Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
If you upgrade to an auto, you'll most likely have to upgrade your dryer, and space, and it goes on and on. It's no use having an auto feeding a 20" belt moving very slowly. I worked in a shop way back where if we had a long run, pre-auto, we would put 3 operators on a manual; a printer, (lower the screen, print, lift the screen) an unloader, and a loader. 300+ per hour. If you are printing 2 colors, then a single unloader/loader would work. This increases our output obviously, without changing your footprint. That being said, once you use an auto, you probably won't want to go back. Even if you're still doing 1 color work. At this point though, you need a dryer that can handle your output. We printed 9,000 2/0 on white shirts once with 2 manuals over a weekend, our dryer was a 48" wide belt, or it wouldn't have happened.Steve
Single person set up from FarmBoy Graphicshttps://youtu.be/m93qmWzpakA
Sorry been missing in action...tornado like conditions here in Connecticut....lost power, computer an a few days of work.Sbrem: Its just me for the moment, so I was thinking an auto would help in regards to saving physical energy and /or the cost of employees. Currently I believe my press is the weakest part of my set up and was just wondering if a more expensive / better press would be worth the upgrade or if I should just save for an auto. I have an good flash, and a 30" electric belt dryer both from Vastex.Prince: Absolutely right on dialing in the process. Recent small changes have improved my quality and process for essentially no cost. Still have plenty of room for improvement and yeah I feel the tedium is taking away from the creative, marketing and organizational things. I guess bigger toys don't cover for lazy excuses.Paradozcs The Anatol Volt is all electric which is why I would be interested in that press. Your chain of thoughts makes a lot of sense. I didn't consider the snowball reaction. I think your metric of 100k is a good place to start serious consideration. I calculated my theoretical max sales would be about 250k not factoring in the tedium or potential for burnout or additional time spent with additional customersThanks printers a lot of good advice
Knowing what I know now I would have never bought a single manual press. I had 3 before buying my first auto and I think I wasted years of time doing that. But your space, your finances and so on would determine if that is possible.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on August 12, 2020, 11:18:59 AMKnowing what I know now I would have never bought a single manual press. I had 3 before buying my first auto and I think I wasted years of time doing that. But your space, your finances and so on would determine if that is possible.Agree with this