"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Just got a new barudan single head about a month ago. I was told by most, don't buy a single head. I just wanted to get started, get comfortable and get good first, so I bought it. After just a few weeks of running the machine, and might I add the barudan is AMAZING! Not sure I even know what a thread break is, it doesn't happen. Worked in a shop with 40 plus heads of another brand and all day long dealt with thread breaks. Anyway, yes, you can find used multi head machines for close to the same price, but I don't want someone elses problems and I never buy used. That's just me. Here is my honest opinion after running this thing now for a few weeks. I can see why, sometimes my outsourced embroidery sux, I already know what they are doing wrong, and I can already do hats better than they can. It pays to do it yourself. Second and probably most important, DOUBT YOU WILL MAKE MUCH MONEY ON A SINGLE HEAD. Its just to damn slow. Hurry up and wait! Its a good way to learn, but expensive too. I wouldn't get rid of mine, but you better believe at least a 6 head is in my near future.
We have two single heads. also don't run both machines simultaneously on a job (which I don't really agree with, but I don't interfere too much). We will run them both if we have different jobs to get done at the same time and we DO run them both sometimes when we got to get a job done or it's larger... I just think we should almost always be running both on anything past 10 or so.
Quote from: Gilligan on January 07, 2016, 10:53:50 PMWe have two single heads. also don't run both machines simultaneously on a job (which I don't really agree with, but I don't interfere too much). We will run them both if we have different jobs to get done at the same time and we DO run them both sometimes when we got to get a job done or it's larger... I just think we should almost always be running both on anything past 10 or so.If the machines are not the same brand you will notice a difference in the embroidery from one machine to the other. I run singles, and there is a difference between brands on how a design sews out. This may be why they don't want to run the same job on the two machines.
In our office we only have room for a single head, a 2 head would be pushing it. Are machines tolerant of temp swings? In the winter it could be 40 degrees in the shop and summer could be 120.