"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I'd like to thank everyone for all of their great feedback and how considerate it has been. It's hard to find this detailed info without asking those who already own or have experience on them, without getting a sales pitch, or wrustling some feathers of owners who own each of these brands I've been so heavily analyzing (M&R, Vastex, Antec) ... Refreshing to get that kind of stuff from here.I am thinking most likely M&R is my way to go, it seems everyone has a pretty strong opinion that although Vastex makes a solid press, if I plan to ever go auto, makes more sense to already own the associated boards and reg system thats proven across manual and auto w/ the M&R system. Now to save up that extra $$ to be able to try and get all these wanted features from the outset, new and working well, instead of upgrading after machines begun to take on wear or jobs that may shift callibration, I'd like to have airlocks and sideclamps up front instead of down the road.
an auto indexer would rule, hah, have never seen one of those on a manual. Could be awesome for someone to build a base like the auto flashes that rotate and spin into place that you just slide any top of a mobile flash unit into and configure for balancing, etc... instead of having to buy a proprietary flash thats just super expsensive because it does a 90 degree rotation w/ a servo .. good idea though.after also realizing a try-lock costs $2500, i'm kinda leaning back towards vastex, not because of quality or anything, but getting more for my money ... I mean, Vastex's VRS is around $975, yes, they don't have airlocks (this may be the decider, and tri-lock apparently only works best w/ the airlocks) ... so it's a tough call still. $2500 for trilock is kinda absurd, its 2 right angles!
Quote from: sonicweaponprinting on December 06, 2012, 06:24:51 PMan auto indexer would rule, hah, have never seen one of those on a manual. Could be awesome for someone to build a base like the auto flashes that rotate and spin into place that you just slide any top of a mobile flash unit into and configure for balancing, etc... instead of having to buy a proprietary flash thats just super expsensive because it does a 90 degree rotation w/ a servo .. good idea though.after also realizing a try-lock costs $2500, i'm kinda leaning back towards vastex, not because of quality or anything, but getting more for my money ... I mean, Vastex's VRS is around $975, yes, they don't have airlocks (this may be the decider, and tri-lock apparently only works best w/ the airlocks) ... so it's a tough call still. $2500 for trilock is kinda absurd, its 2 right angles!ok. the shear craftmanship of the tri- lock is superior. the registration pallet is very nice. you have another piece that goes on the glass of you exposure unit and it works. no comparison to the vastex. i think that point should motivate you MORE toward m/r. you have it backwards. your getting much more for your money with m/r. besides trilock technology your getting a press with much better pallets, micros. all that adds up to faster production, faster set-up. i would say thats more for your money..
I try not to weigh in on these things but Sonic, well.................ya did good there
Quote from: tonypep on December 20, 2012, 03:04:17 PMI try not to weigh in on these things but Sonic, well.................ya did good there yep. now buy a real dryer also. i heard m/r has a few that will match your press.believe me a miss matched shop of equipment can be distracting. seriously,a m/r fusion will be a great fit.