"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Quote from: Gilligan on December 18, 2013, 10:14:51 AMI imagine, having seen Alan's process first hand, that two color jobs require no micros as well and would be set up nearly as fast. Add to that if their are repeats then films are faster on those jobs than dts as he has mentioned.Like you say, it's all about systems. If dts helped you improve that much, that's awesome. But recognize that you could have improved on previous systems and seen nearly the same sort of gains. I imagine, head to head with the same jobs, Alan and you would practically be neck and neck. Now give Alan 50k to spend on what he wanted (second press probably) and he would be crushing it. This is how Tony crushes it, no one can doubt his procedures.So you can buy a second auto, hire staff to run it, and deal with increased screen production/seps/scheduling/etc for 50k? I mean even 2 new employees paid piss poor would cost you most of if not all of that 50k budget PER YEAR just to run this new press. I guess he could find a 5k beat up all air Jav. Can Alan's screen room produce enough additional screens to keep those guys busy on this second auto, would he have the sales to fill a second Auto and keep those guys busy as well as his current staff, or would he do the same work 2x as fast now and send everyone home at noon? How many employees are at Tony's shop. I assume Tony has more employees than 2 full time guys and a part time guy. So apples to oranges in Tony and Alan's shop I would guess. I know he's your hero and I am not doubting for a second his processes he's done great and his shop is a inspiration for all us small guys. But I think the pipe dream of just throw a second auto in there and it solves all is way out there. It requires a bit more than just a auto investment and likely requires added labor costs, which the labor costs alone would cost more in 1 year than a DTS costs total which and be spread out if desired.
I imagine, having seen Alan's process first hand, that two color jobs require no micros as well and would be set up nearly as fast. Add to that if their are repeats then films are faster on those jobs than dts as he has mentioned.Like you say, it's all about systems. If dts helped you improve that much, that's awesome. But recognize that you could have improved on previous systems and seen nearly the same sort of gains. I imagine, head to head with the same jobs, Alan and you would practically be neck and neck. Now give Alan 50k to spend on what he wanted (second press probably) and he would be crushing it. This is how Tony crushes it, no one can doubt his procedures.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on December 18, 2013, 11:04:09 AMQuote from: Gilligan on December 18, 2013, 10:14:51 AMI imagine, having seen Alan's process first hand, that two color jobs require no micros as well and would be set up nearly as fast. Add to that if their are repeats then films are faster on those jobs than dts as he has mentioned.Like you say, it's all about systems. If dts helped you improve that much, that's awesome. But recognize that you could have improved on previous systems and seen nearly the same sort of gains. I imagine, head to head with the same jobs, Alan and you would practically be neck and neck. Now give Alan 50k to spend on what he wanted (second press probably) and he would be crushing it. This is how Tony crushes it, no one can doubt his procedures.So you can buy a second auto, hire staff to run it, and deal with increased screen production/seps/scheduling/etc for 50k? I mean even 2 new employees paid piss poor would cost you most of if not all of that 50k budget PER YEAR just to run this new press. I guess he could find a 5k beat up all air Jav. Can Alan's screen room produce enough additional screens to keep those guys busy on this second auto, would he have the sales to fill a second Auto and keep those guys busy as well as his current staff, or would he do the same work 2x as fast now and send everyone home at noon? How many employees are at Tony's shop. I assume Tony has more employees than 2 full time guys and a part time guy. So apples to oranges in Tony and Alan's shop I would guess. I know he's your hero and I am not doubting for a second his processes he's done great and his shop is a inspiration for all us small guys. But I think the pipe dream of just throw a second auto in there and it solves all is way out there. It requires a bit more than just a auto investment and likely requires added labor costs, which the labor costs alone would cost more in 1 year than a DTS costs total which and be spread out if desired. You haven't been paying attention.You don't try to run both presses at the same time. You stage everything. Unless I missed something, this is part of what Tony does. Your print guys float from press to press knocking down jobs while someone else goes behind them tearing down and setting up jobs. You don't need all that additional staff then. If it's a short job and the next one isn't setup yet then they can take a bathroom break or pitch in and get the job setup even faster.No matter what you are turning out way more pcs per shift than you were with just adding in a DTS that can MAYBE save you some time, but not really if it's a repeat order (again, like Tony's model and to some degree Alan's).
I just find the time you've spent on worrying about 50k purchase AMAZING ...
I thought we were talking about sam's shop? He's got a guy just cranking out screens on the dts right? Has to be some ass time for someone some where. When is your shop making money, when the machines are running or when the jobs are being setup?
I can buy the exposure time going down because you're not exposing through glass and film, but as mentioned, for most small-medium sized shops that's not a bottleneck unless they are using crappy light sources, and it's hands-off time. I posted about how a $500 Nuarc flip-top can be modified to have exposure time to rival, or beat the new LED units, nobody seemed to care. My 3K Nuarc Fliptop smokes my 8K Olec and wall frame, but it doesn't matter to us as the worker can be doing countless other things in the 60-120 seconds an exposure takes. I still might by a used 6K fliptop that will accommodate a 23 - 31" screen as I see them go for under $1000 often, and sell the Olec 8K and wall frame for a profit. I'm still not sure how a press set-up is faster than a when using good FPU system, care to eloborate? Did you have a good FPU system before the DTS?I guess I just find it too easy to circumvent an expensive piece of equipment with some cheaper things and good systems.I for one will make a point of stopping in if I get down that way, beers and lunch are on me.Just times the Nuarc Flip-top, 45 seconds exposure including pulling vacuum on a 156 non-S mesh with Autotype 8000 with Diazo. Murukami Autosol HV with a half-load of Diazo would cut 15-20 seconds off of that.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on December 18, 2013, 12:41:46 PM I just find the time you've spent on worrying about 50k purchase AMAZING ...And I'm sure this reminds a lot of us of a time when you refused to pick up a phone to call Gary Fox about some discharge samples... Which btw, would have likely saved you all that headache that took you months (not constantly, I know) to work out.
You hate the phone and guys like Alan and I love this industry and love to crunch numbers.
Inkhaving a dts takes out the human factor for lining up film also film has a thickness which can mess with lining up. also has anyone figured out the cost of space to file all the film say over the course of 30 yrs? or how about the time to file and retrieve each film and the cost to reprint film if needed. I know a guy down in Rhode Island that has an entire floor of just film. what does that cost to have ( taxes, heating, rent, ect?) also now that it is so big how much time does it take to retrieve and refile? those are some big aisles.just a thought.sam
I am of the belief that I don't want a second auto until we have to have it and was thinking DTS would be done before the second auto. I think I can make both scenarios work well, but DTS seems like the more simple route along with keeping payroll the same. The second auto would have a better ROI if the jobs were there to support it but with adding DTS instead, you can better manage any normal increase or even decrease in production.
Quote from: Gilligan on December 18, 2013, 05:04:35 PMI thought we were talking about sam's shop? He's got a guy just cranking out screens on the dts right? Has to be some ass time for someone some where. When is your shop making money, when the machines are running or when the jobs are being setup?I know what you really want to do is just insult Sam, there is plenty of time for that. You made a reference to Alan's shop and a second 50k auto and how that makes sense. Much like several calling BS on Sam (which I somewhat agree with at least at some level), I reply to you and call BS that 50k is all it would take due to needing a least SOME more labor. Now your back to talking about Sam's shop? I don't fully believe much of anything Sam say's mostly because he's really excited and likely embellishing some. But that doesn't change that fact that he's made DTS work for him.... I think its fair to present the question that could some of you be underestimating the value of DTS and your just ignoring it over basic ROI math? I mean you have to admit, that if Sam can make it work who's apparently half the size of Alan or Inkman that maybe it should be worth considering that maybe ROI isn't telling the full story.
I think it all comes down to how good your FPU, film filing and other systems are. If you have a good FPU and other systems, you probably won't see much improvement from getting a DTS. I certainly haven't seen a solid explanation of where all the ROI money is going to come from posted anywhere yet.Printing film is "hands-off" time, and on repeat jobs you only print film once. Pulling film from a good filing system has to be faster than printing DTS everytime. Taping up screens on a good system like Alan's is faster than any DTS screens I've seen.A good FPU system has plenty good enough registration.A good FPU has only 2 tiny marks that need to be taped up or blocked outA clean shop doesn't have significant pinhole issues.All of the things that can make a DTS an expensive and low-profit venture for most of us small to medium shops are systems, or can be had for a tiny fraction of what a DTS costs.If you are having significant set-up times, you don't have a good FPU system or aren't using it correctly.If you are having pinhole problems, you don't have a clean shop or have employees following the systemsIf it takes you a long time to find old films or if they are in poor condition you have a bad film filing system or have employees not following good systems.A few will tell (belittle) us over and over how great a DTS is, and how good the ROI is for a medium sized shop, but never offer any actual facts. There are plenty of reasonable people here who would love to hear the reasoning and would accept supported facts, there just haven't been many presented.Some are happy with their DTS. Great, and you certainly don't have to explain yourselves here, but if you do, be prepared to back it up is all I guess. My 60" automatic squeegee sharpener is an undefendable purchase I recently made, I didn't even really have room for it yet, but yet there it sits. ROI, never probably. Happiness factor is through the roof though. I justify it to myself because I've had several other equipment purchases which complete ROI was achieved in the first production run on them.
No, Sam's shop is the point of topic BECAUSE it is Sam that is giving the 11 month ROI, it is because Sam is running an entry level press that states 550/pcs hour. These are some of the reasons a 2nd auto or at least a replacement auto might have been better money spent. Tony doesn't run all of his auto's constantly, but he has his printers printing constantly.
You admit (or maybe it was Shelly) that you are severely lacking in this department and there is a lot of time wasted here (that's not a stab, so please don't feel the need to defend yourself, I'm sure our prepress is in worse shape). But in your case, ABSOLUTELY would you see an ROI more like Sam's. But most shops that size have or should have tackled the prepress department and got it fine tuned as much as possible. For some guys (like us), we can afford to waste a bit of time in this department because we aren't up to our eyeballs in work. But for us, now is the time to start addressing those things. I'd rather tune up a current system to get every bit I can reasonably get out of it before I drop 50k on a problem that is a training/systems issue. A consultant would come in for a fraction of that and vastly fix more than just that.
Quote from: Socalfmf on December 18, 2013, 02:46:11 PMInkhaving a dts takes out the human factor for lining up film also film has a thickness which can mess with lining up. also has anyone figured out the cost of space to file all the film say over the course of 30 yrs? or how about the time to file and retrieve each film and the cost to reprint film if needed. I know a guy down in Rhode Island that has an entire floor of just film. what does that cost to have ( taxes, heating, rent, ect?) also now that it is so big how much time does it take to retrieve and refile? those are some big aisles.just a thought.samWell, we have 20 years worth of film that maybe takes up 40 square feet, out of 8000. Once a year we go through a list of the previous years jobs to throw away birthday parties, bar-mitzvahs and any other one timers. We still keep the digital files, but that takes no room. And I'm pretty sure film storage costs are figured in as overhead anyway in a large place storing as much as a whole floor (sq. ft?). Before we opened our shop back in '90 (part time at night), I worked for someone else from '75 to "93. I had all films (all pre-digital) and paper art stored in about the same amount of space in some custom made cabinets to hold very large file folders.Steve
You quoted someone else but referred to us.