"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
We use 4" pallets also and load thru the neck. yes the smalls are tight but they go on . The smalls run slow
Quote from: RStefanick on July 06, 2017, 03:24:49 PMWe use 4" pallets also and load thru the neck. yes the smalls are tight but they go on . The smalls run slowThanks Rick for the reply. I also load through the neck but these days with more fitted style long sleeves it's tuff to get those smalls even mediums on without the garment stretching a ton. Ugh, gotta figure something out.
Hi guys,Looking for some help or direction on how to print on Long Sleeves.I have a M&R Diamondback Press. I have 4"wide sleeve pallets. I've done printing on the sleeves before and on the smaller garments the way the arm on the press plus the pallet it stretches the heck out of the sleeve and some smaller sizes don't even fit.Is the only option buying some special made pallets? Any one have some sorta jerry rig idea how to do them?Thanks for any help
Quote from: inkstain on July 06, 2017, 07:48:17 PMQuote from: RStefanick on July 06, 2017, 03:24:49 PMWe use 4" pallets also and load thru the neck. yes the smalls are tight but they go on . The smalls run slowThanks Rick for the reply. I also load through the neck but these days with more fitted style long sleeves it's tuff to get those smalls even mediums on without the garment stretching a ton. Ugh, gotta figure something out.And you are in the US. We are dealing mainly with garments made for the Asian market. Generally smaller then US sized garments and slimmer too. Certain sizes are almost impossible to load on the standard sleeve pallets. To run those on our automatic press would mean we would have to index at 20 seconds.
Quote from: inkstain on July 06, 2017, 02:47:26 PMHi guys,Looking for some help or direction on how to print on Long Sleeves.I have a M&R Diamondback Press. I have 4"wide sleeve pallets. I've done printing on the sleeves before and on the smaller garments the way the arm on the press plus the pallet it stretches the heck out of the sleeve and some smaller sizes don't even fit.Is the only option buying some special made pallets? Any one have some sorta jerry rig idea how to do them?Thanks for any help The problem is not the pallet but rather the pallet support bracket. Maybe try the double sleeve pallets by actionengineering http://www.actionengineering.com/cat-258-1-1453/hinged-double-sleeve-pallets.htm
Quote from: Rockers on July 06, 2017, 08:01:35 PMQuote from: inkstain on July 06, 2017, 02:47:26 PMHi guys,Looking for some help or direction on how to print on Long Sleeves.I have a M&R Diamondback Press. I have 4"wide sleeve pallets. I've done printing on the sleeves before and on the smaller garments the way the arm on the press plus the pallet it stretches the heck out of the sleeve and some smaller sizes don't even fit.Is the only option buying some special made pallets? Any one have some sorta jerry rig idea how to do them?Thanks for any help The problem is not the pallet but rather the pallet support bracket. Maybe try the double sleeve pallets by actionengineering http://www.actionengineering.com/cat-258-1-1453/hinged-double-sleeve-pallets.htmThat looks pretty sweet but it's also mentioned that the model has been deleted. bummer
It's about the only real drawback of M&R presses. My preference is for the simple and solid M&R clamp locking into the ali channel. Nothing is ever going to go wrong with it, and if something ever did it's a simple and cheap fix.It just doesn't work for sleeves though. Trying to stretch a nice delicate cotton garment over a giant goofy lump of ali with 4 quick release levers sticking out the side of it.I always thought the simplest solution would be to take a router to the legs on the bottom of a 4" sleeve pallet to create a cavity in order to feed the sleeve of a long-sleeve garment on. I've never been game enough to try it though. I think there's quite a simple solution in that for M&R though, to choose an ali profile or extrusion with a thicker wall so when the cavity is milled out the pallet will still be strong enough to avoid flexing out of shape. It would be a worthwhile solution to run on a chameleon or another M&R manual press, would be an expensive exercise in ruining 12-14 of them for an auto though.
We bit the bullet and bought the tapered pallets a while back. Made a huge difference loading on the auto and has allowed us to print pockets too. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: Get Shirts on July 06, 2017, 09:08:54 PMWe bit the bullet and bought the tapered pallets a while back. Made a huge difference loading on the auto and has allowed us to print pockets too. Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkFor a M&R auto?
The ROQ has a nifty pallet that looks like it can fit any sleeve on.