"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
just as an FYI, I have seen the video or the actual printer deliver in advertised time for both. The hold up is in prepping the art file, loading the shirts, making sure the shirts are ready, pretreat done and so on. With a good system like Smake and possibly Brown's Linx those are optimized and significantly faster and easier.pierre
I dont see any attachment picture on app and web based nothing. which model?
Nice write up Pierre.We are on our 3rd DTG. It's a good addition, but it's also becoming a flooded market at this point. Also, the lack of poly printing, and really hard times printing on blends is a huge setback for these printers.I loved our GT541. It was a great machine even though it was only CMYK. The GT381 I personally don't think is that great of a machine. I have had more problems with it overall than we did with the 541. I haven't looked at the GTX at all.When it's all done, we may not replace it. Being in the south we do a TON of poly. I mean, a strong 80% of what's on press is moisture wicking of some sort. A white ink machine just isn't a good fit for us at this point. We'll probably check out a good little CMYK printer if that's still the case.
Quote from: blue moon on July 02, 2020, 12:39:29 PMjust as an FYI, I have seen the video or the actual printer deliver in advertised time for both. The hold up is in prepping the art file, loading the shirts, making sure the shirts are ready, pretreat done and so on. With a good system like Smake and possibly Brown's Linx those are optimized and significantly faster and easier.pierreShare the video please!
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on July 02, 2020, 12:50:30 PMQuote from: blue moon on July 02, 2020, 12:39:29 PMjust as an FYI, I have seen the video or the actual printer deliver in advertised time for both. The hold up is in prepping the art file, loading the shirts, making sure the shirts are ready, pretreat done and so on. With a good system like Smake and possibly Brown's Linx those are optimized and significantly faster and easier.pierreShare the video please!sorry, could not find it any more. The video showed only one shirt printing and the time it takes to do it.Obviously, there will be delays running it full on so I reduced the numbers per hour in the calculations. Brother is set for 35 per hour and EPSON at 65.
Quote from: blue moon on July 03, 2020, 06:59:58 AMQuote from: GraphicDisorder on July 02, 2020, 12:50:30 PMQuote from: blue moon on July 02, 2020, 12:39:29 PMjust as an FYI, I have seen the video or the actual printer deliver in advertised time for both. The hold up is in prepping the art file, loading the shirts, making sure the shirts are ready, pretreat done and so on. With a good system like Smake and possibly Brown's Linx those are optimized and significantly faster and easier.pierreShare the video please!sorry, could not find it any more. The video showed only one shirt printing and the time it takes to do it.Obviously, there will be delays running it full on so I reduced the numbers per hour in the calculations. Brother is set for 35 per hour and EPSON at 65.Just watched this video. It takes a touch over 1 minute to print this shirt, not counting any load time of the shirt, not counting any time getting the file loaded or located, not counting any pre-treat time or heat press time. This looks to be a smaller print than would be normal in my shop as well. Printer moves pretty quick though. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=34vBdmk57G4
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on July 03, 2020, 07:32:15 AMQuote from: blue moon on July 03, 2020, 06:59:58 AMQuote from: GraphicDisorder on July 02, 2020, 12:50:30 PMQuote from: blue moon on July 02, 2020, 12:39:29 PMjust as an FYI, I have seen the video or the actual printer deliver in advertised time for both. The hold up is in prepping the art file, loading the shirts, making sure the shirts are ready, pretreat done and so on. With a good system like Smake and possibly Brown's Linx those are optimized and significantly faster and easier.pierreShare the video please!sorry, could not find it any more. The video showed only one shirt printing and the time it takes to do it.Obviously, there will be delays running it full on so I reduced the numbers per hour in the calculations. Brother is set for 35 per hour and EPSON at 65.Just watched this video. It takes a touch over 1 minute to print this shirt, not counting any load time of the shirt, not counting any time getting the file loaded or located, not counting any pre-treat time or heat press time. This looks to be a smaller print than would be normal in my shop as well. Printer moves pretty quick though. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=34vBdmk57G4 that looks to be about 16" tall. we have the shirt at the shop, I can have them measure it. We (Richard Greaves and our production manager) watched it print a 12x12 in about 42 seconds. That would not necessarily work for you since you print much larger, but for most of us it's OK. Software like smake or linx actually preloads the design for you so no looking for anything while printing (just scan the bar code on the shirt). Pretreatment is still a pain. There are some automated options that do it like the printers (similar to the way printer art is preloaded), some that will pretreat the whole garment and it looks like fully pretreated garments are coming this fall.We are getting there. . .pierre
ask me in few months. I think we are just getting there or close enough to give this a shot. Our experience with DTG so far has been rough, but for the most part it was technology related. It seems that the issues we had have been addressed, but only time will tell.For anybody reading this and thinking DTG is like a copier machine (push the button and a shirt comes out), MOVE ON! Digital is a process almost as complicated as screen printing and unless you are willing to 1. learn it, 2. put in the time and 3. set up in depth systems it will be a failure. To those that are willing, there will be payouts!pierre