Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Need help on pulling the trigger on switching to gas dryer. I have found a good used sprint 3000 38" belt 10' heatCurrently we have a 38" Radicure with the extra panel, we run it daily (9hrs+) and has been an awesome dryer, my electricity bills run around $500 month for the shop ( dryer /compressor / 3 spot dryers etc)Am I going to get any more throughput with the gas dryer over electric? I'm thinking of getting the dryer this year to run with my air 6 colour Sportsman but want to upgrade to a 10-12 colour servo press in a year.Some plus's I see are-the ability to start trying water base or discharge base prints-programability for different cure temps-speed?cons-will take up more shop space-sounds like more maintenance is needed on gas dryers-read a comment about noise? hadn't heard that before or considered it?- not sure if it can dry say 70-80 doz an hour of plastisol , thought I hade seen an M&R throughput chart before but can't find itAny info or isight would be appreciated ,
Thanks for the replies, think its probably time to go gas.
Going to a gas from electric dryer is the only case I've seen where a sales person can truthfully tell you "you can't afford not to buy it". We went from a 100a beast of an electric with 10' of heat to a Sprint HO with 16' of heat and an extra foot wider belt The gas payment plus the note on the gas dryer is less than the electric payment on the old dryer. And we have way more capacity, better cure, etc. The HO is a monster dryer too so it's not even apples to apples and it's still far cheaper. [/i]. Anyways, stop paying your utility co for that old electric and upgrade your curing and capacity for less.
Quote from: ZooCity on October 31, 2017, 01:12:36 PMGoing to a gas from electric dryer is the only case I've seen where a sales person can truthfully tell you "you can't afford not to buy it". We went from a 100a beast of an electric with 10' of heat to a Sprint HO with 16' of heat and an extra foot wider belt The gas payment plus the note on the gas dryer is less than the electric payment on the old dryer. And we have way more capacity, better cure, etc. The HO is a monster dryer too so it's not even apples to apples and it's still far cheaper. [/i]. Anyways, stop paying your utility co for that old electric and upgrade your curing and capacity for less.We experienced the same as ZooCity. Our payment on the dryer plus the cost of gas is less than what we're saving in electricity. I would argue making the switch from electric to gas is not only the best move, but also the time to justify going for a bigger dryer since you know you'll be able to cover the payments. You'll never be in this position again and there's an incredible peace of mind in having a really solid dryer. Yes I'm estimating $4000 on the install, had the gas fitter out there saying approx $1500-$2000 and the last quote on ducting was around $2000Another thing to consider, when you switch to gas, you'll need to budget for the electrical work, running the gas line, and venting the dryer. Get quotes, plan ahead, and make sure your contractors know exactly what needs to be done so you don't have down time.
Quote from: Croft on October 31, 2017, 04:05:39 PMThanks for the replies, think its probably time to go gas.If you fold the shirts coming off the press to around 18"x18" you can get two garments across a 38" wide belt, and achieve production speeds of around 1,000/pph with plastisol inks with a Sprint 3000 38" Gas Dryer with 10' Heat
Anyone have a guess at real world numbers curing discharge PPH through a dryer like the 3000 with a 10 ft chamber?