"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Ink use:Brother total ink used was 8.96cc (CMYK 1.75 and White 7.21) M&R total ink used was 2.48cc (CMYK .94 and White 1.54)
Here's what I don't get. Cost of white ink aside, how can THIS BE ACCURATE?QuoteInk use:Brother total ink used was 8.96cc (CMYK 1.75 and White 7.21) M&R total ink used was 2.48cc (CMYK .94 and White 1.54)Clearly the Brother print is waaaay darker than the M&R, yet it used over 3 times the VOLUME of white ink? Peter said it himself, the white inks both machines use aren't that far apart in chemical make up. So either the ink volume calculations are wrong for one or both of these machines, or the Brother unit is dumping over half its white ink into the waste container rather than printing it on the shirt (if that's even calculated into the print CC). Peter argues that white ink volume differences are a non-factor even.Something's fishy. One of these measurements is off by a lot in my opinion.
Quote from: jvieira on December 29, 2015, 03:07:51 PMQuote from: GraphicDisorder on December 29, 2015, 07:16:26 AMQuote from: bulldog on December 28, 2015, 07:37:50 PMPerhaps the case just happens to be that the M&R is better? I would hope it is. It's kind of like comparing a Toyota to a BMW, both very fine vehicles but one should just be better. I don't follow you on this one, Brother is a company that builds printers. Shouldn't theirs be better? In all fairness, M&R has been in this business for a long long (looong) time. They have contacts and knowledge in the industry. Brother is pretty new in the garment decoration business and it is not their main biz.To be more precise, it's just the opposite. Brother has been in business since 1954 producing a variety of products (as is M&R) but not as long as Brother.As it pertains to DTG. Brother was/are a digital garment printer manufacturer since 2005 and earlier. SOURCE: https://printaura.com/dtg-printing/History of DTG. DTG printing is a relatively new technology (within the last 10 or so years.) Direct to garment printing was introduced around 1996 at a trade show in Tampa, Florida. In 1998, Brother, Intl. began to develop proprietary DTG printers, beta testing them until 2003, with a first showing at an Atlantic City, NJ trade show in 2005.SOURCE: http://www.coldesi.com/learning-center/learn-about-t-shirt-printing/history-of-digital-garment-printingEarly 2005 brought the first large traditional printer company into the marketplace as Brother introduced thier GT-541 - a light shirt only printing solution that eventually became the Brother Graffittee DTG printer line.They are great but is not the only thing they have been developing printers to print on...for a long long time. They are large in size and history, towering over M&R in that area of business.About BrotherWith a dedication to product quality and excellent customer service, Brother International Corporation, the US subsidiary of Japan-based Brother Industries Ltd., is committed to an At Your Side philosophy with its customers, business partners and colleagues. Established in 1954, Brother International Corporation is a premier provider of home, home office, and business products, as well as industrial solutions that revolutionize the way we live and work. Headquartered in Bridgewater, NJ, the company employs approximately 1,200 colleagues in the Americas. The globally-recognized Brother product line includes an award-winning range of printers and Multi-Function Center® all-in-ones, the CES and CHA Award-winning ScanNCut, the market-leading P-touch® electronic labeling line, OmniJoin™ web and video conferencing, document management solutions, industrial and home sewing equipment, and the number one line of facsimile machines in the United States. In 2014, for the sixth year in a row, consumers voted Brother Printers and All-in-Ones #1 in overall satisfaction and reliability in the PCMag.com Readers’ Choice Awards. Additionally, for the second year in a row, Brother Printers and All-in-Ones were awarded #1 honors in overall satisfaction and reliability in the 2014 PCMag.com Business Choice Awards.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on December 29, 2015, 07:16:26 AMQuote from: bulldog on December 28, 2015, 07:37:50 PMPerhaps the case just happens to be that the M&R is better? I would hope it is. It's kind of like comparing a Toyota to a BMW, both very fine vehicles but one should just be better. I don't follow you on this one, Brother is a company that builds printers. Shouldn't theirs be better? In all fairness, M&R has been in this business for a long long (looong) time. They have contacts and knowledge in the industry. Brother is pretty new in the garment decoration business and it is not their main biz.
Quote from: bulldog on December 28, 2015, 07:37:50 PMPerhaps the case just happens to be that the M&R is better? I would hope it is. It's kind of like comparing a Toyota to a BMW, both very fine vehicles but one should just be better. I don't follow you on this one, Brother is a company that builds printers. Shouldn't theirs be better?
Perhaps the case just happens to be that the M&R is better? I would hope it is. It's kind of like comparing a Toyota to a BMW, both very fine vehicles but one should just be better.
Peter thanks for your post. I am not going to dispute your info other than to say that not only is the ink more expensive, the Brother is using and wasting more of it. This info isn't in your numbers. I have thrown around the number 3x the cost as it seems every print costs at least 3x more. That's been my general context of that. See my latest post with print, 6x the cost on that Brother and that was with settings near what Brother suggested for less ink use. The white isn't bright enough, so to me it needs more white, which will just make that gap even bigger with more ink used.Id love to discuss these machines in a production situation. Right now we can't even seem to find the time to set our site up to begin to sell anything off these machines. I hope by next weeks end we are very close to that after we have Brother and M&R both come by.
Earlier this year Nazdar SourceOne engaged a DTG Industry Expert to support us in a detailed analysis of pre-treatment cost, print quality, production performance, ink cost, and overall cost per print comparison between the AEOON KYO Series DTG printer, and another high production DTG printing system. One thing our Industry Expert insisted was that he wouldn't base his findings on the pre-treatment and ink volume usage numbers that were reported by the pre-treatment application systems, and DTG printers. Rather we went old school, and started out by weighing a number of "virgin" shirts, that were re-weighed after the pre-treatment was applied. We recorded the weight increase in each garment to get the actual volume of wet pre-treatment on each garment. In the case of the shirts for the AEOON they were dried under a heat press, and then reweighed to establish a before printing net weight. The garments were printed with white ink, then removed from printer to be weighed. These garments the had to be trashed as they couldn't be reloaded. Another set of pre-treated and weighed garments were loaded onto the DTG units and printed with White and CMYK, then weighed. We were able to convert the data based on the weight in grams of pre-treatment, white ink and CMYK applied to the garment into a volumetric measurement in CC's or ML's.
Awesome stuff there Peter, I'd love to see more details.How about waste ink? Was that accounted for as well?
Wow Peter, you guys don't mess around! I'm curious, when you did this, how close were the actual results to what the rip was saying?I will say 4.7x the white ink does seem crazy, I would think you'd have enough ink pooling on the shirt to swim in it.
This is why I'd like to see the settings tweaked till we get a nearly identical print. That would be the better test in which one is putting out more ink. That and coupled with a weight test as stated to see if it's wasting vs actually using that much ink. I only really know Epson but I know that unless my machine is going through it's priming or cleaning phase it doesn't have a chance to arbitrarily dump ink. It would have to stop over the waste section to do so. Now that might be different on the Brother but I don't really see how.That said, that is a TON of ink in that waste tank and as everyone has said, they are in the business of selling ink mostly so I'm sure they waste ink unnecessarily. (Dan, I forgot about that one in our discussion, it's been said a couple of times.)
Brandt: Just to be clear I don't in anyway doubt your report that you are using more CC's / ML's of ink for the same print on the GT-381, than you are on the M-Link. I also agree that your total ink cost per print from the GT-341 could be 3X or more than what you are experiencing from the M-Link, with the ink cost differential fueled by a combination of increased ink volume per print, and a higher cost per CC or ML. With that said, here’s what I’m having some trouble understanding. As I stated in my earlier posts the ink chemistry between the inks used in both DTG printers is very similar. The difference in one DTG inkjet ink versus another is nothing like it is in screen inks, where the opacity and performance of a low cost plastisol ink weighing 9 lbs. per gallon, is way different to a high performance white ink that weighs 13 lbs. per gallon. One of your recent posts reported ink usage on the same print of 8.96cc (CMYK 1.75 and White 7.21) for the GT-381, and 2.48cc (CMYK .94 and White 1.54). These results report that the total ink usage on the GT-381 is 3.6X (CMYK 1.9X, and White 4.7X) that what used by the M-Link. I can understand that the basic Print Driver on the GT-381 could be laying down a little more ink than the OEM RIP supplied by the M-Link, but 3.6X the total volume ink usage doesn't sound right to me.
Earlier this year Nazdar SourceOne engaged a DTG Industry Expert to support us in a detailed analysis of pre-treatment cost, print quality, production performance, ink cost, and overall cost per print comparison between the AEOON KYO Series DTG printer, and another high production DTG printing system. One thing our Industry Expert insisted was that he wouldn't base his findings on the pre-treatment and ink volume usage numbers that were reported by the pre-treatment application systems, and DTG printers. Rather we went old school, and started out by weighing a number of "virgin" shirts, that were re-weighed after the pre-treatment was applied. We recorded the weight increase in each garment to get the actual volume of wet pre-treatment on each garment. In the case of the shirts for the AEOON they were dried under a heat press, and then reweighed to establish a before printing net weight. The garments were printed with white ink, then removed from printer to be weighed. These garments the had to be trashed as they couldn't be reloaded. Another set of pre-treated and weighed garments were loaded onto the DTG units and printed with White and CMYK, then weighed. We were able to convert the data based on the weight in grams of pre-treatment, white ink and CMYK applied to the garment into a volumetric measurement in CC's or ML's. I realize how busy that you are right now, but when the smoke clears it might make sense to use a weighing process to validate the ink volume usage of both DTG print platforms.