Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
We have both a stampinator and a hot head.My press operators seam to like the hot head better, but I think that the stampinator is more effective.One thing, with the stampinator if going on hoodies it won't work great at least on a M&R press as it comes down uneven on the garment as it's offset but the hood. So in that instance the hot head is better since you can control the length of the stroke.We had early issues with the stampinator and it losing heat in a run, however we were using it to cure the under base, which you can't do with the hot head. I think that is mostly remedied now, as well as you could throw a flash in front of it and use it in the head after.Having both is the best option, but if I had to choose one I'm for the stampinator, I think if you are a business owner and not an employee like me, there are a lot of creative uses for it, however getting my coworkers to think outside the box just doesn't quite happen.I'd like to use it to apply inside neck labels, ask Eric to send you a video of his "RapidStamper" it's rad, that's what I want, I also like to use it near the end of a print run to smooth the print before it goes through a dryer, not just for the bases.One thing though as far as heat, if you are loading slowly, a lot of the heat should come from your pallets so although it may not be as hot from the top you should have a good temperature coming from the bottom which you are pressing the ink against. However a roller is like a fraction of a second of direct contact, a hot head is like 1.5 second, and a stamper is like 6 seconds or however long you want to set it. So you'll get a much better smooth surface from a stampinator as it's more time, and more solid direct down pressure than a moving tool across a surface.I'd get way more if my coworkers would use them more, and they weren't some effin expensive, I think I could get China to make them for a fraction of the cost. The patent is on the springs in it, M&R used to make them I-kiss, it's not rocket science, why the rocket ship price?
We have both a stampinator and a hot head.My press operators seam to like the hot head better, but I think that the stampinator is more effective.One thing, with the stampinator if going on hoodies it won't work great at least on a M&R press as it comes down uneven on the garment as it's offset but the hood.
Quote from: zanegun08 on January 21, 2021, 09:15:56 PMWe have both a stampinator and a hot head.My press operators seam to like the hot head better, but I think that the stampinator is more effective.One thing, with the stampinator if going on hoodies it won't work great at least on a M&R press as it comes down uneven on the garment as it's offset but the hood. I didn't even think about the pocket on the hoodie making it an uneven surface! Possibly a special pallet for that. More $$In that case, an iron may be the best choice. Hoodies are my main reason for the Iron or Stampinator.Do you still need to flash with the Stampinator? I was led to believe that you didn't or maybe just an option when you need to.I know that a few M&R guys swear by the Hot Head. Is the Roq Iron the same or a just similar?
this is my argument for the stampinator:-It is a roller and a flash in one unit. that's it, game over!
So you can stamp wet ink to flash it and it won't stick or blur the image?
Quote from: ericheartsu on January 25, 2021, 10:03:35 AMthis is my argument for the stampinator:-It is a roller and a flash in one unit. that's it, game over!Pretty much! We have not touched our iron since we got the stampanator. In fact if someone want to buy a ROQ Iron I'd be happy to sell ours. We found that especially with like a sponge fleece garment the Iron would sometime move the garment a bit, this could be minimized with less pressure and some screwing around, but you can take all those things out of the equation if you use the Stampinator.
Quote from: TCT on January 25, 2021, 10:31:44 AMQuote from: ericheartsu on January 25, 2021, 10:03:35 AMthis is my argument for the stampinator:-It is a roller and a flash in one unit. that's it, game over!Pretty much! We have not touched our iron since we got the stampanator. In fact if someone want to buy a ROQ Iron I'd be happy to sell ours. We found that especially with like a sponge fleece garment the Iron would sometime move the garment a bit, this could be minimized with less pressure and some screwing around, but you can take all those things out of the equation if you use the Stampinator.TCT...How do you go about using the Stampinator on fleece hoodies with the pocket?I'm quoting a job now that has 200 sponge fleece hoodies.
Brown makes the Anaconda, similar idea for a lot less coin and it would be adjustable print stroke on our presses.