"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Quote from: jvanick on April 08, 2016, 03:58:54 PMwhat kind of error rate to you shoot for/expect on an order that size? less than 1%? less than .1% ?? obviously can't be zero in the end, but what would you consider to be a good #?Not to derail the thread, and it is nowhere near the 70k that Tony landed, but we just ran 9000 prints and only had 7 miss prints. It pains me to say it, but I was responsible for 3 of them! Some example to set for the employees!
what kind of error rate to you shoot for/expect on an order that size? less than 1%? less than .1% ?? obviously can't be zero in the end, but what would you consider to be a good #?
In your defense Alex, while you were printing you were probably also answering phones, looking at art seps, quoting a job, running up and down stairs, and a few other tasks, too
Quote from: bimmridder on April 09, 2016, 10:27:24 AMIn your defense Alex, while you were printing you were probably also answering phones, looking at art seps, quoting a job, running up and down stairs, and a few other tasks, tooWait, doesn't everyone operate like that?
I am in the middle of 75000 pieces 2 sided with a totally green crew. So far we are at .005% misprints. Most of these were fixable on press but were pulled off before I could stop them.
Quote from: Printficient on April 11, 2016, 09:06:42 AMI am in the middle of 75000 pieces 2 sided with a totally green crew. So far we are at .005% misprints. Most of these were fixable on press but were pulled off before I could stop them.this is impressive, especially with a new crew.when running large orders we have a tendency to get complacent during the run... ie, not tacking until it's WAY past needed and then you'll get a handful of shirts that are skewed...the other thing that will happen is we'll run out of ink in the underbase screen... and the ops won't hear the floodbar singing (I can hear that sound all the way in the office and generally will come running)
Yes, long runs usually result in running low of ink in a screen then couple that with tunnel vision from pulling 1000 shirts in an hour without a break and you get misprints. It's really easy to do so I don't get on the guys too much when that happens. Other mistakes can be considered dumb and all bets are off in how we deal with them. Usually they watch me turn red, tell them to get their heads out of their buttholes and I walk outside and yell a few times and it's over with.
Quote from: jvanick on April 11, 2016, 09:10:26 AMQuote from: Printficient on April 11, 2016, 09:06:42 AMI am in the middle of 75000 pieces 2 sided with a totally green crew. So far we are at .005% misprints. Most of these were fixable on press but were pulled off before I could stop them.this is impressive, especially with a new crew.when running large orders we have a tendency to get complacent during the run... ie, not tacking until it's WAY past needed and then you'll get a handful of shirts that are skewed...the other thing that will happen is we'll run out of ink in the underbase screen... and the ops won't hear the floodbar singing (I can hear that sound all the way in the office and generally will come running)Running out of ink was the main culprit. Pulling 4 or 5 shirts before noticing that the ink wasn't there. I have less hair now than I did then.
Quote from: Printficient on April 11, 2016, 10:41:58 AMQuote from: jvanick on April 11, 2016, 09:10:26 AMQuote from: Printficient on April 11, 2016, 09:06:42 AMI am in the middle of 75000 pieces 2 sided with a totally green crew. So far we are at .005% misprints. Most of these were fixable on press but were pulled off before I could stop them.this is impressive, especially with a new crew.when running large orders we have a tendency to get complacent during the run... ie, not tacking until it's WAY past needed and then you'll get a handful of shirts that are skewed...the other thing that will happen is we'll run out of ink in the underbase screen... and the ops won't hear the floodbar singing (I can hear that sound all the way in the office and generally will come running)Running out of ink was the main culprit. Pulling 4 or 5 shirts before noticing that the ink wasn't there. I have less hair now than I did then.0.005% is less then 4 shirts. 3.75 to be exact. Well, at least in metric system. Maybe imperial units give different result.?