Being that it is a brown and their history.. had this been a blue creation the drones would think it was the best thing to ever happen, let that thought sit in.
I doubt it, the whole thing seems like a gimmick to me, we run more strange, different things down our dryer than anybody I know and I can't see a use for this unit. We now have two dryers for different things, but they don't need to constantly change as we alternate objects down the tunnel, it really makes no sense at all to me no matter who built it. Maybe if you're an extremely busy mall shop who does thousands of different items 1-off all day, but even then I don't know one of those that would be busy enough to need this.
-How is scanning a bar code faster than adjusting two knobs?
-Do you have to wait for one item clears the tunnel before putting a different item down it at a different setting?
-Has anyone addressed how this thing would be suitable for production with at best 1 belt infeed in the ideal distance from an unload station and the other two further away?
-2-3 different units would give you more flexibility due to having better positioning options of separate units.
- What sort of shop would this be suited for?
In the last little while we've heat-cured: Wine glasses, Decanters, cowbells, golfballs, umbrellas, cotton shirts, poly shirts, waterproofed cordura nylon with vinyl ink, flashlights, bike bells, transfers, metal signage with epoxy ink, alupanel signage with epoxy inks and wooden winebox lids with gp ink, and having 3 units in one would make for a crazy shop layout where everything ended up in the same space for dryer offload, I don't know how that makes any sense, 3 separate units would be so much better.
Am I missing the point of this thing? who would use it? Is it suited for mass production, or just sampling? I see where having a quartz dryer that only cures when items are in it may provide some energy savings over an oven that stays at temp all the time, but does it get into gas-dryer efficiency levels?, and the inclusion of optical heat sensors to mitigate scorch and poly-dye migration problems makes sense, but we manage that even with our 30 year old HIX with no air and no digital read-outs of temp or speed, just analogue dials with sharpie marks where they need to be set. 8 years on that dinosaur without issue, best $200 I ever spent.
had M&R built this I'd be wondering what the heck they were thinking too. Yes it includes a few neat sensors, but I think it reeks of gimmick with no real-world application, or at least none that haven't been addressed by something simpler and less cumbersome. Heck, couldn't you just have 5 programmable pre-set buttons on a dryer control panel? How does a bar code scanner make more sense than pushing a single button?
Having quartz flash-cures that auto adjust makes complete sense to me as we adjust those all the time, but for the life of me, I can't figure out why you'd want a dryer that does the same as once it's up to temp/speed, why touch it? Runs of 12 pieces where every one needs a different cure profile?
If I'm completely out to lunch, somebody let me know...