"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I have an excellent suggestion - just buy them from us. In the time it takes you to learn how to do it, then do it, and finish them. You could have been selling and finding new customers. The cost for buying the aluminum and then the rubber and the adhesive and then machining them. It's not really worth it unless you just have no orders at all and no new customers can be found. We have these in stock and can get them to you almost immediately.just my 2 cents...Action Engineering, Inc.www.actionengineering.com
Quote from: Action1 on July 06, 2012, 09:21:29 AMI have an excellent suggestion - just buy them from us. In the time it takes you to learn how to do it, then do it, and finish them. You could have been selling and finding new customers. The cost for buying the aluminum and then the rubber and the adhesive and then machining them. It's not really worth it unless you just have no orders at all and no new customers can be found. We have these in stock and can get them to you almost immediately.just my 2 cents...Action Engineering, Inc.www.actionengineering.comSounds like so much trouble one would wonder why anyone would go into business making these things.
If I was to get some 6160 aluminum X .25 inch for my manual would that be thick enough? Then just tap and thread the bottom, being real careful not to go through the top, is that about it after I install rubber tops. This will be going on an Antec and any help would be appreciated.
Quote from: Action1 on July 06, 2012, 09:21:29 AMI have an excellent suggestion - just buy them from us. In the time it takes you to learn how to do it, then do it, and finish them. You could have been selling and finding new customers. The cost for buying the aluminum and then the rubber and the adhesive and then machining them. It's not really worth it unless you just have no orders at all and no new customers can be found. We have these in stock and can get them to you almost immediately.just my 2 cents...Action Engineering, Inc.www.actionengineering.comBut if a printer has no orders and no customers, why would they be making platens?
Our biggest customer came by our shop on a Saturday when my father in law was at the shop catching up on the weeks work. He spent almost every Saturday at the shop and one day this scraggly older guy in a beat up pickup stopped by to get pricing on some caps, now that company is worth millions and they spend about $300K with us every year, so never underestimate a customer or the opportunities you have to land one.