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  #1  
Old 03-07-2007, 12:57 PM
discountprintingservice discountprintingservice is offline
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Default Booklet Maker Wanted

I am looking for an inexpensive small booklet maker. I don't know much about them so if anyone has input as far as good ones/bad ones I would really appreciate it.
Thanks,
John Martin
678-859-7075
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Old 03-07-2007, 08:35 PM
Jeff Jeff is offline
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Standalone or to mate with a collator? If standalone, our Sprint 3000 has been rock solid and is built like a tank and you can get them for ~$2000 (ours isn't for sale yet until we move up to either a plockmatic to mate with our 310/maxxum 10 or an old horizontal bourg AE system though) The weakness of the sprint units is the sprint interface unit/jogger to mate it with a collator -- not enough jog power to be reliable.
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Old 03-08-2007, 12:19 AM
discountprintingservice discountprintingservice is offline
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I am really not sure what I want or need. I just want to be able to do short run book jobs (up to 1000) in house with out the hand work. I have trade binders that can do them for me, but for smaller jobs I do them by hand quicker that I can drive to the TB and back. I just want something more automated. Even just a good collator and stitcher would be good. Normall I would fold the job, nest the pages, staple, and then trim. The last one I did I use the same principle as a bookletmaker. I collated the pages first, stapled them, then folded the whole book, then trimmed. Was a little faster, but I should have scored the cover first. Anyway, I really don't know what I need, but I would like to know which are good machines and which to stay away from. Any input would be great. Also I have a very small buget for this purchase and also a small footprint is important as I am running out of room in my shop. If I could find a good small collator (prefer 10-12 bins), a good stitcher, and a machine to fold the whole book and trim it out I think I would be happy. Of course one complete tied together system would be nice but I don't think it would fit in my budget.

Friction feed or vacuum feed colators?
Vertical or horizontal?
Good brands & models?
Keep away brands & models?
Types of booklet makers?
How they work?
Good brands & models?


John
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Old 03-08-2007, 12:42 AM
Jeff Jeff is offline
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I'm curious to hear others' input as well. I've been thinking of upgrading for a year now, but our volume is only around 1,400 booklets per month, maybe 2,000 the busiest month, and that's not been enough to really pay for an upgrade.

Right now using our MBM collator and Sprint bookletmaker standalone because of the unreliable jogging sprint interface and unacceptalbe losses using it (more loss in print costs mangled than I make in 3 hours time!), I can hand feed the 1,400 booklets in under 3 hours including the time to reload the collator. So it takes a lot of 3-hour-shifts to add up to $5000 for an upgrade... it appears I've become the collator-bookletmaker interface!

You won't find air feed collators for a limited budget - no one seems to give up the air feed towers so the price remains quite high. The need is really mainly for difficult/coated stocks... we run digital output on uncoated bond and with friction feed, 10 bins per booklet, we get about 8 to 10 mis-pulls per 1000 booklets which is acceptable. (a lot of static in play too; I do like the fact that the plockmatic/mbm collators have 4 pickup tires per bin instead of the old-model duplos which have only one pickup wheel per bin)

If you need more than 10 or 12 bins (which I wouldn't mind having for those few larger jobs), the old horizontal bourgs are really tempting because it seems the second towers for tower collators almost never go up for sale and the pairs of tower collators command a really high price used due to limited supply. Also the trimmers for a plockmatic tower setup go for around $2000/$2500 just for the trimmer. The horizontal bourgs go pretty cheap right now as a collator+stitcher+folder+trimmer, but for a 24 or 30 bin horizontal bourg, that's a lot of feet of collator taking up the floorspace here as well as we have a small space. But there are so many on the market that it's tempting... I've never run one though so maybe there is a reason that these old analog horizontal tanks are so plentiful on the market. Then again, there must be a good reason that so many were sold in the first place and bourg certaily has the reputation... I suspect the huge space they take up is a reason many are up for sale.

Look forward to hearing from other people who have more experience. Our way right now isn't elegant but it works, and 3 hours isn't bad labor, but still at some point it would be nice to automate too.
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