Especially if you have enough people to run shifts. But mo people = mo money.If we get eight running molds at the same time then the wait times should go down…
Clay chips with mold injections and flashing?? Are they trying to imitate my beautiful plastic slugs?!I haven't yet ordered a CPC set, is this mid process? The edges look messier than I expected with that line in the middle, maybe that just goes away with play? Thanks for any clarification. Mold itself looks great.
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I suppose this could also just be something in progress, some of the cups might have been a) not added to the press yet or b) already been removed from it.Look at some of the molds. The FDL pictured has four missing cups. That hurts efficiency a lot.
If we get eight running molds at the same time then the wait times should go down…
I would not say it was favored, as much as it was the least worn down mold they have.Why is the A mold so favored? CSQ seems to be their most popular / quinessential mold.
Why is the A mold so favored? CSQ seems to be their most popular / quinessential mold.
I would not say it was favored, as much as it was the least worn down mold they have.
I'm convinced that A mold perpetually being installed was a sales tactic more than anything. Freeing up the second press will allow for shorter turn around times for the other molds if two machines are rotating molds in and out instead of only one.
The price per chip is directly correlated with how worn down the mold is and how many "rejects" each run of a chip makes.CSQ is extremely worn out.
There is a picture in the very first post.When I visited Classic in Las Vegas, they had two machines. They had lots of molds, including old house molds and molds with designs I had never seen before.
I only saw two machines, and I saw the whole factory floor. I understood that they kept the A mold in one machine and rotated molds on the second machine. (Explains the long wait.)
I have seen posts here on PCF claiming they have "three," and "four" machines. This is the first time I have seen someone post that they have eight.
I'm actually wishing they do, but I only saw two.
The price per chip is directly correlated with how worn down the mold is and how many "rejects" each run of a chip makes.
I forget the numbers, but David said that there was an exorbitant number of rejects with more well worn molds like DSQ, Large Crown, et al as opposed to A mold, for example. Something like 20 or 30 "rejects" for every 100 chips made on the high end, with 2 or 3 per 100 on the low end.
More material needed to fulfill the order=higher price.
Some will tell you it costs a million dollars !That's unfortunate. DSQ, Crown and CSQ are the best ones.
Since they haven't changed them, I assume that's because it costs way too much? (even though they would have less rejects, so less time and waste to produce sets with that mold).
Thar be 8 presses in them there photoI honestly have no clue what Im looking at in that picture. Lol
That's the reason we were given, at least.That's unfortunate. DSQ, Crown and CSQ are the best ones.
Since they haven't changed them, I assume that's because it costs way too much? (even though they would have less rejects, so less time and waste to produce sets with that mold).
I believe I've seen at least a few threads from the old ASM days that suggest the craft / knowledge of creating these has also been lost. Some of the old molds still in use are like 100 years old or more now.That's the reason we were given, at least.
There is a picture in the very first post.
Thar be 8 presses in them there photo
These edges are processed on centerless grinding machines by all companies.I haven't yet ordered a CPC set, is this mid process? The edges look messier than I expected with that line in the middle, maybe that just goes away with play? Thanks for any clarification. Mold itself looks great.
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How a business is paid for makes all the difference in the timeline.Long game investment but it’s got to start making sense year 3-5 if you are cranking out quality chips reliably, no?
*** I have no idea what I’m talking about btw***
the craft / knowledge of creating these has also been lost
Each plate has 20 or 25 cups in it.I saw David say it would take like $60k to redo a mold.