"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
heres my take.. M/R is one great company and i love that chameleon.. never had a complaint from anyone male or female about running one. they also hold their value extreamly well. the antec on the other hand are much lighter(the micros work really really good once you get used to them) and hold super tight registration without alot of maintenace, pallet levelling etc. over all unless you have m/r autos or are planning on buying one(so everything like pallets and stuff are interchangable) i would recommend the antec. in a manual.
Just when i thought i had a good starting selection of square aluminum 20x24 screens to get me by on most jobs I get a 600 piece order w 8 designs and 3-4 print locations on each and use almost all of em up on one job! Now i cant see that happening anytime in the near couple years involving newman frames, theyre like 3x the cost, for a young shop, thats a lot of money on other shop stuff I could use. I do understand the difference in what can be achieved with them however, once the manual pays for itself.
Quote from: RStefanick on December 04, 2012, 04:43:41 PMheres my take.. M/R is one great company and i love that chameleon.. never had a complaint from anyone male or female about running one. they also hold their value extreamly well. the antec on the other hand are much lighter(the micros work really really good once you get used to them) and hold super tight registration without alot of maintenace, pallet levelling etc. over all unless you have m/r autos or are planning on buying one(so everything like pallets and stuff are interchangable) i would recommend the antec. in a manual. ^^this is a real good point^^ If it's going to be awhile before you'll want/need/have an automatic (and don't overlook the fact that screen sizes, etc. vary wildly on auto presses and who knows which one you might install first) then an Antec with Newman manual rollers would probably be the best thing going- light and tight.
Quote from: Croft on December 04, 2012, 02:24:39 PMHave run and owned both I would go 6/6 the ladies that print for me on the Chameleon haven't complained or noticed a problem with weight. We have needed that configuration for a couple odd ball jobs where the spot needed to be somewhere other than straight across from the printer. I also think there is less movement needed and less of a push through to the next indent.so, you think a chameleon vs. a sidewinder then? hard to tell the way its worded. 'I also think theres less movement needed and less of a push through to the next index'do you mean the Sidewinder vs. the Chameleon? (please clarify) Thanks!
Have run and owned both I would go 6/6 the ladies that print for me on the Chameleon haven't complained or noticed a problem with weight. We have needed that configuration for a couple odd ball jobs where the spot needed to be somewhere other than straight across from the printer. I also think there is less movement needed and less of a push through to the next indent.
Left and right off contact no big deal. You can do the same with any press using shims. But if everything is level should have no need for it.