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Heidelberg Builds Its Stand with Profit for Customers in Mind

04/08/2002


Hall 8 of Ipex 2002 houses 5,075 square meters of Heidelberg equipment which took 174 technicians or 2,516 of manpower (the equivalent of 11 years of one person's life) to construct.

George Clarke, Managing Director of Heidelberg UK, says: "The Heidelberg stand has been built in response to customer needs, a reflection of the type of one stop shop (or solution centre) which has become the normal production environment for today's printer. Although we can still sell products and service specialists, such as trade bureaux and finishers, we recognise that our customers need advice and support, reasoned response to specific production and business issues.

This Ipex integration is centre stage, physically with our theatre centrepiece, and it will be the key issue as production and business operations are married up to make greater efficiency and profit for our customers. This workflow revolution is as important, and will make as much profit difference to our customers, as the arrival of Autoplate did in the mid 1990s. Less easy to display or demonstrate, workflow is the weapon that will allow printers operating in a challenging market to regain margin and to build their business on real life data, not on a wing and a prayer."

Around this core are the solution centres, each with a full range of prepress, press and finishing equipment. Top items in the industrial centre are a Speedmaster 102-12P with CutStar, a Speedmaster SM 102-10P, a POLAR 137ED and the new Stitchmaster ST400 saddlestitcher, the most automated to date.

There is an adjacent straight printing area with both packaging and commercial versions of Speedmaster CD technology (the plate size of the commercial version is slightly smaller to match that of the SM 102).

Commercial printing area includes the SM52-5P with inline die cutting and the other B3 options, the Printmaster QM 46-2 and GTO-2, and an entry level B2 press, the Printmaster PM 74-2. Postpress items include the Stitchmaster ST 100 saddlestitcher.

In the digital print solutions area see two NexPress machines and two Digimasters as well as DI options, the SM DI 74-5PL and the Quickmaster DI 46-4 with in-line and off-line finishing options.

The commercial web area includes units of the Sunday 4000 64pp and Sunday 2000 24pp press technology, with a new PFM folder.

Heidelberg has matched the Ipex 1998 floorspace. The results, working with German stand builder Born & Strukamp, have been stunning and the creation of our Ipex showpiece trouble-free. This is the fourth and final IPEX project managed by Dennis Egerton, UK National Projects Manager, who retires in June after 20 years with Heidelberg.

At the stand over Ipex the company expects to consume 350 tonnes of paper, 1,000 litres of solvent, 2,000 litres of water-based inks, 850kg of inks, 1,000 litres of developer and machine room solutions and over 1,000 plates. The chemistry consumption is about ten percent down on last Ipex, an indication of the greater efficiency of today's automatic cleaning devices and plate consumption is reduced, too, as a result of more Direct Imaging and digital technology on show.

For further information:
Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG
Corporate Communications
Hans-Dieter Siegfried
Tel.: +49 (0)6221 92 50 63
Fax: +49 (0)6221 92 50 46
E-mail: hans-dieter.siegfried@heidelberg.com

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