Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
why would ironing be out of the question, I have no exp. on number presses but from the videos i have seen they don't seem that quick also can they do 3 digit numbers?, 2 irons and 2 low wage people should be able to crank out a lot of shirts a day , I would expect at least 500 a day per press here.Since the numbers are only black and white they should go really quick, I only say this because my kids play soccer and all of there jersey have ironed numbers on them and they come from a very large supplier that only does team wear , and I'm sure some of the leagues by thousands of shirts at a time
Heres what Iconsider to be the underlying question..........is this program already been accepted with pricing submitted before labor/raw materials being costed out? Not a dig at Mike however if it has you could be in trouble. It took me two days to come up with costing on a similar program consiisting of printing, 2-sided foiling, and inside neck labeling. Time studies on six air operated transfer machines in a dedicated are that I just built but it was worth it. BTW Stahls #s=expensive
Quote from: tonypep on March 12, 2014, 11:06:20 AMHeres what Iconsider to be the underlying question..........is this program already been accepted with pricing submitted before labor/raw materials being costed out? Not a dig at Mike however if it has you could be in trouble. It took me two days to come up with costing on a similar program consiisting of printing, 2-sided foiling, and inside neck labeling. Time studies on six air operated transfer machines in a dedicated are that I just built but it was worth it. BTW Stahls #s=expensiveWe committed to the logo printing already, that part is easy to estimate. The numbering we still need to come up with costs and labor then submit a quote. If it is out of our league then the shirts will be sent to another for numbering which is how they have done it for several years. Thing is they wish to have it all done in house by someone and save some money this way. I am confident once we nail down what process we will use and how the labor will be part of that system we can then quote correctly, I am also confident our quote even if high would still out weigh the cost of having two separate manufacturers touch the job and all the extra shipping included.
On those quantities it might make sense to buy a set of statics and make single digits on one side of the screen and on the flip side put the same number as if it's the first number and beside it the second digit then knock them out on the auto. Hope that makes sense. We do quite a bit of team stuff but not at the quantities that you've landed (congrats by the way) and we had a decent numbering press/attachment for the Vastex manual press and it didn't take long to abandon that press and start heat pressing all of our numbers. We have two heat presses and we buy our numbers from Transfer Express and make sure you get the poly numbers or you could go with a "vinyl" type product from Dalco that will not bleed on the black jerseys which sometimes can be suspect bleeders. On most of the performance wear jerseys we have started using the Dalco numbers instead of the Transfer Express screen printed numbers due to bleed issues. Our biggest numbering job was 600 pieces last year and we heat pressed instead of direct printed. I did some time testing and on a typical team job of 15 jerseys, dark colors, it took 30-45 minutes to do them on our numbering press and about 15-20 minutes to do the same job on our heat press. Light colored garments not requiring a flash the times were very close but we had lesser quality on the direct prints along with complete misprints happening more often. You do have to be somewhat careful with the heat pressed numbers so that you don't put the wrong number on the wrong side but the Dalco numbers are easier than the screen printed transfers in that regard. There is no doubt in my mind that on the dark garments that heat pressing them will be significantly faster than directly printing. Now as to what will cost less, that is up to you and your shop to figure all of that out . But for us I ditched the direct printing numbers after a year or so of doing it then trying the heat press method. Your mileage may vary but I really think heat pressing will be better overall, regardless of shop.
One concern I do have with the inline system is wet ink on wet ink, does the bottom of the screen have to be wiped after each print or worse flash every number?