"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I dont think it is in bad taste to at least tell us what kind of equipment, and what the issues are... you may even find a solution. We dont need to know the manufacturer, but perhaps what the machines are.. Im guessing CTS.
they sent a replacement unit all the way to Japan, so they must be willing to do something. They at least seem to be trying.In the end, I would send the units back. My thinking is you bought the units that sell for half the price similar known and reasonably dependable pieces are going for, so some issues are to be expected. If they promised something it is not delivering, let them know it is not working and that you'll send them back. Before doing so, make sure the issue is not on your end. 'not saying it is, but it would be prudent to try to eliminate that possibility. Could it have something to do with the power? Is your frequency 50 or 60 Hz there? What is the unit designed for? Or could it be the voltage difference that's causing the issue? You are a little bit short compared to US and maybe the power supply is struggling to deliver the right amount of current or the difference in cycles is throwing some sort of timer out for a loop. . .pierre
Quote from: blue moon on February 02, 2018, 09:11:42 AMthey sent a replacement unit all the way to Japan, so they must be willing to do something. They at least seem to be trying.In the end, I would send the units back. My thinking is you bought the units that sell for half the price similar known and reasonably dependable pieces are going for, so some issues are to be expected. If they promised something it is not delivering, let them know it is not working and that you'll send them back. Before doing so, make sure the issue is not on your end. 'not saying it is, but it would be prudent to try to eliminate that possibility. Could it have something to do with the power? Is your frequency 50 or 60 Hz there? What is the unit designed for? Or could it be the voltage difference that's causing the issue? You are a little bit short compared to US and maybe the power supply is struggling to deliver the right amount of current or the difference in cycles is throwing some sort of timer out for a loop. . .pierreThe CTS in question adjust voltage accordingly to location. You can supply anything from 100V-200V according to their specs.We had someone here to set it up for us and it seemed to work fine. Unit is standing in an climate controlled room. Prints are looking like the files are 72 dpi. Jagged edges etc. Nozzle check is unreliable. Sometimes it looks like they are all firing but then once we print the screens they look terrible. Distance pf printhead to screens is kept at the recommended value. Now it was first assumed by the manufacturer that there is something wrong with electronic parts that make nozzles not fire correctly. But since both units were tested before shipping this seems to be out of question. Now my ideal scenario would be that they send service personal down here to take a look and once they confirm that the quality is poor they either fix it so the issue is gone for good or they offer a full refund and we are parting ways in an orderly fashion. There is just nothing we could do differently operating the unit.
Quote from: Rockers on February 02, 2018, 07:53:41 PMQuote from: blue moon on February 02, 2018, 09:11:42 AMthey sent a replacement unit all the way to Japan, so they must be willing to do something. They at least seem to be trying.In the end, I would send the units back. My thinking is you bought the units that sell for half the price similar known and reasonably dependable pieces are going for, so some issues are to be expected. If they promised something it is not delivering, let them know it is not working and that you'll send them back. Before doing so, make sure the issue is not on your end. 'not saying it is, but it would be prudent to try to eliminate that possibility. Could it have something to do with the power? Is your frequency 50 or 60 Hz there? What is the unit designed for? Or could it be the voltage difference that's causing the issue? You are a little bit short compared to US and maybe the power supply is struggling to deliver the right amount of current or the difference in cycles is throwing some sort of timer out for a loop. . .pierreThe CTS in question adjust voltage accordingly to location. You can supply anything from 100V-200V according to their specs.We had someone here to set it up for us and it seemed to work fine. Unit is standing in an climate controlled room. Prints are looking like the files are 72 dpi. Jagged edges etc. Nozzle check is unreliable. Sometimes it looks like they are all firing but then once we print the screens they look terrible. Distance pf printhead to screens is kept at the recommended value. Now it was first assumed by the manufacturer that there is something wrong with electronic parts that make nozzles not fire correctly. But since both units were tested before shipping this seems to be out of question. Now my ideal scenario would be that they send service personal down here to take a look and once they confirm that the quality is poor they either fix it so the issue is gone for good or they offer a full refund and we are parting ways in an orderly fashion. There is just nothing we could do differently operating the unit.Did you try to contact fellow users on this or any other board? You might not be so only one with this issue. At least these was my experience, when dealing with you-are-only-one-having-this-issue type of problems.