Any idea what the approximate pricing is like for the powersquare 160?Watkiss is the best, coolest square back folder. But you have to have deep pockets. It is also quite slow. But like those of us who are slow it does the job the best. Just watching the video is awesome. Is has one staplehead that moves across the spine for as many stitches as you want. And it has this super brass clamp for the squarefold.
Thanks!To give a ballpark, there's a refurbed one with half a million on the clock here for 27k euros
any particular reason why you need 4 staples as opposed to 2?I think we’re happy to do offiline. 16 sheets of 80gsm and one cover of 250gsm a3 down to a4 is the plan
perhaps an alternative form of binding to saddle stitching may be more suitable?They’re books for young people, and sometimes the two staples are just not strong enough….
Really difficult to please everyone. We used to perfect bind them, but then they didn’t lie flat so that was no good either…perhaps an alternative form of binding to saddle stitching may be more suitable?
yeah that would be nice, but puts the price over what schools are willing to pay for the type of books we're doing.We use continuous coil binding for lots of educational and process documents which need to survive rough handling, need to both lay flat and fold back on themselves.
You could also get a GBC inline punch on a machine if you're doing a lot of bound documents that way.. the latest ones on some machines will do 2 punches per page meaning you can still impose onto a sheet and punch at the same timeIs this the 64pp booklets you were talking about bringing inhouse with a Versant and Plock?
If you take the 4-head stitching with squareback solution you are considering, what is the full cost of doing that?
If the staples are on OEM cartridges (as opposed to cheap strips of Rapid), how much per book is the stitching consumables cost?
How many books are you making in a month?
If you put a 10mm coil with a 275GSM C1S backboard and a clear pvc front on, that will cost you circa 11p per unit
Refurbished Magnapunch 1 with 4:1 dieset £1,000
Finish+Crimp @Coil £500
Year one depreciation charge on those = £375
Finishing may take slightly longer, although a good operator on a Magna gets very quick with little if any wastage.
In respect of the price your schools are paying for the finished book, they are going to have to pay more going forward with yet another paper price increase imminent. You must be able to work 11p into the mix...
Konica Minolta sells an in-line booklet maker called the SD-513 that does exactly this. We have it on our C6085 and it's quite useful for 2-up 8.5x5.5 booklets. It also creases the fold, applies a squareback, and trims all 3 sides for a full bleed booklet.Hi does anyone know of a booklet maker that will fix 4 staples, Sadlestich?
Also does a squareback folder make your booklets stronger? Seeing as the staples are then not on the crease?
Cheers
A 30-day Fix for Managed Chaos
As any print professional knows, printing can be managed chaos. Software that solves multiple problems and provides measurable and monetizable value has a direct impact on the bottom-line. “We reduced order entry costs by about 40%.” Significant savings in a shop that turns about 500 jobs a month. Learn how……. |