"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Double indexing sounds wonderful, until you have to pay AT LEAST 2 more employees, and then deal with 2 more employees and their problems. If you've already got them then it's not a big deal but it would be for us and shops like us.
Quote from: alan802 on May 19, 2014, 11:57:48 AMDouble indexing sounds wonderful, until you have to pay AT LEAST 2 more employees, and then deal with 2 more employees and their problems. If you've already got them then it's not a big deal but it would be for us and shops like us.I hear that, I don't think we would be any where near that type of running for a while, but I guess a place like Castle totally makes sense, maybe even a Danny G shop, or Tony P shop with all the extra sets of hands and the need for super quick output on huge 10k plus orders. I want to see our 300 peice multi location 8 color jobs move 2-3 times faster through our system right now and I'll be stoked! I think right now, if I had to set up jobs with double the set ups on one machine to do the double index, I'd be asking for trouble lol. Imagine, you have a 6 color job, that you want to double index, so now you have to make sure those 2, 6 color set ups come off looking identical. Not saying I can't do it, but that would be a stressor my mind wouldn't handle well right now, lol. I'd rather 2 jobs running from 2 different press, and let one press fly like the wind while the more simple job is trucking along on the DB, if ya know what I mean.
I have seen dryers set up all ways with ovals. One at the end like in the pic Mike posted,. 2 dryers, one at each end, so the press and dryers form a "U". That setup would usually be printing 2 jobs, one job on one side of the oval another job on the other side. Think of it as 2 sperate linear presses. I have seen a oval set up to parallel a dryer. This is actually the way we would need to set it's up if we added another press. Theoretically if you had a TON of money you could set up a oval on each side of a dryer and a carousel type at the end... 3 presses 1 dryer. The dryer would have to be wide as all hell but think of the ROI on that dryer! Sorry the post got a little derailed Mike, to get it back on track- I'm sticking with removing #3 and #9. Final answer!
2 heads before flash. Sometimes you want black/dark down before ubase.
Quote from: ebscreen on May 19, 2014, 06:02:10 PM2 heads before flash. Sometimes you want black/dark down before ubase.That makes good sense. One of my reasons for #3 is that way you have the option of setting up 2 jobs that require a underbase. Not to double index, but more like seeing up multiple jobs in the am or something.
Quote from: TCT on May 19, 2014, 05:59:26 PMI have seen dryers set up all ways with ovals. One at the end like in the pic Mike posted,. 2 dryers, one at each end, so the press and dryers form a "U". That setup would usually be printing 2 jobs, one job on one side of the oval another job on the other side. Think of it as 2 sperate linear presses. I have seen a oval set up to parallel a dryer. This is actually the way we would need to set it's up if we added another press. Theoretically if you had a TON of money you could set up a oval on each side of a dryer and a carousel type at the end... 3 presses 1 dryer. The dryer would have to be wide as all hell but think of the ROI on that dryer! Sorry the post got a little derailed Mike, to get it back on track- I'm sticking with removing #3 and #9. Final answer! TON of money, man don't we all wish we had that huh!!! Hit the lotto, set up a super shop, buy the best money can buy of all gear, give good folks good jobs, and have a ton of fun! 3 and 9 huh? hmmm, Making a little layout in Illustrator right now. 3 totally makes sense for sure!!!!