"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Quote from: alan802 on August 27, 2014, 02:02:46 PMI'd love to be able to remove a tablet from the press and take it home or play a game during lunch, upload a new feature, etc. I may be in the minority but I think tablet control and functionality is the best when it comes to operating an auto. I have obviously never used it but I love my tablet and take it everywhere and use it for everything so having one to operate an auto seems like an amazing feature that would play a small role in me choosing a press. There are dozens of more important features to consider before getting to the control panel being a tablet, membrane panel, touchscreen, or the old-school toggle switch but at this stage the ultimate in control and functionality would be a robust tablet. Without the knowledge and experience that the machine gurus have, there is more that goes into it than I realize and cons of using a tablet that I'm not looking at but MHM has been at the forefront of putting technology on their autos and if they're using a tablet then I feel pretty good about it's place and future in running an auto. I like all of the touchscreen control panels over our membrane panel but I see what everyone is talking about when it comes to the "look" of some of them. I have always liked the MHM but the Aries from Anatol looks nice (bordering on being too busy and cluttered but that's straight from someone who hasn't spent much time in front of one) and I like the cool clean look of the Sabre's. If I had to choose out of the 4 with touchscreen control, M&R, Anatol, Sabre and MHM, I don't know which one I'd choose first. The Gauntlet III will be at the DFW show. Go check it out.
I'd love to be able to remove a tablet from the press and take it home or play a game during lunch, upload a new feature, etc. I may be in the minority but I think tablet control and functionality is the best when it comes to operating an auto. I have obviously never used it but I love my tablet and take it everywhere and use it for everything so having one to operate an auto seems like an amazing feature that would play a small role in me choosing a press. There are dozens of more important features to consider before getting to the control panel being a tablet, membrane panel, touchscreen, or the old-school toggle switch but at this stage the ultimate in control and functionality would be a robust tablet. Without the knowledge and experience that the machine gurus have, there is more that goes into it than I realize and cons of using a tablet that I'm not looking at but MHM has been at the forefront of putting technology on their autos and if they're using a tablet then I feel pretty good about it's place and future in running an auto. I like all of the touchscreen control panels over our membrane panel but I see what everyone is talking about when it comes to the "look" of some of them. I have always liked the MHM but the Aries from Anatol looks nice (bordering on being too busy and cluttered but that's straight from someone who hasn't spent much time in front of one) and I like the cool clean look of the Sabre's. If I had to choose out of the 4 with touchscreen control, M&R, Anatol, Sabre and MHM, I don't know which one I'd choose first.
I don't have a CHIII, I have its big brother the CHIIID but here are a few pics of the control screen if you like. I dont have time to do a video right now but I could do one sorta soon. Place is a nightmare right now.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on August 27, 2014, 06:57:02 AMI don't have a CHIII, I have its big brother the CHIIID but here are a few pics of the control screen if you like. I dont have time to do a video right now but I could do one sorta soon. Place is a nightmare right now.Brandt when did you take those pictures of the screens?
Quote from: 244 on August 27, 2014, 03:45:12 PMQuote from: alan802 on August 27, 2014, 02:02:46 PMI'd love to be able to remove a tablet from the press and take it home or play a game during lunch, upload a new feature, etc. I may be in the minority but I think tablet control and functionality is the best when it comes to operating an auto. I have obviously never used it but I love my tablet and take it everywhere and use it for everything so having one to operate an auto seems like an amazing feature that would play a small role in me choosing a press. There are dozens of more important features to consider before getting to the control panel being a tablet, membrane panel, touchscreen, or the old-school toggle switch but at this stage the ultimate in control and functionality would be a robust tablet. Without the knowledge and experience that the machine gurus have, there is more that goes into it than I realize and cons of using a tablet that I'm not looking at but MHM has been at the forefront of putting technology on their autos and if they're using a tablet then I feel pretty good about it's place and future in running an auto. I like all of the touchscreen control panels over our membrane panel but I see what everyone is talking about when it comes to the "look" of some of them. I have always liked the MHM but the Aries from Anatol looks nice (bordering on being too busy and cluttered but that's straight from someone who hasn't spent much time in front of one) and I like the cool clean look of the Sabre's. If I had to choose out of the 4 with touchscreen control, M&R, Anatol, Sabre and MHM, I don't know which one I'd choose first. The Gauntlet III will be at the DFW show. Go check it out.I'll be there all day Friday...I hope. If not I'll be there all day Saturday. I'd like to be there both days so I can see what I missed last year. I didn't have near enough time on the floor last year.
Throwing my 2 cents out for what it's worth.... Personally I would never want a tablet or any "removable" control off my press bottom line. The last thing I want is my guys to be playing games or surfing the internet. I could just see my guys now checking out some nude websites and infecting the tablet with some sort of virus that messes with the machine functions. I like the interface look of the tablet but I've never really seen an industrial style tablet that I would trust in a screen print shop. Guys spraying glue, extreme heat, harmonic vibration of the press, etc etc etc are all reasons I personally wouldn't trust a tablet. I really like the idea behind it but I'm nowhere near sold on it yet. The one thing that I really wish I had was a live portal where I could watch what my presses were doing, could load jobs, etc.... I think workhorse really hit one out of the park with their portal gateway on the new saber press as that is one platform that I think would fit very well into a shop like mine. I know m&r is developing some new software/production tracking so that will probably be the bees knees once Rich throws it out to all of us so that will nice when we can get that going. But my opinion is there's so many things I can see going wrong with tablet or my guys taking advantage of it that until some steps to make it more industrial with certain locks I personally don't dig it.......
Could this all become a digital workflow from beginning to end? Files sent to the screen rooms CTS and when they are ready have the job pop up on press with all the particulars of the job like colors, print positions, flashes needed, qty and colors of garments etc etc.?
Quote from: Prosperi-Tees on August 27, 2014, 09:14:21 PMCould this all become a digital workflow from beginning to end? Files sent to the screen rooms CTS and when they are ready have the job pop up on press with all the particulars of the job like colors, print positions, flashes needed, qty and colors of garments etc etc.?Could be? Good lord, it should be...or should've been long ago. Press makers should be selling mgmt software that integrates with all their gear. I should be able to input all spec into one location on my computer and know that ink is popping up in the ink queue in the mixing software/scale, location and print order at the press, laser location guide auto sets to it's location reference, flash temp/time/intensity auto setting to last used on that design or an inputted default or best guess, etc. And it's a win-win for everyone as the shop gets the software and the manufacturer has in built loyalty to their gear since it syncs to their system. Better, there should be communications standards for our line of work so that all sorts of machinery, etc. can be synced. Every single shop in this country and the world is burning countless hours checking on everything from flash times/temps to "where do I locate this print again?". If you think you aren't, I beg to differ and argue that simple connections of tech could be saving time in every shop. Toss in a workforce that, shall we say, leaves a little to be desired and the need is magnified. Our presses should be prompting our ops, our scales our ink techs and so on. This is very basic use of long existing tech that I'm describing. I feel like our industry is behind, far behind, what our cousins in print have engineered in order to stay afloat. We're getting a free ride at the moment in that digital textile can't quite beat screen in a number of situations but that ride will come to an abrupt halt at some point.All that said, low tech, simple, sound and smart management can overcome a lot of this but I doubt any level of managerial intelligence will keep our industry alive when digital steps it's game up in the textile realm, we need to already be faster and better.
What do you guys see wrong in this picture?