"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
We started our in-house production adventure with DTG. It works fine if you buy a decent machine and have someone dedicated to it 24/7. Do not - for a second - leave it alone. It needs A LOT of tlc all the friggin time!We bought a Anajet mP5i, I regretted it 5 minutes later. It also cost us 25.000€ and did not come with a pre treat machine, which was a huge mistake on our part. Printing on dark garments never really worked so after a while we removed the white ink and let the lines dry. We've been working with it for the last 2 years only printing on light garments. If it was today I would have bought a DIY Epson printer for a fraction of the cost.Unless you have a steady stream of work and somewhere where you can control COMPLETELY humidity and temperature, don't go for it. For the love of god, do not go for it! If you can work every day and control those factors, sure, go ahead
DTG really is a pain. Unlike screenprinting presses, that are built like a tank, these are computers and they're so unstable that you cannot predict what is going to happen next. We are now in the process of changing our entire warehouse to accommodate the printer with better conditions. We had to change one of the printheads in May and it cost us 2300€. That's almost 10% of what it cost us in the first place.It's an adventure and I love the look and feel of DTG but, knowing what i know today, I would have bought an Epson or any other brand except Anajet
Someone posted about reading the threads at t-shirtforums and honestly there is a lot of info there. Here is what I have picked up just reading around over there:Brand makes a HUGE difference, both when it comes to the quality of the machine and support down the road.There are sort of two camps, on one side you have people building their own machines essentially from scratch (brother, epson), and on the other side you have people who are building machines based on other companies printheads (anajet, neoflex, spectra).The Anajet seems to have a pretty poor track record on both fronts compared to many of the other options out there. The Brother 361 you got seems to be popular and have a good track record on support and the machine not crapping out randomly.The Epson F2000 also seems like a good option.Lots of people are switching to the Spectra 3000 or 600 now as well, which is a sort of new and much smaller company, and their machines are based on the Epsons. Seem like a good value and has good support.Neoflex seems to have gone from a popular choice for the epson based machines to a steadily less popular choice due to issues with support and lagging behind on innovation vs the spectra.
Quote from: mimosatexas on November 10, 2015, 05:10:58 PMSomeone posted about reading the threads at t-shirtforums and honestly there is a lot of info there. Here is what I have picked up just reading around over there:Brand makes a HUGE difference, both when it comes to the quality of the machine and support down the road.There are sort of two camps, on one side you have people building their own machines essentially from scratch (brother, epson), and on the other side you have people who are building machines based on other companies printheads (anajet, neoflex, spectra).The Anajet seems to have a pretty poor track record on both fronts compared to many of the other options out there. The Brother 361 you got seems to be popular and have a good track record on support and the machine not crapping out randomly.The Epson F2000 also seems like a good option.Lots of people are switching to the Spectra 3000 or 600 now as well, which is a sort of new and much smaller company, and their machines are based on the Epsons. Seem like a good value and has good support.Neoflex seems to have gone from a popular choice for the epson based machines to a steadily less popular choice due to issues with support and lagging behind on innovation vs the spectra.I agree, I've also done my research including info from tshirtforums and I've narrowed my choices down to a Brother GT-361, EPSON F2000, or BelQuette MOD1 (GENESIS maybe?). They all seem to have positive reviews and good support.