Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Hey All. So Im really torn here about a dryer. I think its time to upgrade to gas here. What we are torn about is size. Right now we have an electric dryer, 48" wide with 6 ft of heat. We feed a manual and our DBack into it. Rarely is it ever backed up, but if we have a design on the auto that is full size, it gets a little tight on the belt. Especially with the manual going too. I think we've settled on a Sprint, either a Mini or a 48". I know both come with 8 ft of heat. My questions and where we are torn, is what size to get. I know the answer is to always go bigger than you need, but from what I understand, its a pretty good chunk of change between the 2 (I think its close to 8K difference, thats a huge amount to us). Is there going to be a noticeable difference in the belt speed between what we have now and a sprint that has an extra 2 feet of heat? I know they make extensions to the chambers, is that going to help speed everything up coming out of the dryer? I guess Im just asking because we have no experience with gas. I understand that it still boils down to the shirts time in the chamber and when it cures. But I guess I do not understand the actual productions numbers coming out. If we go down to a 38" we are losing belt space we have now, but does the speed of the belt on a longer chamber make up for that? Really, it will be our biggest purchase we've made here in a really long time. Bigger, and possibly more expensive than the automatic we have. For as long as we've been in business (about 30 years), we are behind the ball technology-wise. Im trying to get us up to speed slowly and this place has been a huge help. Thanks guys. Matt C
Everyone talks gas savings but ppl should look carefully at it.My electric is like 8 cents per kw. That's CHEAP! Hard to really get much savings there.Now, don't get me wrong, I would still LOVE to have gas! I though I'd be able to justify it given all this talk about savings... But I'm pretty sure I'm under $1/hour when my dryer is running (fuzzy math off the top of my head so forgive me if I'm off.)
My electric is like 8 cents per kw.
QuoteMy electric is like 8 cents per kw.I wish our rate was that low. Depending on the month it is easily double and sometimes triple that rate.Bill
Quote from: Squeegie on December 31, 2014, 10:25:47 AMQuoteMy electric is like 8 cents per kw.I wish our rate was that low. Depending on the month it is easily double and sometimes triple that rate.BillYeah, exactly... it's starts to make a lot more sense when your rates are getting north of 20 cents/KW like some of you guys have to deal with.My electric company is a CoOp so it's essentially a non-profit and the savings get passed right onto us.
wow thats crazy. just checked our bill and we are at 31/kw. i would assume that would be a SIGNIFICANT savings in electric over gas. edit, gas over electric
Quote from: Gilligan on December 31, 2014, 11:05:46 AMQuote from: Squeegie on December 31, 2014, 10:25:47 AMQuoteMy electric is like 8 cents per kw.I wish our rate was that low. Depending on the month it is easily double and sometimes triple that rate.BillYeah, exactly... it's starts to make a lot more sense when your rates are getting north of 20 cents/KW like some of you guys have to deal with.My electric company is a CoOp so it's essentially a non-profit and the savings get passed right onto us. You might want to check all included like taxes, peak demand , delivery, etc. just a FYI. You should also check with other Radicure users for their settings. The ones posted before work for most.