"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on December 17, 2015, 02:51:33 PMCorrect, but keep in mind its not just the ink costs, speed too. The M&R is faster, so time is a factor on that ROI. What is the heat press time? That is the true time. If DTG 1 can do 2 shirts a minute and DTG 2 can do 1 shirt a minute and you have to Heat press the shirt for let's say 90 seconds than you would have two shirts on DTG 1 waiting to cure and 1.5 shirts on DTG 2. The point is print speed is a factor if cure speed is as fast or faster. You can only do as many shirts in a given time as you can press. What are the press times?
Correct, but keep in mind its not just the ink costs, speed too. The M&R is faster, so time is a factor on that ROI.
With the heat press we recommend 1 minute of hover and 2 consecutive 1 minute pressure presses (with 5-10 seconds in between to let the vapor escape).
. Use a regular heat-press* set at 356°F and press for approximately 35 seconds† with light pressure tocure both a light garment and dark garment prints.
How can the heat press be faster? It needs X time at Y temp.Googling I came across this info:Alex M: recommending a hover heat pressQuoteWith the heat press we recommend 1 minute of hover and 2 consecutive 1 minute pressure presses (with 5-10 seconds in between to let the vapor escape).Brother PDF:Quote. Use a regular heat-press* set at 356°F and press for approximately 35 seconds† with light pressure tocure both a light garment and dark garment prints. So we are at 3 mins and 10 seconds for M&R and 35 seconds for Brother.
Quote from: Gilligan on December 17, 2015, 04:45:31 PMHow can the heat press be faster? It needs X time at Y temp.Googling I came across this info:Alex M: recommending a hover heat pressQuoteWith the heat press we recommend 1 minute of hover and 2 consecutive 1 minute pressure presses (with 5-10 seconds in between to let the vapor escape).Brother PDF:Quote. Use a regular heat-press* set at 356°F and press for approximately 35 seconds† with light pressure tocure both a light garment and dark garment prints. So we are at 3 mins and 10 seconds for M&R and 35 seconds for Brother.This was for the idot. Different machine and ink.Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: Alex M on December 17, 2015, 05:06:25 PMQuote from: Gilligan on December 17, 2015, 04:45:31 PMHow can the heat press be faster? It needs X time at Y temp.Googling I came across this info:Alex M: recommending a hover heat pressQuoteWith the heat press we recommend 1 minute of hover and 2 consecutive 1 minute pressure presses (with 5-10 seconds in between to let the vapor escape).Brother PDF:Quote. Use a regular heat-press* set at 356°F and press for approximately 35 seconds† with light pressure tocure both a light garment and dark garment prints. So we are at 3 mins and 10 seconds for M&R and 35 seconds for Brother.This was for the idot. Different machine and ink.Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkWhew! My bad.So what are the current recommended heat press times/procedures?
I'm only going off Alex M's postings, I assume them to be accurate.We are seeing a diminishing return on this faster speed once you start having to buy 5 or 6 heat presses to keep up. Not to mention floor space and electrical running them.I only want to make sure all of this is transparent for people checking this out. I honestly forgot about the heat press times till Sonny brought it up so it's warranted to take a look at the details and numbers. No sense kicking out 2 shirts a min if you need to heat press those shirts for (a combined) 6.5 mins. You are bottle necking quick.VSIf you can only print 1 shirt a min but can heat press it in 35 seconds then you are able to produce 1 shirt a min with a single brother + heat press combination. This also gives you time for your heat press to recover as you mentioned.
Ideally these printers would be out on the floor near the dryer in my opinion as well as near the heat press station. I could totally see myself being lazy if I had one and DTG my 12 piece orders lol or better yet pay a newb to run it so they don't mess up the big press/ink/screens. If those heat press times are right or close, I'd say you shouldn't be curing shirts on a heat press that were printed by the Mlink, just run them through your big ass dryer and save the space/money/electric.
Couple of Questions. Can you cure prints from either printer in your dryer? Are you keeping both machines or are they there on trial and you choose one?Either way congrats and Merry Christmas