sieving processes is more favorable. Use of both processes could be a good idea as well. Say you produce 10,000 gallons of Ethanol, 5% water cut leaves only 500 gallons of water to be removed with every batch. But if you can reduce the cut to 100 gallons or less with pre-reboiling w/ the antifreeze you would have to dry the batch dryer less often.
These things will get saturated and steam extraction won't dry them to 100%. It's just that it isn't necessary to get them back to 100% dryness for more batch processing as the quantity of Zeolites should be sufficient to operate the process with only a 80% H2O removal for a few runs again.
Andy