"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Quote from: Inkworks on December 18, 2013, 01:41:16 PMI 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.Damn you summed it all up perfectly! And you nailed one important fact on the head. Some people will buy certain equipment that have no ROI in any reasonable amount of time but they do so for quality of working conditions. Brandt for example would buy a CTS not because he cannot keep up on screens but because the quality and ease of use you can get out of it. I would never begrudge anyone for doing something like that its awesome actually.
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.
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.
To be honest, I'm only lurking and skimming this thread but am I the only person wondering why everyone seems so concerned about how other people are running their business? It seems to me that every shop is different and what's more worth the investment, equipment wise, will vary greatly from shop to shop. Some people may have systems down in their screen department that a CTS wouldn't be more beneficial than a second or faster press. For some shops, maybe additional staff would be more valuable than equipment. Am I missing something here? Didn't this all start out just being about screen tape being pricey?Scott
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
This is what I said:How can DTS have such a poor ROI but Sam can easily afford it who apparently is "half" your shops size? It's a fair question.... how can he afford it if the ROI is that bad? Some of you act as if it would put you out of business its such a poor move.
If Brandt wants to buy things for his shop to make people happier then I won't interfere or try to talk him out of it but I can post my opinion on the matter. If people are already happy at their jobs, why would you spend thousands of dollars to make them even happier when there is no financial gain to be had? I will always decide where to spend money based on what I think is important. A few of those include: 1. Need 2. ROI 3. Efficiency 4. Morale We need an automatic, we use newman rollers and quality mesh for amazing ROI, our exposure unit is efficient and all those things I mentioned help with morale...unless you're my printer There are obviously more factors involved in spending money on equipment and tools but doing it just as a "quality of job" isn't enough for me.I don't know how many times I've said it, I'd love to have a new DTS machine sitting in the art department. But it still doesn't change the fact that we will not buy ANYTHING if it doesn't make "cents" or sense. If we all bought things because 1. we want it, 2. we can afford it, then how ridiculous would our lives be? If you want to spend 50K so Billy Bob's job is easier on his fingernails then that's your decision and I don't have to like it, I don't have to agree with it, but I'll defend my reasoning for saying it's not a good move for our shop to do the same.
I'd love to AC the production area so my guys aren't sweating all day and when I'm out there I don't have swamp ass but how many of you would spend an additional $15K up front then likely $10-12K per year on additional energy costs? The increase in production would be hard to quantify unless you did the same types of jobs before and after install but I doubt the AC would have much of an ROI at all. It's a quality of job decision that I doubt many of you would choose to do.
I would never, ever, under any circumstance spend $50K on something that ONLY makes an already easy job (compared to many labor intensive jobs) even easier. If that piece of equipment makes our jobs easier while giving us a great return, even better.
Who's acting like it will put them out of business? And your reasoning is completely different than the other sides' in that it sounds like you run your business like some people live their lives "if it feels good, do it". If you can afford it and it has some benefit, big, small, whatever, then you should buy it?
SRI will not buy a DTS because Sam says he's getting a 1 year ROI and it boils down to this: I DON'T BELIEVE IT.
<Snip> Maybe we pick up a few extra jobs per week and make an extra $250/week and $1K per month (again, padding the numbers in favor of DTS). Now we have $50K invested so out of all those numbers, how long is our ROI? Well, padding the stats in favor or DTS and at 25 screens per day we come up with $200/mo (prolly closer to $150 with all the repeat work we do), 2 additional hours of labor at the end of the week to do "something" let's say a couple more jobs per week at an additional $1000 profit/month (I wouldn't mind profiting that for every 8 jobs we did) and I get a rough estimate of 3.3 years ROI for the $50K DTS.Now 3.3 years is NOTHING to scoff about, that's why us getting a DTS in the near future is even on the table for discussion. 50 screens per day and we're getting there. 100 screens per day=no brainer (unless you're Tony's shop).
So is it safe to say that CTS is great for some and not feasible for others?
I will tell you one thing, unless you have a very diligent art staff, you can get you a$$ kicked. You don't have film to check to make sure everything correct. You likely won't find out until on press. Can you afford that down time? Or do you make your art department stronger? No, it sure as hell isn't all puppy dogs and rainbows. And it is a machine, it will go down. Can you fix it? (it won't call in sick though) It sure isn't for everyone. but is is right for us. I can't imagine our operation without it (them ) But is sure not a simple plug and play. It's a NEW system within your system, and it damn well better be right for you.