"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Quote from: Inkman996 on March 26, 2014, 12:03:39 PMQuote from: GraphicDisorder on March 26, 2014, 11:44:15 AMHomer and others hit it as well. Quality of life. Id like to enjoy my job. Nobody wants to fight a process otherwise we'd all be hand printing on a table can curing in a stove. If something is faster it often means its also easier. This leads to happier shop over all. I am sure our next deal will be either another embroidery machine or a DTS or just something to burn screens faster period. Our ameragraph is about our next bottle neck followed by our dryer. So we have work to do to get those new deals going I HOPE this year or so. I am sure by the "math" we will adopt DTS before the pros say I should. That's ok, ill be happy and we will have capacity to grow into. Here is a dumb question. If you have bottlenecks then why don't you print five days a week instead of just 4?If we printed 5 days a week when would we do separations? When would we do screens? Those are done on our 5th day, in case you missed that.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on March 26, 2014, 11:44:15 AMHomer and others hit it as well. Quality of life. Id like to enjoy my job. Nobody wants to fight a process otherwise we'd all be hand printing on a table can curing in a stove. If something is faster it often means its also easier. This leads to happier shop over all. I am sure our next deal will be either another embroidery machine or a DTS or just something to burn screens faster period. Our ameragraph is about our next bottle neck followed by our dryer. So we have work to do to get those new deals going I HOPE this year or so. I am sure by the "math" we will adopt DTS before the pros say I should. That's ok, ill be happy and we will have capacity to grow into. Here is a dumb question. If you have bottlenecks then why don't you print five days a week instead of just 4?
Homer and others hit it as well. Quality of life. Id like to enjoy my job. Nobody wants to fight a process otherwise we'd all be hand printing on a table can curing in a stove. If something is faster it often means its also easier. This leads to happier shop over all. I am sure our next deal will be either another embroidery machine or a DTS or just something to burn screens faster period. Our ameragraph is about our next bottle neck followed by our dryer. So we have work to do to get those new deals going I HOPE this year or so. I am sure by the "math" we will adopt DTS before the pros say I should. That's ok, ill be happy and we will have capacity to grow into.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on March 26, 2014, 12:59:38 PMQuote from: Inkman996 on March 26, 2014, 12:03:39 PMQuote from: GraphicDisorder on March 26, 2014, 11:44:15 AMHomer and others hit it as well. Quality of life. Id like to enjoy my job. Nobody wants to fight a process otherwise we'd all be hand printing on a table can curing in a stove. If something is faster it often means its also easier. This leads to happier shop over all. I am sure our next deal will be either another embroidery machine or a DTS or just something to burn screens faster period. Our ameragraph is about our next bottle neck followed by our dryer. So we have work to do to get those new deals going I HOPE this year or so. I am sure by the "math" we will adopt DTS before the pros say I should. That's ok, ill be happy and we will have capacity to grow into. Here is a dumb question. If you have bottlenecks then why don't you print five days a week instead of just 4?If we printed 5 days a week when would we do separations? When would we do screens? Those are done on our 5th day, in case you missed that. No I didn't miss it. Its an honest question Brandt, not trying to goad you or criticize. In our shop we run five days a week, we have one guy that is here every day cleaning and reclaiming and helping with set ups. Another guy is our main printer. I prep jobs every day with art and films and smb related stuff. I do not need a dedicated day just for seps because we have the staff to do the things I don't need to be doing. I am just saying if you are bottle necked then it might make sense to print on five days and hire a part timer if needed to make it possible.
Quote from: Inkman996 on March 26, 2014, 01:25:48 PMQuote from: GraphicDisorder on March 26, 2014, 12:59:38 PMQuote from: Inkman996 on March 26, 2014, 12:03:39 PMQuote from: GraphicDisorder on March 26, 2014, 11:44:15 AMHomer and others hit it as well. Quality of life. Id like to enjoy my job. Nobody wants to fight a process otherwise we'd all be hand printing on a table can curing in a stove. If something is faster it often means its also easier. This leads to happier shop over all. I am sure our next deal will be either another embroidery machine or a DTS or just something to burn screens faster period. Our ameragraph is about our next bottle neck followed by our dryer. So we have work to do to get those new deals going I HOPE this year or so. I am sure by the "math" we will adopt DTS before the pros say I should. That's ok, ill be happy and we will have capacity to grow into. Here is a dumb question. If you have bottlenecks then why don't you print five days a week instead of just 4?If we printed 5 days a week when would we do separations? When would we do screens? Those are done on our 5th day, in case you missed that. No I didn't miss it. Its an honest question Brandt, not trying to goad you or criticize. In our shop we run five days a week, we have one guy that is here every day cleaning and reclaiming and helping with set ups. Another guy is our main printer. I prep jobs every day with art and films and smb related stuff. I do not need a dedicated day just for seps because we have the staff to do the things I don't need to be doing. I am just saying if you are bottle necked then it might make sense to print on five days and hire a part timer if needed to make it possible.Our screens are cleaned on the weekend by part timers, that's not what I am talking about when I said screens. I am talking about burning, taping, checking for pins, sorting of the weeks shirts and seps are all done on Monday for the whole week. This is handled by James and Shelly. Since Shelly does our seps and Shelly is the printer thats not possible to be printing 5 days without hiring a new Shelly since nobody would then be doing seps if she was out there printing. So until we replace Shelly for doing seps and/or printing, we print 4 days a week. There are many things we can do here to make 4 days a week of printing not a issue by speeding up the printing, speeding up the screen burning and so on. This is a big part of what the CH3D was for us. More jobs, same print time. Once we hit a level where this isn't possible and all bottle necks are solved other than adding a "Shelly" then we continue this way improving all the processes around her until its hands that we really need. Machines are cheaper than people.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on March 26, 2014, 01:36:07 PMQuote from: Inkman996 on March 26, 2014, 01:25:48 PMQuote from: GraphicDisorder on March 26, 2014, 12:59:38 PMQuote from: Inkman996 on March 26, 2014, 12:03:39 PMQuote from: GraphicDisorder on March 26, 2014, 11:44:15 AMHomer and others hit it as well. Quality of life. Id like to enjoy my job. Nobody wants to fight a process otherwise we'd all be hand printing on a table can curing in a stove. If something is faster it often means its also easier. This leads to happier shop over all. I am sure our next deal will be either another embroidery machine or a DTS or just something to burn screens faster period. Our ameragraph is about our next bottle neck followed by our dryer. So we have work to do to get those new deals going I HOPE this year or so. I am sure by the "math" we will adopt DTS before the pros say I should. That's ok, ill be happy and we will have capacity to grow into. Here is a dumb question. If you have bottlenecks then why don't you print five days a week instead of just 4?If we printed 5 days a week when would we do separations? When would we do screens? Those are done on our 5th day, in case you missed that. No I didn't miss it. Its an honest question Brandt, not trying to goad you or criticize. In our shop we run five days a week, we have one guy that is here every day cleaning and reclaiming and helping with set ups. Another guy is our main printer. I prep jobs every day with art and films and smb related stuff. I do not need a dedicated day just for seps because we have the staff to do the things I don't need to be doing. I am just saying if you are bottle necked then it might make sense to print on five days and hire a part timer if needed to make it possible.Our screens are cleaned on the weekend by part timers, that's not what I am talking about when I said screens. I am talking about burning, taping, checking for pins, sorting of the weeks shirts and seps are all done on Monday for the whole week. This is handled by James and Shelly. Since Shelly does our seps and Shelly is the printer thats not possible to be printing 5 days without hiring a new Shelly since nobody would then be doing seps if she was out there printing. So until we replace Shelly for doing seps and/or printing, we print 4 days a week. There are many things we can do here to make 4 days a week of printing not a issue by speeding up the printing, speeding up the screen burning and so on. This is a big part of what the CH3D was for us. More jobs, same print time. Once we hit a level where this isn't possible and all bottle necks are solved other than adding a "Shelly" then we continue this way improving all the processes around her until its hands that we really need. Machines are cheaper than people. Thats great but some day you will come to the point where you will have to print at least five days a week. We couldn't possibly get by minus one work day of spinning the press and when it gets really busy as it is getting currently we have to work on weekends. The way i always felt if the machine is not spinning it is not earning money.
You know what our biggest bottle neck is and no machine on this earth could change it? That is space! We really are at our max for space, there is no room for any new machines and even if we bought a CTS and increased our production it would make no sense since our space is maxed out and pushing more orders through would be chaos.
Quote from: Inkman996 on March 26, 2014, 02:35:16 PMYou know what our biggest bottle neck is and no machine on this earth could change it? That is space! We really are at our max for space, there is no room for any new machines and even if we bought a CTS and increased our production it would make no sense since our space is maxed out and pushing more orders through would be chaos.No plans to expand? We bought our building with expansion in mind. We have the back 6k sqft of our place rented currently. So we can expand into that if we like. We can also build another 90ft x the width of our building back if we need. If we fill up all of that, then we got bigger problems lol.
We are in our second expansion. Our first shop was only 1500sqf now close to 4k. Problem is in CT commercial space is super expensive and the value of our current building is not what it was when the owner bought it. Or eyes are always open for a good deal and was real close to a stand alone building twice the sqf but the seller would not negotiate on the price. We also almost bought the unit next to ours when it went up for sale but being in a commercial building that has multiple units would have required us to pay for two units in all expenses just not worth it.
AlanI know I have said this a million times...go dts...we were recently down for a day ( our fault ) and printing films...well it sucked balls...I honestly do not know how anyone can go back to doing that once you have seen a dts. My artist wasted time printing films, my screen guy wasted time lining up films, it took us 70% longer to expose screens than it did with the dts due to going through the glass. I honestly think if you upgraded to a dts you will be able to do 2 xtra jobs a day without any further labor...sam