"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
That thing is friggin awesome! I take it the illuminated end caps on the print heads are print head controls, that would be super cool if they started having full control at all heads, even if just membrane buttons, but touch screens is pretty sick in an awesome way. My back would seize if I tried to load at that speed. If I'm running our DB at 40 DZ/H myself, I can hang for about 30 mins and then it's time for someone to jump in and help out. I can only imagine double that, then the way this thing is running, 6 times that, jeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeesh, pretty impressive that a machine that big can run solid and accurate at that speed, an I'm sure that's really the point of the whole record. They are beasts for sure. Cool vid!
Thanks for the info Rich! I wasn't trying to say the record was worthless necessarily, I just didn't write enough words to ask how it could translate to a better press. How far are we from an autoloader?
Quote from: StuJohnston on May 08, 2013, 08:02:31 PMThanks for the info Rich! I wasn't trying to say the record was worthless necessarily, I just didn't write enough words to ask how it could translate to a better press. How far are we from an autoloader?we have an auto loader. It is called the Visa. It has been ready for 8 years. The industry is not ready for it yet. The apparel manufacturers need to make a change to their packaging and that is the only hang up.
Couldn't a shop stack shirts correctly for the loader?
Quote from: 244 on May 08, 2013, 09:11:53 PMQuote from: StuJohnston on May 08, 2013, 08:02:31 PMThanks for the info Rich! I wasn't trying to say the record was worthless necessarily, I just didn't write enough words to ask how it could translate to a better press. How far are we from an autoloader?we have an auto loader. It is called the Visa. It has been ready for 8 years. The industry is not ready for it yet. The apparel manufacturers need to make a change to their packaging and that is the only hang up.Couldn't a shop stack shirts correctly for the loader?
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on May 09, 2013, 12:14:31 PMQuote from: 244 on May 08, 2013, 09:11:53 PMQuote from: StuJohnston on May 08, 2013, 08:02:31 PMThanks for the info Rich! I wasn't trying to say the record was worthless necessarily, I just didn't write enough words to ask how it could translate to a better press. How far are we from an autoloader?we have an auto loader. It is called the Visa. It has been ready for 8 years. The industry is not ready for it yet. The apparel manufacturers need to make a change to their packaging and that is the only hang up.Watch the video. The machine is basically a pick and place robot with a few little items to open the shirt and place it flat on a glued surface. Placement of the stacking is the only issue. Garbage in , garbage out comes to mind if initally placed improperly. In order for this to work the shirt stack coming out of the box would have to be pretty damn close to perfect. And there you have the problem. Getting the apparel manufacturers to change the way they pack shirts would take an act of God. Too many miles of conveyors in the world to handle the shirt box as it is!Couldn't a shop stack shirts correctly for the loader? Yes but by stacked right, Rich means stacked with the sleeves, neck seams and back side of the shirts removed. Well and a special bracket attached so the machine can pick them up. I would love to see this thing. Unloaded not a big deal but to be able to grab a shirt off a pile??? I have a hard time some times.
Quote from: 244 on May 08, 2013, 09:11:53 PMQuote from: StuJohnston on May 08, 2013, 08:02:31 PMThanks for the info Rich! I wasn't trying to say the record was worthless necessarily, I just didn't write enough words to ask how it could translate to a better press. How far are we from an autoloader?we have an auto loader. It is called the Visa. It has been ready for 8 years. The industry is not ready for it yet. The apparel manufacturers need to make a change to their packaging and that is the only hang up.Watch the video. The machine is basically a pick and place robot with a few little items to open the shirt and place it flat on a glued surface. Placement of the stacking is the only issue. Garbage in , garbage out comes to mind if initally placed improperly. In order for this to work the shirt stack coming out of the box would have to be pretty damn close to perfect. And there you have the problem. Getting the apparel manufacturers to change the way they pack shirts would take an act of God. Too many miles of conveyors in the world to handle the shirt box as it is!Couldn't a shop stack shirts correctly for the loader?