HomerSimpson
New Member
I am looking for your recommendations for the ideal print process, and material for my application. I have developed a modular building block, with our current focus on interior work spaces, at home or an office. I machine them on a CNC router from various materials, 1/4" white melamine with an MDF core at the low end, to 3-ply solid bamboo at the high end. Each block is <23" wide. I want to add a product which is either canned, or customer uploaded images, which can be applied to the surface of the panel, either before or after machining. Durability, image quality (resolution, vibrancy, etc), and cost are the key parameters. My cost to add the image would ideally be under $2-$3/sq.ft, which includes the printing, material (if applicable) applied to the block surface, and my labor to apply that material.
I would outsource this to a local printer and if demand takes off, buy the equipment to do it in-house. If I do this, ideally the printer costs me less than $25K and the cost of printing is less than 75 cents per sq.ft.
Here are my thoughts as a result of my research into the options. Feel free to correct any of my statements or add your own thoughts on the best print process and material for my application.
1. UV FLATBED PRINTER: This seems like it is the best option if I exclude my cost requirement. From quotes I have received from printers, the cost is too high (these quotes vary from $6 to $80 per sq.ft.). If I buy a printer, and amortize it the cost into each job, I'm concerned that there would be long periods of time when the printer is not in use, and this may affect the printheads (nozzle clogging, replacement, etc).
2. UV ROLL PRINTER: Obviously I'd need to print on a flexible material and then stick it to my panel. Adhesive backed vinyl? Non-adhesive material that I place on my panel after I have applied an adhesive? My worry here is accurately cutting the material into the shape of my panel, and then accurately adhering it to the side of my panel so that the image is edge-to-edge on the finished product.
3. LATEX ROLL PRINTER: Ink cost can be high due to HP being the main/only vendor. Machine can sit for longer periods of time between jobs without negatively affecting heads and ink evaporation. Higher run cost due to power usage from heaters.
4. ECO-SOLVENT ROLL PRINTER: Some limitations on substrates. Can the machine sit for long periods of time between jobs?
5. SOLVENT ROLL PRINTER: Low resolution.
5. AQUEOUS WIDE FORMAT PRINTER (sheet or roll): I know the image isn't durable. Can I laminate it and then stick it onto my panel?
6. WIDE FORMAT XEROGRAPHIC PRINTER: This would be ideal if I could find one that could output a 24" wide, full color image, and then possibly laminate it, because I know these machines can sit for long periods of time between jobs.
I would outsource this to a local printer and if demand takes off, buy the equipment to do it in-house. If I do this, ideally the printer costs me less than $25K and the cost of printing is less than 75 cents per sq.ft.
Here are my thoughts as a result of my research into the options. Feel free to correct any of my statements or add your own thoughts on the best print process and material for my application.
1. UV FLATBED PRINTER: This seems like it is the best option if I exclude my cost requirement. From quotes I have received from printers, the cost is too high (these quotes vary from $6 to $80 per sq.ft.). If I buy a printer, and amortize it the cost into each job, I'm concerned that there would be long periods of time when the printer is not in use, and this may affect the printheads (nozzle clogging, replacement, etc).
2. UV ROLL PRINTER: Obviously I'd need to print on a flexible material and then stick it to my panel. Adhesive backed vinyl? Non-adhesive material that I place on my panel after I have applied an adhesive? My worry here is accurately cutting the material into the shape of my panel, and then accurately adhering it to the side of my panel so that the image is edge-to-edge on the finished product.
3. LATEX ROLL PRINTER: Ink cost can be high due to HP being the main/only vendor. Machine can sit for longer periods of time between jobs without negatively affecting heads and ink evaporation. Higher run cost due to power usage from heaters.
4. ECO-SOLVENT ROLL PRINTER: Some limitations on substrates. Can the machine sit for long periods of time between jobs?
5. SOLVENT ROLL PRINTER: Low resolution.
5. AQUEOUS WIDE FORMAT PRINTER (sheet or roll): I know the image isn't durable. Can I laminate it and then stick it onto my panel?
6. WIDE FORMAT XEROGRAPHIC PRINTER: This would be ideal if I could find one that could output a 24" wide, full color image, and then possibly laminate it, because I know these machines can sit for long periods of time between jobs.