"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
i agee flashbacks are awesome, wish I had a second as well. will have one in near future. and to me a flashback is not a band-aid at all.
Some old timers would say even flashes are a band aid.
Quote from: aauusa on January 15, 2016, 11:39:08 AMi agee flashbacks are awesome, wish I had a second as well. will have one in near future. and to me a flashback is not a band-aid at all.Whats the max dz per hour you print at while flashing a full size image 15x17 inches? I know when I watched flashbacks in action it was like watching paint dry. Much like revolver. Quote from: bimmridder on January 15, 2016, 12:24:54 PMSome old timers would say even flashes are a band aid.when i print and catch alone doing a large flash average print size 12x12 it is just at 150 pieces per hour(12 dozen) when not flashing 300 pieces (25 dozen) with the flash going full stroke I am able to load a shirts and catch each piece coming out of the end of the dryer(nothing falls in the box)(small walk to back of dryer to the load station 8 steps) the above numbers are for print/flash/print/flash. we are a small auto shop 1 printer and 1 cleaner. we do more smaller jobs than 300 pieces or more jobs. so the flashback does not slow us down. but if you are a larger shop or do more larger orders then yes the flashback will create some issues on time. so just going big on the press is not always the right fit for each business. all depends on the number of employees which you are going to use to run the machine and the size jobs your shop normally prints. side not our dryer is rated for 36 dozen per hour.for me I like the air rather than electric. reason is for me and my brain it is easier to fix/find local parts for the air components. where some of the stuff which can go wrong on the electric well i would need to find a local supplier which is not available (small market )Also true
when i print and catch alone doing a large flash average print size 12x12 it is just at 150 pieces per hour(12 dozen) when not flashing 300 pieces (25 dozen) with the flash going full stroke I am able to load a shirts and catch each piece coming out of the end of the dryer(nothing falls in the box)(small walk to back of dryer to the load station 8 steps) the above numbers are for print/flash/print/flash. we are a small auto shop 1 printer and 1 cleaner. we do more smaller jobs than 300 pieces or more jobs. so the flashback does not slow us down. but if you are a larger shop or do more larger orders then yes the flashback will create some issues on time. so just going big on the press is not always the right fit for each business. all depends on the number of employees which you are going to use to run the machine and the size jobs your shop normally prints. side not our dryer is rated for 36 dozen per hour.for me I like the air rather than electric. reason is for me and my brain it is easier to fix/find local parts for the air components. where some of the stuff which can go wrong on the electric well i would need to find a local supplier which is not available (small market )Also true
Quote from: aauusa on January 15, 2016, 12:59:58 PMwhen i print and catch alone doing a large flash average print size 12x12 it is just at 150 pieces per hour(12 dozen) when not flashing 300 pieces (25 dozen) with the flash going full stroke I am able to load a shirts and catch each piece coming out of the end of the dryer(nothing falls in the box)(small walk to back of dryer to the load station 8 steps) the above numbers are for print/flash/print/flash. we are a small auto shop 1 printer and 1 cleaner. we do more smaller jobs than 300 pieces or more jobs. so the flashback does not slow us down. but if you are a larger shop or do more larger orders then yes the flashback will create some issues on time. so just going big on the press is not always the right fit for each business. all depends on the number of employees which you are going to use to run the machine and the size jobs your shop normally prints. side not our dryer is rated for 36 dozen per hour.for me I like the air rather than electric. reason is for me and my brain it is easier to fix/find local parts for the air components. where some of the stuff which can go wrong on the electric well i would need to find a local supplier which is not available (small market )Also true Sounds like it is right for your shop now... id agree with you. What about in 5 years? What if you need to start pumping out work, those flash backs and that dryer are going to be holding you back sounds like. I think the idea of a auto for most is to increase capacity as well as making it a bit less hard than printing manually. If you can unload/load/walk to back of the dryer and be ready for the next pallet in the time it takes the flash back that is SUPER slow. That seems like a band-aid in that context. A stand alone flash on a print flash print and you'd be lucky to be able to load/unload in the time it took to flash. Just saying.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on January 15, 2016, 01:18:49 PMQuote from: aauusa on January 15, 2016, 12:59:58 PMwhen i print and catch alone doing a large flash average print size 12x12 it is just at 150 pieces per hour(12 dozen) when not flashing 300 pieces (25 dozen) with the flash going full stroke I am able to load a shirts and catch each piece coming out of the end of the dryer(nothing falls in the box)(small walk to back of dryer to the load station 8 steps) the above numbers are for print/flash/print/flash. we are a small auto shop 1 printer and 1 cleaner. we do more smaller jobs than 300 pieces or more jobs. so the flashback does not slow us down. but if you are a larger shop or do more larger orders then yes the flashback will create some issues on time. so just going big on the press is not always the right fit for each business. all depends on the number of employees which you are going to use to run the machine and the size jobs your shop normally prints. side not our dryer is rated for 36 dozen per hour.for me I like the air rather than electric. reason is for me and my brain it is easier to fix/find local parts for the air components. where some of the stuff which can go wrong on the electric well i would need to find a local supplier which is not available (small market )Also true Sounds like it is right for your shop now... id agree with you. What about in 5 years? What if you need to start pumping out work, those flash backs and that dryer are going to be holding you back sounds like. I think the idea of a auto for most is to increase capacity as well as making it a bit less hard than printing manually. If you can unload/load/walk to back of the dryer and be ready for the next pallet in the time it takes the flash back that is SUPER slow. That seems like a band-aid in that context. A stand alone flash on a print flash print and you'd be lucky to be able to load/unload in the time it took to flash. Just saying.I agree when we do grow then yes we would need a larger dryer and press, but we are not just a printer for tee shirts and such but rather a full cut and sew shop with embroidery and full sublimation. so for us to grow we would not be looking at the print department but rather our cut and sew full sublimation department. as this is our highest bang for the buck and the area which has the least competition honestly. those large print orders really are not the areas we wish to go after as there are already thousand of print shops which have that ability. do we get large order 1000 pieces (this is large) yes do i like doing them no..it honestly comes down to what are you going to be printing, size orders, number of employees you are paying to run the machine, and where you want the business to grow.for me 150 shirts per hour with p/f/p/f is not slow imo. but some may see it as turtle speed. but I would not have been able to get a 6 color 8 station press with a flash in the footprint which we have. do i wish I had a 8 color yes but no room for it and only an hand full of times do I wish i had one in the last 10 years.
I get your point but I do not think it as a sacrifice as you would not always run the auto at full speed. I would think more than likely wrong.. I mean I own a car that says it will do 120mph but i never drive it at that speed. is it great to have the power if I need it yes but not sure when i would need it. when we got our press it was not for speed but rather smarter working(less labor). really who needs the fastest printer unless you have the work and workers to run it. but i think going from a manual press to an auto most would want max colors over speed but then this is dependent on what type of shop they are wanting to be and what jobs they are wanting to get. did we sacrifice with our press yes but not for speed but rather colors is where we sacrificed. we did look at press with a dedicated flash head and the loss of the color is what kept us from that route, . good conversation though
missing my point. if you do not have jobs everyday with 500 pieces or more why do you need to go so fast. we do teams mostly well those are 36 pieces or less runs. so i do not need the 500 or 300 count speed. look at it like this if you are only going couple of hundred feet no reason to go 80 mph hour. did we think of growth when we got it 10 years ago yes, did we grow with it yes, do we still have more growth room with this press yes.
you must have the work load to print 500 pieces an hour or 300 an hour. i mean if a shop prints 800 shirts per week and are limited by space then why go for speed. cause you still have to pay the workers and at even 300 an hour that would mean your worker is only getting part time work.
it depends on what your business is setup to do and what market you want to go with. me I rather print a $18/$25 jersey out the door shirt rather than a $4 tee shirt. My margin is much larger on that $18/$25 jersey rather than that $4/$5 tee shirt. we are not a screen print business but rather a sport team business concentrating on teams and smaller orders which the other shops pass cause it does not meet the minimum.
in this last year for example i can think of about 7 or 8 jobs which had more than 300 pieces, and 1 which had more than 1000. but we still had close to 45,000 imprints on our auto. so it works to about 800/900 shirt per week. with our flashback we do not have to set up the second screen nor do we use revolver mode. it works for us in this model of team sports.
um. why buy an auto if you never see yourself producing more than 150 shirts an hour. Any shop with an auto should want to see a 350-450 per hour rate, or just buy a large color count manual press. I mean, if you plan to grow and produce. I couldn't justify that, but then again, when we got our first auto I just didn't want to pull a squeegee anymore. It only took a month of running it to know it only made sense to produce a no less than 300 per hour, but I guess everyone has their own vision for where they want their shop to go.