greysquirrel
New Member
The only way this was a perfect fit is if CP only sold roll to roll machines. Did they carry another flatbed option at the time? If not then they where not lying to you. Printing direct should always be faster than two and three step and the printer can give you a white option if needed. Maybe they where including mounting, laminating and trimming into the equation? Every printer has a spec sheet. On that spec sheet are the speeds that the unit can perform. Have you ever fact checked your printer to the sheet? Again, a better way to go rather than calling it a lemon.
Was the printer in a clean room? isolated? or in a warehouse where you guys are cutting and fabricating the corn hole boards?
You mentioned that they replaced a head that failed from dust. If so, technically they did not have to even do that for you. Environment and head crash are not covered with any printer warranties. So I am just not sure after two months of use, the printer may have not run at speeds you had hoped for and a head was replaced from what the manufacturer deemed as your environment being a contributing factor that you have a lemon.
Do you have anything in writing that promises speed? If so, that is the angle you take.
I don't think any of us on here think that you don't have a right to be upset. I think we've all made some purchases that have not worked out. Want a pre-treater? I have previously worked for a reseller as a service manager for 12 years, so I understand the process involved with problematic machines and unhappy customers. I can tell you that if the product had an issue that could not be repaired or had a defect, the manufacturer would do anything they needed to do to make it right. None of them want bad public exposure. I worked directly with HP, Epson and Roland, Seiko, Summa, Graphtec, Seal, GFP, Onyx and Caldera. Every single one of them have always stood by their product and would do whatever was necessary to get a printer back in spec, performing normally. I have personally had to request 4 printers in 12 years to be returned and swapped by the manufacturer because of an issue that could not be repaired. Before the returns happened, either a field engineer or the manufacturer's head tech would come onsite with me to our customer's location to try to isolate and resolve the issues.
If the product is not right, and they cannot make it right, they will always offer to swap. If its not reaching your expectations, that is a whole other thing. Mark or anyone at Roland has no business trying to help you sell your printer. If CP is your reseller and they value your consumable business, they will do anything in their power to help retain you as a customer and get you to a happier place because they want your next major purchase. If CP is not your main supplier, then the chances of them helping is non existent. This is why relationships in the industry are important. It should never be about price. No reseller can always have the cheapest price. Sometimes its ok to pay more for a product knowing that someone is there to help when you have an issue with media, application or just sourcing.
I'm now back on the other side in business for myself. Before I purchased my flatbed, I attended the major shows earlier in the year. I had spent over two hours in the booth going through the whole printer with the engineer running the device finding out the good the bad and where the growth of the product was going to be and when. I knew that the product was still evolving and would continue to evolve. I went to a demo at a local reseller(not my previous company/they were not selling the product) The product did everything I was hoping for. Once other resellers where aware I was looking to make a major purchase, I was surrounded by better pricing. I ended up purchasing from the company that spent a morning with me demoing the unit. Not because of their price(they were not the cheapest) but because I had already started to build that relationship. We had a couple of issues at the beginning that the manufacturer was working through. Ultimately, they helped resolve the issues and had my back the entire way and I have been a loyal customer ever since. No single vendor can get 100% of anyone's business....but I can guarantee you that they get 70-75% of mine.
Was the printer in a clean room? isolated? or in a warehouse where you guys are cutting and fabricating the corn hole boards?
You mentioned that they replaced a head that failed from dust. If so, technically they did not have to even do that for you. Environment and head crash are not covered with any printer warranties. So I am just not sure after two months of use, the printer may have not run at speeds you had hoped for and a head was replaced from what the manufacturer deemed as your environment being a contributing factor that you have a lemon.
Do you have anything in writing that promises speed? If so, that is the angle you take.
I don't think any of us on here think that you don't have a right to be upset. I think we've all made some purchases that have not worked out. Want a pre-treater? I have previously worked for a reseller as a service manager for 12 years, so I understand the process involved with problematic machines and unhappy customers. I can tell you that if the product had an issue that could not be repaired or had a defect, the manufacturer would do anything they needed to do to make it right. None of them want bad public exposure. I worked directly with HP, Epson and Roland, Seiko, Summa, Graphtec, Seal, GFP, Onyx and Caldera. Every single one of them have always stood by their product and would do whatever was necessary to get a printer back in spec, performing normally. I have personally had to request 4 printers in 12 years to be returned and swapped by the manufacturer because of an issue that could not be repaired. Before the returns happened, either a field engineer or the manufacturer's head tech would come onsite with me to our customer's location to try to isolate and resolve the issues.
If the product is not right, and they cannot make it right, they will always offer to swap. If its not reaching your expectations, that is a whole other thing. Mark or anyone at Roland has no business trying to help you sell your printer. If CP is your reseller and they value your consumable business, they will do anything in their power to help retain you as a customer and get you to a happier place because they want your next major purchase. If CP is not your main supplier, then the chances of them helping is non existent. This is why relationships in the industry are important. It should never be about price. No reseller can always have the cheapest price. Sometimes its ok to pay more for a product knowing that someone is there to help when you have an issue with media, application or just sourcing.
I'm now back on the other side in business for myself. Before I purchased my flatbed, I attended the major shows earlier in the year. I had spent over two hours in the booth going through the whole printer with the engineer running the device finding out the good the bad and where the growth of the product was going to be and when. I knew that the product was still evolving and would continue to evolve. I went to a demo at a local reseller(not my previous company/they were not selling the product) The product did everything I was hoping for. Once other resellers where aware I was looking to make a major purchase, I was surrounded by better pricing. I ended up purchasing from the company that spent a morning with me demoing the unit. Not because of their price(they were not the cheapest) but because I had already started to build that relationship. We had a couple of issues at the beginning that the manufacturer was working through. Ultimately, they helped resolve the issues and had my back the entire way and I have been a loyal customer ever since. No single vendor can get 100% of anyone's business....but I can guarantee you that they get 70-75% of mine.