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screen printing => Equipment => Topic started by: brandon on June 28, 2019, 10:48:01 AM
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On the M&R website getting supplies rounded up for our CTS and noticed the M-Link is gone? Only the Digital Squeegee is listed. What happened?
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On the M&R website getting supplies rounded up for our CTS and noticed the M-Link is gone? Only the Digital Squeegee is listed. What happened?
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The entry level DTG market is probably one the decided not to compete in and are only focusing on the DS. That would be my guess
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I can see that plus other things. Interesting. The times are a changing.
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Why pay $50k to print one shirt at a time when you can print 400 an hour with the digital squeegee?
Mine is getting installed the second week in July.
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Different tools for different needs. We do screenprinting and DTG. Both departments make shirts and are busy all day. We screenprint around 10 to 20 times as many shirts as the DTG, but the DTG puts out around 50x as many skus in the same period. We do on demand production for around 1000 designs (probably many more, but I don't actually have a number). Only about 50 of those are screenprinted, and only about 20 of those are always done as screenprinting due to art, stock, or volume reasons. Maybe I'm missing something, but why would I want to tie up an auto for that kind of variety and volume vs a cheaper, smaller footprint machine?
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Different tools for different needs. We do screenprinting and DTG. Both departments make shirts and are busy all day. We screenprint around 10 to 20 times as many shirts as the DTG, but the DTG puts out around 50x as many skus in the same period. We do on demand production for around 1000 designs (probably many more, but I don't actually have a number). Only about 50 of those are screenprinted, and only about 20 of those are always done as screenprinting due to art, stock, or volume reasons. Maybe I'm missing something, but why would I want to tie up an auto for that kind of variety and volume vs a cheaper, smaller footprint machine?
This is a super valid point. But i believe tools like the DS will kill the full color market between 50 and 300pcs, where for most shops, it's cheaper and easier to print two bases, and use the DS for a flawless full color image.
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I don't think you can compare the two machines.
With the digital squeegee as far I as know (maybe there is something knew that I don't know about) you have to print the white base, flash and then print the image with the digital squeegee.
This means that you have to make a base screen, register it and then print. Not practical for small runs.
I have not seen or heard of any white bases that work without a lot of problems, drying in the screen, etc. Remember you need a base that is compatible with the DTG inks.
A good DTG will print the white base and the better ones print the pre treatment as well.
It's good for small runs but all DTG machines requite a lot of maintenance, and they need to work a lot to stay trouble free.
It's not a unit that you can switch on now and again and print, you have to have a maintenance schedule and you are purging with expensive ink all the time.
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Registering one spot colour screen versus 6+ for Sim Process and adjusting them to blend properly seems practical to me.
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Everyone has good points on here but I think that is another discussion thread. I was just curious if they stopped making it and are now putting everything into the digital squeegee series. That's all. But all good points one way or another.
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Registering one spot colour screen versus 6+ for Sim Process and adjusting them to blend properly seems practical to me.
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Especially with tri-loc
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I think there is so much competition on low-mid range DTG printers that it's hard to make it work. It's too bad because I think the M-link was one of the more impressive units.
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I think there is so much competition on low-mid range DTG printers that it's hard to make it work. It's too bad because I think the M-link was one of the more impressive units.
Certainly better than their first attempt. The I-Dot seems to have somewhat been erased from history.
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I think there is so much competition on low-mid range DTG printers that it's hard to make it work. It's too bad because I think the M-link was one of the more impressive units.
Certainly better than their first attempt. The I-Dot seems to have somewhat been erased from history.
true, it also doesn't help that the first couple times I read i-dot it looked like idiot.
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I think there is so much competition on low-mid range DTG printers that it's hard to make it work. It's too bad because I think the M-link was one of the more impressive units.
Certainly better than their first attempt. The I-Dot seems to have somewhat been erased from history.
true, it also doesn't help that the first couple times I read i-dot it looked like idiot.
No, that would be how some of the adopters felt, LOL (though I think that I heard that folks were offered some assistance.)