For Immediate Release
RYOBI MHI 750G Packaging Edition offers an affordable, fully automated press; delivers what many commercial and packaging printers need—high-margin, special-effects printing for thick packaging board and light weight sheets CHICAGO—One veteran printer says the Ryobi 755XLG Packaging Edition is the most productive and cost-efficient press for premium short run package printing in North America. The 6 Up RYOBI MHI 750 Packaging Edition series press will be highlighted at Graph Expo 2014, where printers entering or expanding into package printing can learn how the press will dramatically expand their product offerings. Packaging runs become profitable in as few as 500 sheets with Ryobi Smart Instacolor technology and Ryobi LED UV curing system which allow print jobs to move quickly from print to finishing. Graphic Systems North America reports the fully automated, 31-inch, 16,000-sph RYOBI 750 Packaging Edition series press fits commercial printers who are entering package printing or growing that segment of their business. In addition, the press is earmarked for U.S. and Canadian packaging printers who are grappling with the shorter run demands of their customers and aren’t sure that inkjet or digital will match their quality and durability needs. A unique Blister Pack configuration is also available in the 750 Packaging Edition. The press is available in up to eight colors to provide maximum Pantone color matching and multiple spot color versatility, easily accommodating up to 31-point board and a wide variety of synthetic substrates along with specialty treatments including chemical embossing, cold foiling, opaque whites over foil, and much more. For added profitability, the 6-up 750 Packaging Edition press is available with the RYOBI UV Casting and Foiling System, which delivers a wide range of special effects printing, including Cast & Cure holographic effects and inline foiling for high security, specialty decorating and high-impact retail packaging. In-depth discussions of the 750 Packaging Edition press together with finished print samples will be available in the GSNA Commit to Print Booth at Graph Expo 2014, McCormick Place Booth #4404, Sept. 28 to Oct. 1, in Chicago. Visitors are also encouraged to attend the Ryobi Printers Panel presentation in the CPP Theatre for a lively discussion of trends in short run packaging on Monday September 29 at 11:30 AM. Key features of the RYOBI MHI 750 Packaging Edition include: • Remotely adjustable shell type skeleton transfer system provides the versatility printers need to ensure mark-free printing on thick paper and plastics as well as lighter stocks that benefit from the support of a transfer cylinder. • Ryobi Smart Instacolor technology achieves ultrafast makeready with minimal paper waste. • Two inches of additional paper size versus competing German and Japanese presses allow for greater operating flexibility, image stability, print quality and multiple up formatting. • Ryobi’s LED UV Instacure technology is ideally suited to short run packaging since the press sheet is immediately cured and ready for finishing and no powder is required. • Smart Ryobi Plate Changing system provides simultaneous plate changing in roughly two minutes. • Ryobi High Grade Feeder assures stable, high-speed sheet feeding across all stock weights. The RYOBI MHI 750G Packaging Edition press has successful placements worldwide and saw its debut U.S. placement in May 2014 at Graphic Edge Printing & Packaging in metro Milwaukee. Veteran commercial printer Dale Skinkis, owner of Graphic Edge, reviewed all comparable presses before deciding on the RYOBI MHI 755 packaging press. “This is the most productive and cost-efficient press for premium, short-run package printing in North America,” he said. Putting ink on packaging board and labels has a bright future, with continued growth expected in the $170 billion North American packaging market. Much of the fastest growth in package print is coming from small and mid-size manufacturers of consumer products who need short run packaging to sell their products. Large consumer products companies look to versioning and targeted packaging runs to grow their market share. High-speed offset remains the highest quality and lowest-cost of production for folding cartons, labels and some flexible packaging—regardless of run length and nothing compares to offset for package durability. The RYOBI MHI 750G Packaging Edition press greatly expands capabilities for commercial and packaging printers as it reduces total manufacturing cost in this high value add segment of the print market. The press accommodates a wide range of paper, plastic and specialty substrates, from super-thin sheets to heavy board, delivering the precision, power and stability these stocks require. All Ryobi presses are backed by quick-response service from GSNA’s local, factory-trained technicians in the U.S. and Canada, together with engineers from RYOBI MHI headquarters in Japan. Versatile press also excels at general commercial and specialty printing “The RYOBI 750G Packaging Edition press delivers what many commercial printers are looking for today,” said GSNA Chairman Don Barbour. “The Packaging Edition is a highly versatile workhorse,” Barbour said. “It brings new cost savings and capabilities to a very broad range of general commercial printing and specialty package printing. In addition, for dedicated package printers, it’s robust and fast enough to handle all their shorter runs at the same quality they currently deliver to their customers.” Added Karl Belafi, Jr., GSNA co-founder: “In head-to-head matchups for functionality, print quality and total cost of manufacturing, the RYOBI 750 Packaging Edition series press outperforms any other 6-up press on the market today and digital can’t come close for image quality and durability.” About Graphic Systems North America (GSNA) and RYOBI MHI Graphic Technology RYOBI MHI Graphic Technology Ltd. is one of the world’s largest manufacturers of sheetfed offset printing presses. Its high-speed, fully automated presses are respected worldwide for unsurpassed print quality, low total cost of ownership, extreme ease of operation and unmatched reliability. Graphic Systems North America (GSNA) delivers the full line of RYOBI MHI sheetfed offset presses and technologies and highly responsive technical support and parts fulfillment to commercial, in-plant, packaging and other specialty printers. CRON CTP solutions are available through select GSNA distributors. GSNA serves all 50 states and Canada and also oversees a network of 20 printing equipment dealer-partners. More than 30 print industry sales consultants offer sophisticated business analytics to support capital equipment decisions. Fifty-plus factory-trained technicians and parts professionals deliver real-time support from Ryobi’s engineering and technical team in Japan. Spare parts depots offer overnight service across the U.S. and Canada. More information is at www.ryobi-group.com. For immediate release
Demand is strong as large tech companies are bullish on value of print; press runs nearly full-out over two shifts—six days weekly SANTA CLARA, CA—It takes bold confidence in future of print to invest more than $3 million in a new printing company startup. But that’s exactly what 25-year veteran printing company owner Mike Mahmoudi did when he opened Nino Press in the heart of Silicon Valley in 2013. The business serves some of the biggest names in global technology along with fellow commercial printers—differentiating on job turnaround speed, dependability and print quality. When it came time to decide on a flagship offset press for his new company, Mahmoudi, a trained electrical engineer, scrutinized all options from Japanese and German manufacturers. He choose a five-color, 8-up RYOBI MHI 925 offset press with aqueous coater late last year that, today, runs nearly full-out over two shifts, six days a week. The other presses, he said, just couldn’t compete in head-to-head comparisons. Mahmoudi said selecting RYOBI MHI was among the best business decisions for Nino Press, which specializes in high-quality books along with the full gamut of commercial and high-margin specialty print. “Our RYOBI MHI press can produce 98% of the jobs we would do on a 40-inch press—for a whole lot less money,” said Mahmoudi, who established a network of successful printing companies in western Massachusetts before doing the same in the San Francisco Bay Area in 1996. “It delivered the strongest technological package at the best acquisition price and lowest total cost-to-print.” The 16,200-sph press was sold by Kian Hemmen of Print & Finishing Solutions (PFS), Placentia, CA, and is fully serviced by PFS, which covers the Western U.S. for RYOBI MHI’s distribution group, Graphic Systems North America. PFS is a GSNA co-founder and partner. GSNA and RYOBI MHI are exhibiting at Graph Expo 2014, Sept. 28-Oct. 1, Booth 4404, McCormick Place, Chicago, and a RYOBI MHI 925 with built-in LED-UV instant cure will be demonstrated. For Mahmoudi, the RYOBI MHI 925 has been such a reliable profit-center—with its heavy automation, new production efficiencies and low cost-per-impression—that he expects his next offset press will be another RYOBI MHI. Comparing the economics of offset and digital Mahmoudi said successful printers today understand they need to have high-technology offset presses as well as digital presses to maximize profitability. The economics of certain very short-run jobs obviously favor digital. But on an increasingly large percentage of business over 250-500 impressions, the economics clearly favor offset, he said. The big reasons: automation and speed of today’s sheetfed offset presses versus digital’s high cost-per-page. Exceptionally fast turnarounds and extreme-quality print have been the cornerstones of growth at Nino Press and his other printing company, Bay Central Printing in Union City, CA, even through the extended recession. This day and age, Mahmoudi said, “the customer doesn’t want to wait—things have to be done right away. That’s how our operation is set up.” He said the days of a printer taking 48 to 72 hours to get a quote back to the customer are long gone. Today, in less than two hours, the customer gets his price quote, the printing company is chosen and the file is sent over for proofing and printing. Mahmoudi offered one example where a client needed 3,000 copies of a four-color, 56-page book with aqueous coated cover—in less than 18 hours. “They came to us on a Friday evening at 5—and said they needed the job in their hands by Saturday noon,” he explains. “We asked them to bring us the file, got them a proof while they waited and they approved the job on the spot. It ran overnight, was in the bindery at 6 a.m., and in their hands one hour before their deadline.” “Printing is so much about extraordinary service today—and the market for great service is always going to be there,” Mahmoudi said. Silicon Valley tech companies know print is a cost-effective supplement to digital marketing He is thoroughly bullish on the long-term future of print, and that’s saying a lot for someone who’s built two separate printing companies in the epicenter of global technology. “There’s very high demand for ink on paper around here and that’s not going to go away.” “Many tech companies do a lot of advertising using print—a lot of direct mail, brochures, catalogues and books. They know that print is a cost-effective, profit-driving complement to digital communications and marketing.” He added: “We also know the arguments about digital communications somehow being more environmentally friendly than print have been debunked. It takes an enormous amount of energy to run technology, and that energy has to come from somewhere. Paper, on the other hand, is a renewable resource.” Printing companies, he said, can cut operating costs with a low carbon and chemical footprint. It’s not just about using “green” to market to customers. His Agfa plate setter is chemical-free, and the new RYOBI MHI press draws less energy and uses less paper and chemicals than other 8-up presses. All coated and uncoated stocks are recycled and they’re printed using vegetable-based inks. Nino Press is in process of becoming a certified Bay Area Green Business, a designation his Union City facility already has. Nino Press employs nine people at its 10,000-square foot Santa Clara center. But it doesn’t look anything like a traditional printing company. “We made it look really high tech—a nice, clean operation. We literally stripped the interior down to the studs and put in brand-new everything—new offset and digital presses, new platesetter, new computers, new furniture, paint and flooring.” He said some visiting clients walk in and immediately wonder why they don’t smell inks and chemicals, the familiar smell of a traditional print shop. “We tell them we’re not a traditional printing company—and they can bank on that.” About RYOBI MHI Graphic Technology, Graphic Systems North America (GSNA) and Print & Finishing Solutions (PFS) RYOBI MHI Graphic Technology Ltd. is one of the world’s largest manufacturers of sheetfed offset printing presses. Its high-speed, fully automated presses are respected worldwide for unsurpassed print quality, low total cost of ownership, extreme ease of operation and unmatched reliability. Graphic Systems North America (GSNA) delivers the full line of RYOBI MHI sheetfed offset presses and technologies and highly responsive technical support and parts fulfillment to commercial, in-plant, packaging and other specialty printers. CRON CTP solutions are available through select GSNA distributors. GSNA serves all 50 states and Canada and also oversees a network of 20 printing equipment dealer-partners. More than 30 print industry sales consultants offer sophisticated business analytics to support capital equipment decisions. Fifty-plus factory-trained technicians and parts professionals deliver real-time support from Ryobi’s engineering and technical team in Japan. Spare parts depots offer overnight service across the U.S. and Canada. More information is at www.ryobi-group.com. Print & Finishing Solutions (PFS), Placentia, CA, is the authorized master distributor and provider of technical support for RYOBI MHI and RYOBI presses across the Western USA. PFS specializes in new and refurbished equipment, parts, supplies, installation, training and post-sale service/support for the print and graphics industry. The company serves commercial, in-plant, package and specialty printers and binderies of all sizes. PFS employs 30 team members dedicated to supporting the Western USA for sales and service. It owns and operates two live demonstration centers spotlighting world-class offset, digital and bindery solutions: one at its 14,500-square-foot Orange County, CA, headquarters facility, and the other at its new 9,000-square-foot location in Phoenix, AZ. The showrooms feature the latest equipment from RYOBI MHI, Horizon, MGI, Perfecta and more. At PFS, our overriding goal is to be your “Business Partner in Print and Finishing.” For more information, call PFS at 800-398-5283 or visit www.printfs.com. Contact: Mike Mahmoudi, Nino Press, Santa Clara, CA, 408-988-1717 Kian Hemmen, Print & Finishing Solutions, Placentia, CA, 800-398-5283 |
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