Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Slower season?
We have our customer to thank.
The economic news is always negative. Current reports from wall street and large corporations show slow recovery. These statements are forever talked about and economist never see the brighter picture.
We on the other hand, are busy. This show season has allowed us to show more people that fully electric automatic printers are the best way to move their businesses into the future. These conversations have produced orders that will fill us into the new year. We think of it as a gift.
Thank you to all our customers. We look forward to the 2011 show season to expand our customer base and thank our current customers in person.
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
Screen versus Digital. Where are the profits?
The question of screen print versus direct-to-garment equipment is buzzing through the industry. There is an allure the digital side of life. Cleanliness, space constrictions, coolness of the art are all big selling points for that investment. That being said, is there money to be made with these systems? Probably. However, is it the same market? Probably not.
Thursday, August 19, 2010
Your auto is on the way! Now what?
But, you still have the jitters. Why? Because you have forgotten something. You have to be prepared to print. You have to be prepared to personally spend time with your machine and the tech uninterrupted. You have to be involved. HUH?
Be prepared, mechanically and physically.
The assembly and calibration of the machine will need a little manual labor. That means you and your staff. The technician will need a bit of help lifting heads into position and bolting them secure. It would be a good idea for you to stick around and watch and ask questions of what your tech is doing. Your machine will come out of calibration with use and you should learn to maintain the press after he leaves. Take a look at what tools he uses from his tool box. If you do not have these, make them part of your next hardware store visit. If he has a check list, make a copy for your future use.
Keep in mind that you spent a lot of money and you should spend some time as well. You will need to be prepared to turn off your phone and have your employees available or self-directed while the tech is in your building. He is only there for a short time and it will cost you more money to get him back, so stay put. I know for some of you this sound like obvious advice. Trust me, the staff involvement is essential and often skipped.
Be prepared to print.
Okay, you have stayed with your tech. You are one-with-the-press in a zen like trance. You are so excited that your palms sweat. Maybe the sweat is from the manual labor. What next? Printing!
Please remember that you can set-up, print and tear down a 100 piece job in an hour. You will need multiple jobs to get comfortable with the process and put the machine through its paces. So....
- Screens coated for the press. (many for many jobs)
- Ink
- shirts (don't laugh, we have had to go buy them from Wal-mart when a customer wasn't prepared)
- Artwork already on film or vellum.
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Setting up shop.
Let's start with the screen room.
To begin with, no matter what you have heard, you do not need a darkroom. What you do need is light, heat and humidity control. You also need power and water.
To start with, your machinery manufacturer should be able to give you dimensions for plumbing the drain to your sink. You will need some flexibility in connecting all this so have a plumber ready. Not just a guy who owns a wrench, but someone who has done real plumbing and understands that leaks are a problem. You will also need incoming water in both a garden hose and power washer form. Cold water is all you need.
For the screen prep, make sure that you have a work table and your coated screens need a flat, dry, dark place to dry and store. This could be a professional cabinet from the manufacturer or a rack that you constructed with a fan in it.
The power requirement for the screen room is pretty simple. Most items will need a standard 120V outlet. The only item that may need special wiring is your exposure unit. Confirm with the manufacturer the amp draw on the unit and whether it has a plug installed. If no plug, you will need an electrician. I will get to that person later.
The printing room.
For a manual print shop, you will need space and time. Have the tools available and a person with some mechanical skills and patience ready to assemble and level the press. This is where keeping the manual is important. Presses need to be level to themselves, not to the ground. So do not use a bubble level and follow the press leveling steps in the manual. Unless you have followed all the steps, your press will not register. No matter who you bought the press from.
For an auto shop, you will probably have a technician to help install. Have all the parts uncrated and ready for the installer. Then stay out of the way until they are ready for you. However, when they say that you are needed, be prepared. I will list the items necessary for this adventure in my next blog.
The dryer will need to have its legs attached, the exhaust fan vented and a hard wire cut-off breaker installed. This is where I get to vent about electricians. I am not talking about Uncle Buddy who fixed your lamp when your were in high school. I am not talking about a guy who has worked on his garage. I am not talking about a house electrician who has installed a few outlets. I am talking about a person who installed industrial equipment. One who has a multi-meter and understands how to use it. One who has heard of 3 phase power and understands how it works. Pay the money for the real guy. You spent this much on equipment, now get it installed correctly.
Make sure you have the power specs from the manufacturer. All these dryers need a 4 line system for single phase. All these dryers will need to be hard wired. They do not come with a plug. An industrial electrician will understand that.
Supplies are required.
I will list in my next post what you must have for the first day to get running. Many shops come with a start up kit but these are just to get started and you will need more.
We want to make sure that our customers start on the right footing. We want them to be successful. We understand that starting a new shop can be frustrating but let's make sure that the frustration is not from being ill-prepared. Have the people and items that you need ready and available and the manufacturers and their representatives will help you get through.
www.brownmfg.net
www.autotshirtprinter.com
www.t-shirt-printers.com
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Preparing for equipment installation
- If you have a dock height building, then make sure that you have a pallet jack or a forklift immediately available. It is not the drivers job to get it off his truck. It is yours.
- You can request a lift gate on the truck. That will cost more and the crates that screen printing machinery requires are usually too large to fit on a lift gate. You still need a way to get it off the lift gate and into your building.
- You can get a roll-back tow truck. We use these often for large items and big parking lots. These are flat bed tows with a winch system. They will drag the crate onto their bed, then lower the crate to the ground. They are usually $75 and do a great job. However, you need a parking lot and they will not help you get large items into your building.
- Rent or borrow a fork truck or hi-lo. These can be rented by the hour. It will solve all your problems and they are not very expensive.
- Hammer
- pry bar
- Utility knife
- drill -- complete with driver bits
- US or metric socket and open end wrench set
- allen head set
- tape measure
- level
- blood, sweat, tears
- beer and pizza -- after you are done
Thursday, June 24, 2010
Knowing your conveyor oven
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Forums?
As a member of these sites, we are able to read and respond to all the posts. Most often the items posted do not contain content that we are experts on. Many times they are in parts of the industry that we have nothing to do with. Ok, we just read as many of you do.
However, many posts are counterproductive to earning money as screen printers. These, all I can do is shake my head. As examples, making equipment instead of buying. Posters want an opinion as to whether they made something worth using. My first response is that the time they took making the equipment should have been sent selling print jobs. They could have sold enough jobs during that time to pay for a really nice press that will give them quality work.
I am sure I have mentioned that we are in this to make money, not play with power tools.
Other posters want an opinion on a product. As a manufacturer, how can I respond to that? We will not bash a competitor.
Then there are the postings that comment on our products. As the manufacturer, we cannot get into a conversation online without risking our reputation. We often know who the post was written by. They have chosen not to call us or have decided that we are not willing to service them to their demands. How can we comment on any of that.
A good reason to be a troll.
So, for those who wish more active participation by manufacturers, take a look at the reasons we are silent.
Contact us directly, please.
www.brownmfg.net
www.autotshirtprinter.com
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
Too busy for trade shows?
Please, let me explain.
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
Pre-registration devices
Why? you ask. Because, as I have mentioned in earlier blogs, we are in this to make money. Not to play with screens and art.
What should one of these systems do?
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
Equipment. New, used, reconditioned.
- Conveyor Dryers. No matter what they say, something is broken that is expensive to fix. I say this from experience. I have taken a lot of used dryers as trade-ins. They are never fully functional. It may have been running when the original owner replaced it but they are replacing it for a reason. If the machine is available at an auction remember that the company that is out of business did not have the money to maintain it. Repair costs will range for $250 to $1000 depending on what is broken.
- Manual textile printers. The biggest risk you take as a buyer of used machinery is registration. A press will have increased problems as it ages due to wear and tear. Maintenance can prevent much of this, however, some presses do not age well. If there is registration issues they can be expensive and time consuming to remedy. If the press holds register well but has some broken parts, make sure that those parts are still available.
- Flash cure units. These are used up. Do not buy. You can purchase new ones for very little money.
- Exposure systems. These may be a good deal. You will probably have to replace rubber and reseal the frame but if you are handy they are a pretty good buy. Make sure that the bulb is currently available.
- Automatic textile presses. How handy are you? How good of a printer are you? Can you figure one of these out without manufacturer's help. When you get done, will you make any money on it within 3 months without serious aggravation? If you can answer yes to all of these, then take a look. But parts are expensive and your time is valuable.
- Conveyor dryers. Heaters, motors and switches can work one day and break the next. Within a few months you may be repairing the unit because the original parts that are still in the unit are old. You will have maintenance costs within the first year. They may be minimal but you risk the $1000 of another rebuild.
- Manual textile printers. These are a good buy. The registration has been secured. The press is functional. They are just dirty. Yes, they are really dirty. Reconditioned does not mean new paint. If you are willing to clean them up or work around the "Ugly Betty" effect they they are a good buy.
- Flash cure units. If you find one that is reconditioned, then buy it. Rare, these things. These and heat press machines usually get used up and thrown out.
- Exposure units. This is another good buy. The seal has been rebuilt. The risk is in the electronics and the vacuum motor. You may have to replace these sooner than you would like.
- Automatic textile printers. Buying one of these has the same risk a buying a reconditioned dryer. You could have very high maintenance costs very quickly. Make sure you are ready to be your own repairman and that the parts for the machine are still available.
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
Where is the profit in Athletic Numbering?
Friday, May 14, 2010
When is my business ready for an auto t-shirt printer?
Defining a shop size. The small to midsize shop with manual equipment is a shop with one or several manuals, 1 or more hourly employees and an owner operator.
Production Rates. The following Graph is based on the average production rate of a top-notch employee manually printing over an 8 hour day at $10.00 pr/hr.
The following graph is based on the average production rate of a top notch employee automatically printing only, over an 8 hour day at $10.00 pr/hr.
*This graph does not include expenses such as Benefits, workman’s comp, insurance or typical day to day employee aggravation.
Comparison. A shop output is at least four times greater when using an automated machine and employing the same amount of people.
Many owners find that when they personally produce a conservative 300 shirts per hour, they can restructure their facility, use their employee time more effectively or eliminate extra employees.
ROI when comparing Manual printing to Automatic printing.
Based on a 1 year business cycle, using manual equipment only. Total production of 122,400 pieces.
Employee cost at $10/hour with 8 hour days | $20,800.00 |
Workman’s Compensation | $350.00 |
Insurance | $350.00 |
Total Employee Cost (approximate) | $21,500.00 |
Based on a 1 year business cycle, using automated machinery and a restructured workforce. Owner production of 288,000 pieces in 4 hours per day.
Machine cost of $30,000 on a 60 month lease | $7,800.00 |
Total Cost (approximate) | $7,800.00 |
Not only is your shop 4+ times more productive, you have also increased your profit by $13,700 without a change in sales.
Y1-5 ROI= $13,700 $7,800 (Machine Payments) - $21,500 (Eliminated overhead employee expense)
Total $68,500
Y6-10 ROI= $21,500 no lease payments and expected life of the machine
Total $107,500
10 Year total ROI $176,000
Job Size. The common misconception about automatic printing is the size of order that is required to make an automatic useful.
Manual printing in a standard week with 1 press
JOB Shirt count and color Colors Sides TIME #1 150 light 2 1 2.5 hrs #2 50 light 3 2 1.5 hrs #3 95 dark 1 2 2.5 hrs #4 250 dark 2 2 6.5 hrs #5 400 dark 3 1 4.5 hrs #6 25 dark 1 2 50 mins #7 35 light 1 2 50 mins #8 75 light 2 2 2.5 hrs #9 100 dark 3 1 2 hrs #10 250 light 3 1 3.5 hrs #11 25 light 2 1 30 mins #12 45 light 1 1 30 mins #13 18 dark 2 2 50 mins #14 180 dark 2 2 5.5 hrs #15 65 dark 1 2 2.5 hrs #16 40 light 2 1 30 mins
Total time for the above job chart = 35 hours of continuous printing
Automatic printing in a standard week.
JOB | Shirt count and color | Colors | Sides | TIME |
#1 | 150 light | 2 | 1 | 20 mins |
#2 | 50 light | 3 | 2 | 20 mins |
#3 | 95 dark | 1 | 2 | 30 mins |
#4 | 250 dark | 2 | 2 | 50 mins |
#5 | 400 dark | 3 | 1 | 45 mins |
#6 | 25 dark | 1 | 2 | 20 mins |
#7 | 35 light | 1 | 2 | 20 mins |
#8 | 75 light | 2 | 2 | 30 mins |
#9 | 100 dark | 3 | 1 | 20 mins |
#10 | 250 light | 3 | 1 | 40 mins |
#11 | 25 light | 2 | 1 | 20 mins |
#12 | 45 light | 1 | 1 | 20 mins |
#13 | 18 dark | 2 | 2 | 30 mins |
#14 | 180 dark | 2 | 2 | 50 mins |
#15 | 65 dark | 1 | 2 | 30 mins |
#16 | 40 light | 2 | 1 | 30 mins |
Total time for the above job chart automatic approximately= 8.5 hrs of continuous print time.
Thank you for the time to review the difference between automatic printing and manual printing. We hope that this gives a clear picture why most shops need to consider adding an automatic to their current production.
We hope that Brown Manufacturing Group, Inc. is your source for all your printing equipment needs. Contact us, or check our web site, for additional information.
*All dollars quoted are based on industry standards and are subject to change.
www.brownmfg.net
www.autotshirtprinter.com