Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Quote from: Inkman996 on November 20, 2012, 03:22:20 PMYes Sam it helps make money a tiny tiny bit faster, it does not make your auto print faster, your folder fold faster etc, but yes it helps make the current amount of money a tad bit faster. But more importantly does it make more money? Again unless you turned work away previously then he same amount of money is coming, albeit its made faster its not made more.I have to side with Sam on this one. As you look at the printing process as a whole, wherever you improve efficiencies, the result will be cost savings. This can be in the form of ink, labor, film etc. The point I made earlier in the post is that we have radically improved our set-up times with the I-Screen. With all of the time saved on our set-ups, we are able to print more each day on each of our presses thus making more revenue each and every day.I had an M&R rep out about 2 weeks ago, we did a 3 color (tight registration) set-up on darks in 4 minutes that was dead on the money with registration. We taped up reg marks and were printing in under 6 minutes. I'll get the video link and post it to illustrate the time savings. As a contract print shop, downtime is a killer of profit. So maybe this machine doesn't actually produce the print but it certainly does support the process and increases efficiencies in the process as a whole.
Yes Sam it helps make money a tiny tiny bit faster, it does not make your auto print faster, your folder fold faster etc, but yes it helps make the current amount of money a tad bit faster. But more importantly does it make more money? Again unless you turned work away previously then he same amount of money is coming, albeit its made faster its not made more.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on November 20, 2012, 04:01:03 PMThis conversation is getting comical. Having a second auto for example wouldn't do much good if you couldn't feed it screens. So you'd need either twice the screen staff or some how do screens quicker.... DTS would make sense very quickly there. Some of you get to detailed in your break down of the process. If the whole process from customer purchase to customer holding finished product is faster, then anything you do to make your process faster actually makes you money. It may be the same money, but you made it faster. Please tell me, how is making money faster bad? If you can make money faster, your likely to find time to make more work come through the door. You see where this is going.Brandt not sure what world you live on or Sam for that matter but we are talking about a machine that images a screen and cuts expo time down some, it is not making a lot of time at all in the whole scheme of themes. If you had to print a 10k order the DTS would only shave a minute off that really long run, thats what some of us see and others do not. Some of us see that the machine is awesome but its expensive and it does not make any real money, when your shop is at capacity then sure it will free up some valuable time, if your one auto it will be minute, if your ten autos then it could start realizing serious numbers. Us personaly being a production type place I would prefer another press and hook up with bigger brokers and bigger universities, its available, a DTS would not get us that kind of work but a second auto sure would.
This conversation is getting comical. Having a second auto for example wouldn't do much good if you couldn't feed it screens. So you'd need either twice the screen staff or some how do screens quicker.... DTS would make sense very quickly there. Some of you get to detailed in your break down of the process. If the whole process from customer purchase to customer holding finished product is faster, then anything you do to make your process faster actually makes you money. It may be the same money, but you made it faster. Please tell me, how is making money faster bad? If you can make money faster, your likely to find time to make more work come through the door. You see where this is going.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on November 20, 2012, 04:01:03 PMThis conversation is getting comical. Having a second auto for example wouldn't do much good if you couldn't feed it screens. So you'd need either twice the screen staff or some how do screens quicker.... DTS would make sense very quickly there. What about feeding it jobs? Can Sam output 80 screens in 80 minutes with his new tool? Tony does, with film. 80 screens will fill two autos and hundreds of multi auto print shops feed the presses with film processed screens every day. Can we at least agree that Tony's shop couldn't develop 80 screens in 80 minutes if he had a DTS? He'd need at least 2, maybe 3 of them. It does make sense very quickly once you get into many screens per day and you can't develop a screen as quickly as Tony's guys, but then again, this goes back to smaller shops and ROI for me. Why would you buy a DTS to do screens quicker when you do a much poorer job in screen development than the average shop? Just get better at screen development and be like Tony's guys. If I can expose 2 screens to our competitions one screen, doesn't mean they need to go out and buy a DTS, that's all I'm saying.What comes first, the chicken or the egg, the second auto or the DTS? It's a good question and I really don't know what I'd buy first...probably leaning DTS but it's not easy.
This conversation is getting comical. Having a second auto for example wouldn't do much good if you couldn't feed it screens. So you'd need either twice the screen staff or some how do screens quicker.... DTS would make sense very quickly there.
Shelly), who also sets up all embroidery, does all seps, does all ordering, does all loading on the auto and so on.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on November 20, 2012, 05:13:58 PMShelly), who also sets up all embroidery, does all seps, does all ordering, does all loading on the auto and so on. Sounds like you don't need a DTS you need another Shelly. I was wondering why Shelly doesn't post much anymore, poor overworked girl.
Right now we're at 10-12 business day for turn around time. Sometimes it's worse. I KNOW that we lose customers because of that. Also we have to turn away rush jobs. So what's the hold up? It's not that the presses aren't fast enough. It's that most of our jobs are small jobs. The setup time to register jobs on press is what's killing us. Forget everything else, film, exposure time etc. If i can cut down the time it takes to setup the press and get it printing shirts i can print a few more jobs per day. We will be able to take rush orders and lower our turn around time thus bring in money we normally would have lost out on. This is where the DTS helps make us money.
Tony has dedicated screen people. We don't even have 1 dedicated screen person, hell we don't even have 1 dedicated screen print person at all, any part of the process soup to nuts. Comparing his set up to ours is like night and day. If I can skip hiring someone and output screens faster than I am now, how could that be bad for my shop? It's clear to me here that every shop is very different.
No one here that owns a DTS currently has answered my question about warped screens and print height. Screens are not all exact and no one can guarantee perfect newmans. I am curious how not so perfect screens are dealt with?
What about what Pierre brought up? I know by looking at the specs they should do higher lpi and resolution versus film, but Pierre has seen one up close and says the halftones are not what he gets on film. That's not as big of a deal for some of us, but it's just one more reason to think about it.