Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Quote from: DannyGruninger on March 06, 2014, 06:44:31 PMBrandt, looks awesome in there! I'll be needing to plan a trip out there to see that press kicking out the jams. I think we are going to try and replace our dback this year with a 3d so I'd like to play around with one if you don't mind. Our ch3 is so badass that I can only imagine how great the 3d is. Just today on our ch3 we printed over 4,000 shirts across 8 different PO's with 44 screens total. We have a job on press right now that we are double stroking and it's running 61 doz/hr double stroking! Let me know when would be a good time to make a day trip out your way, I've got some stuff to bring your way for you to test as well......We were double stroking a job this am 6 color job, 56dz a hour, and we are still really getting used to the press. I need to come out to your shop some day, I doubt you will be impressed with our tiny operation but your welcome here and your welcome to play with the press all you like.
Brandt, looks awesome in there! I'll be needing to plan a trip out there to see that press kicking out the jams. I think we are going to try and replace our dback this year with a 3d so I'd like to play around with one if you don't mind. Our ch3 is so badass that I can only imagine how great the 3d is. Just today on our ch3 we printed over 4,000 shirts across 8 different PO's with 44 screens total. We have a job on press right now that we are double stroking and it's running 61 doz/hr double stroking! Let me know when would be a good time to make a day trip out your way, I've got some stuff to bring your way for you to test as well......
First impressions so far:1. Did a job yesterday that we have printed many times before. It used to take us 1.5hrs on the sportsman. Took about 35-40 minutes on the new press and I would describe it as "casual" printing. 2. Fast, I think it was hitting 208dz a hour with heads on at one point, of course we cant print that fast though. The press is very smooth and it's got a bunch of cool features and we are still figuring out new ones. 3. Go to function is nice. You can be at the main control panel and send a pallet where ever you like with about 2 button hits. 4. You can have it memorize the Tri-lock pallet. So you can just click it at any time and it brings it to you. pretty nice at the end of the job just hit the button and load the tri lock up. 5. Control nearly everything at the head or at the main control panel. 6. Copy/head paste/head feature is nice. So you can set your stroke/speed/pressure on 1 head and then "copy" and "paste" to any or even all heads with like 2-3 clicks. Nice not to have to go to each head and set that.. 7. Amazing how accurate the servo motors are on this press, you tell it to stop at 1 inch and 19 inches and it does exactly that regardless of speed of print/flood. The Sportsman had some "coast" in the head so if you were running hard you had to compensate with the prox sensors. None of that to worry about on this beast. 8. Flash plug at each head, that is nice no chasing cables.9. I love that it doesn't table up and down.... this makes loading and unloading faster. 10. Preheat is nice. It has a temp sensor for each pallet.... so you can set a temp you'd like the pallets, you click 1 button and put it in auto mode and the heads turn off and index/flash the pallets on its own and the press beeps at you when the pallets are ready. [/quoteNice post, keep them coming. Chris
I'm seeing people say "nearly" every function from the main panel can be done. Which ones cannot? And the same question for the controls at the heads?
Now, when you can have ink added to screens from the panel,,,,,,,,,,,,, ok just being a smart azz
Quote from: screenprintguy on March 07, 2014, 10:01:36 AMNow, when you can have ink added to screens from the panel,,,,,,,,,,,,, ok just being a smart azz
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on March 07, 2014, 10:10:29 AMQuote from: screenprintguy on March 07, 2014, 10:01:36 AMNow, when you can have ink added to screens from the panel,,,,,,,,,,,,, ok just being a smart azzhahahhahahahahaah that's awesome!!Hey Brandt, after you and Shelly run several jobs, let us know how much "physical", difference you feel on your bodies loading, unloading setups as well as the loading unloading of shirts vs the Sporty.
First impressions so far:1. Did a job yesterday that we have printed many times before. It used to take us 1.5hrs on the sportsman. Took about 35-40 minutes on the new press and I would describe it as "casual" printing. 2. Fast, I think it was hitting 208dz a hour with heads on at one point, of course we cant print that fast though. The press is very smooth and it's got a bunch of cool features and we are still figuring out new ones. 3. Go to function is nice. You can be at the main control panel and send a pallet where ever you like with about 2 button hits. 4. You can have it memorize the Tri-lock pallet. So you can just click it at any time and it brings it to you. pretty nice at the end of the job just hit the button and load the tri lock up. 5. Control nearly everything at the head or at the main control panel. 6. Copy/head paste/head feature is nice. So you can set your stroke/speed/pressure on 1 head and then "copy" and "paste" to any or even all heads with like 2-3 clicks. Nice not to have to go to each head and set that.. 7. Amazing how accurate the servo motors are on this press, you tell it to stop at 1 inch and 19 inches and it does exactly that regardless of speed of print/flood. The Sportsman had some "coast" in the head so if you were running hard you had to compensate with the prox sensors. None of that to worry about on this beast. 8. Flash plug at each head, that is nice no chasing cables.9. I love that it doesn't table up and down.... this makes loading and unloading faster. 10. Preheat is nice. It has a temp sensor for each pallet.... so you can set a temp you'd like the pallets, you click 1 button and put it in auto mode and the heads turn off and index/flash the pallets on its own and the press beeps at you when the pallets are ready.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on March 07, 2014, 07:22:14 AMFirst impressions so far:1. Did a job yesterday that we have printed many times before. It used to take us 1.5hrs on the sportsman. Took about 35-40 minutes on the new press and I would describe it as "casual" printing. 2. Fast, I think it was hitting 208dz a hour with heads on at one point, of course we cant print that fast though. The press is very smooth and it's got a bunch of cool features and we are still figuring out new ones. 3. Go to function is nice. You can be at the main control panel and send a pallet where ever you like with about 2 button hits. 4. You can have it memorize the Tri-lock pallet. So you can just click it at any time and it brings it to you. pretty nice at the end of the job just hit the button and load the tri lock up. 5. Control nearly everything at the head or at the main control panel. 6. Copy/head paste/head feature is nice. So you can set your stroke/speed/pressure on 1 head and then "copy" and "paste" to any or even all heads with like 2-3 clicks. Nice not to have to go to each head and set that.. 7. Amazing how accurate the servo motors are on this press, you tell it to stop at 1 inch and 19 inches and it does exactly that regardless of speed of print/flood. The Sportsman had some "coast" in the head so if you were running hard you had to compensate with the prox sensors. None of that to worry about on this beast. 8. Flash plug at each head, that is nice no chasing cables.9. I love that it doesn't table up and down.... this makes loading and unloading faster. 10. Preheat is nice. It has a temp sensor for each pallet.... so you can set a temp you'd like the pallets, you click 1 button and put it in auto mode and the heads turn off and index/flash the pallets on its own and the press beeps at you when the pallets are ready. Just an FYI. If this is a job that repeats occasionally use the save feature and next time you run it recall the job and it will set 95% of the parameters you used to run it the first time.