Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
I spent 30 minutes at their booth at the ISS Ft Worth show and there was no mention of this new press. Looking back on that I'm fairly certain the distributor and Anatol rep had no knowledge of this or they are very good at keeping secrets since we talked specifically about the all electric Brown a few rows away. I'd like to see how they are working the choppers and see how pressure is regulated. If it's simply regulated by how far the squeegee goes down, then I couldn't use it for a lot of what we do. Dark ink, light shirts, no problem, but when it comes to maximizing opacity for a specific ink I need control over downward force. Is that a giant monitor on that thing or is the press that small, bad photoshop perhaps? I saw the Aries system up close, the step back feature, etc. and like I've always said, the machines...not that bad. They were doing a nice little sim process job on it using the step back, and for the one man show who has more than he wants to do manually then printing 150-200 dark shirts an hour is freaking awesome.So close, yet so, so very far away.
So close, yet so, so very far away.
Quote from: alan802 on October 08, 2013, 03:46:41 PMI spent 30 minutes at their booth at the ISS Ft Worth show and there was no mention of this new press. Looking back on that I'm fairly certain the distributor and Anatol rep had no knowledge of this or they are very good at keeping secrets since we talked specifically about the all electric Brown a few rows away. I'd like to see how they are working the choppers and see how pressure is regulated. If it's simply regulated by how far the squeegee goes down, then I couldn't use it for a lot of what we do. Dark ink, light shirts, no problem, but when it comes to maximizing opacity for a specific ink I need control over downward force. Is that a giant monitor on that thing or is the press that small, bad photoshop perhaps? I saw the Aries system up close, the step back feature, etc. and like I've always said, the machines...not that bad. They were doing a nice little sim process job on it using the step back, and for the one man show who has more than he wants to do manually then printing 150-200 dark shirts an hour is freaking awesome.So close, yet so, so very far away.Looks like from the pic above that the choppers still have depth adjusters, so I'd guess "pressure" can be knocked down/up individually. No screen is too big lol I want the Aries OS on my 2004 Trident, that'd be bad-ace rather than drilling down through the menus to adjust parameters.Gilligan, we get it, you hate Anatol
Hey Alan, thanks for stopping by the booth and talking shop. I enjoy talking shop, probably way too much I was actually hoping you would get a chance to stop back by the booth and get a better look at the Titan. If you are ever up this way in Arlington and want to stop by and take a up close look at one, the door is always open to you and anyone else that may want to.Gilligan, I am sorry that we gave you an awkward feeling at our booth, I do apologize for that. If there is something or a question I can help you with, please feel free to ask.And since I was in the neighborhood here is the info on the tag printer*NEW* Introducing Anatol's new automatic small-format textile printer.- Maximum image area 6" x 6"- Maximum screen size 10" x 25"- 1 - 4 colors- 6 - 10 stations- Servo indexer- Pneumatic print heads- 8" touchscreen operating system- Quick release squeegees & flood bars- Adjustable stroke & flood speed- Adjustable dwell setting- Double print stroke setting- Adjustable flash time & intensity- Automatic t-shirt sensor- Foot pedal option
You sir have been a good sport. anatol should be happy to have someone like you representing them!
Well if you take into consideration that a6/5 all air Titan will run you about 21k, the volt isn't that bad once you get a compressor, chiller, plumbing and electrical work done it is probably close to the same.