Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
One thing you could do is flash dry shirts, stack them and then finish curing with a hot press. This way you can get by with one 20A 110 outlet if youonly have the flash or hot press on one at a time.
What are the drawbacks to low cure additives besides probably not a great idea when it's 110 degrees in the shop I would imagine. Any issues with durability etc?.
Quote from: Homer on November 08, 2017, 07:20:43 AMthinking outside the box here, I wouldn't be bothered by any of this. I remember working in a small confined area and it was brutal. I would invest my money in 2 or 3 really nice heat presses, get set up with a decent transfer supplier and go that route. No press, no dryer, no inks, no chemicals. On top of that, find a quality contract shop and send out the large orders. Focus on selling, not printing.I like this idea. I always told myself if I ever went back to a home operation, I'd probably ditch screen printing and just do a nice DTG setup and find a niche. Might be my retirement plan lol.
thinking outside the box here, I wouldn't be bothered by any of this. I remember working in a small confined area and it was brutal. I would invest my money in 2 or 3 really nice heat presses, get set up with a decent transfer supplier and go that route. No press, no dryer, no inks, no chemicals. On top of that, find a quality contract shop and send out the large orders. Focus on selling, not printing.
Saw a great dryer made for DTG.Looks like a chest of drawers.The draws had a metal screen base and it had hot air circulating through the draws.You lay a shirt in a draw and let it cure, no moving belt.This system can cure plastisol, water base and discharge.Also compact, the draws need to be the size of a shirt.