It did a number on the plate, put a really amazing gouge on the impression cylinder, and made an incredible sound before the operator got the thing. We have a ryobi 780e and would not buy it again, has a whole list of problems and are just now getting them worked out (after 2 years) But i hear only good things about the 750 series Just make sure you go through xpedx not a ryobi dealer What issues are you having that are getting worked out Did you buy it new.
The 9920 is indeed a ryobi 3200 When presstek bought ab dick co They only sold ryobi products from that point We service a few models of this press and they are ok machines Nothing to write home about Ryobi copied a 360 and that is how it is
Ryobi is backwards on their thinking They say a 3.5 mil stripe to the plate and a 3 mil stripe to the oscillator Should be reverse i always did about 3 mil to the plate an about 3,5 to the oscillator You dont want the plate driving the form roller The roller train should be driving the form roller. About ryobi 582h it depends more upon what you call consistent high quality, and how skilled and patient your press operator is
This equipment may get you ahead of where you are now, but it won't make you competative with all the colour trade printers out there that print full colour work fast, cheap, and right. Ryobi 525 gx having run a variety of press old and new, the sm52 will give your a lot of versatility Our configuration is a 6 color perfector (4/2) with aq coater Fast make ready for your short run stuff 1000 sheets or less 15,000 sph production with non stop feeder and delivery for your longer runs I believe the new machines come with the mechanic in the box.
We were having problems about 2 years ago & our presstek/ab dick service tech wanted to swap out for crestlines ($6500) After checking around, we found a ryobi service tech who told us most of the problems with the ryobimatic were usually simple adjustment problems Hi i am considering upgrading to a new press I presently run a presstek (ryobi) 34 di The di has been a great press for us over the past few years As our volume has increased i am finding that my hard costs on plates is starting to get up there when compared to conventional presses
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