Yes. From my point of view the driver is what Erik is trying to do. If he's correct, RI College gets lots of publicity and increases it's brand as a potential center of innovation in Print. There is a pretty good chance that someone at RI College sees the value of increasing the perception of their brand. And without ANY money invested in "advertising/marketing." Brand goes up, enrollment goes up. Enrollment goes up, everybody is happy.
Good points. But, given the capabilities of distance learning, communicating through the Internet, my skill set and some contacts I have in RI, I think this could be solved relatively easily. If and only if there is someone at the school who buys in. If that is possible, everything else is doable. If that doesn't happen. Nothing can happen.
Michael and Mattf,
The idea is not so bad but there are problems. One is that I work full time at a food packaging company doing process engineering and am not available to travel.
I have tried doing "distance development" before and it has not worked out so well. Once with a school on the west coast. There was some interest but after about 7 months, they realized that they did not have the skills to do the work. Another time was with a printer in Australia. Again months wasted and basically due to the lack of the specific skills required to fabricate parts etc.
The only time it worked was with a press manufacturer in Europe where the design engineers there could design and fabricate a simple version of the ITB, which we tested when I went there to give a seminar. But of course, they would not make the results public.
The ITB is potentially a product but it is also a very low cost way of demonstrating the science which would be useful to a school that was interested. To demonstrate the science, the ITB can be made much simpler than required for a production version.
Not only would it demonstrate the breaking of the interrelationship of ink and water, it can also be used to test other interesting issues on press from presetting to different methods of applying dampening solution to the press that potentially is less troublesome, maybe alcohol free solutions. I had a list of experiments that the school could have done for this purpose.
The real problem, as has been mentioned, with any long distance effort is who is at the other end. My view is that it needs to be an engineer who can design details for the target press. Otherwise it is not very practical. That is why I am looking for a printer locally. It would be much easier for me to work with the printer locally and do the design work.
But if someone in RI is interested and has an engineer who is keen on helping, I would not rule it out.
The best solution would be a Toronto based small printer. Unfortunately, there is not much curiousity in the Toronto printing community so far.
Erik:
Thanks for the info, there are no engineers at my company who would be able to design the machine for the target press. We don't have any engineers for starters, thats why I think Michael thought a good solution would be to get RI college involved, as they would potentially be able to design work to test the press. However, there is no specific engineering major at the college, so our best bet would be to find a school with a engineering background that could handle this sort of work. A school comes to mind...
MIT! Right in Boston, their engineering program is renowned across the country. Not sure if its something you were looking for, but it could be an interesting idea. Have MIT design and build the machine, take it to maybe RI college so they can test it. Any issues MIT students can easily head down to do what they need.
It would be nice to have MIT test it, but there isn't any specific print or media programs there. Just a suggestion if you feel this will work.