"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
i still think you are wrong ALAN..but keep doing what you are doing!sam
Forgive me for sounding like a complete dumb*ss, but is the ink dry when the screen is finished? Will it smear when placed in the exposure unit.
Well, I just watched the video, I like the Lawson unit, it's fast, but there wasn't much ink for that image. Our little 1400 could do that in half the time of the normal stuff we have to output.
...Sam, your math is a bit of a false economy, dont you think? Your numbers make sense if you are turning away one job a day because you are bottlenecked, Otherwise, you cannot apply that fantasy-income toward a ROI. Now when you start growing and selling more jobs and can handle it in the same time-frame, THEN it makes sense. ...were you turning away a job a day? Or did you magically start getting an additional job a day? If not, then the ROI is not as fast as you claim....not saying that DTS isnt the BOMB, I am sure we would all love to have one. And I would go so far as to admit that, if it could be comfortably afforded, that its smart to bring it in sooner than later. But the way you are crunching the numbers, aside from the perfect-world scenario described above, is just not realistic.
I noticed in SAMs video that he had a piece of tape strapping one corner of his roller screen, I am assuming he had to hold that corner down, not saying its possible the great Sam could have a warped Newman but he had a piece of tape there for a reason.
Quote from: Parker 1 on November 19, 2012, 05:29:13 PMForgive me for sounding like a complete dumb*ss, but is the ink dry when the screen is finished? Will it smear when placed in the exposure unit. The ink is still somewhat wet which WILL smear if you touch it with your fingers. Most people that have dts units remove the glass all together in their exposure unit. Our exposure times are already too fast for our current workflow so we kept out glass in the exposure and we just put small plastic spacer plates between the glass and the screen so the screen is slightly above the glass.