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Re: WHICH HEAT PRESS
Posted: 02 Jan 2010, 21:44
by Calypso Bay
Hi Guys,
Ive seen an all in one press which does mugs, t-shirts and the rest, going for a good price. Should I go for it?
Its CE approved and brand new.
Cheers.
Re: WHICH HEAT PRESS
Posted: 02 Jan 2010, 21:57
by Justin
I've heard mixed reviews on these 5 in 1 presses. Personally I'm not keen but some folk swear by them. I know some of our members have them so they're in a better position to comment on them.
Justin

Re: WHICH HEAT PRESS
Posted: 02 Jan 2010, 22:25
by Calypso Bay
I thought as much,
I too feel it would be better to have each thing individually. Its on at £175.00 all in and I am tempted.
Re: WHICH HEAT PRESS
Posted: 02 Jan 2010, 22:28
by Justin
I can see that it would be tempting at that price. I do prefer seperate machines, if your mug press fails you can still do everything else and so on.
Re: WHICH HEAT PRESS
Posted: 02 Jan 2010, 22:34
by Stitch Up
I bought one of these just before Christmas - build quality is good and thus far, it's worked faultlessly.
I'm unsure if the CE marking is genuine however! My gut feeling is it's not as obtaining CE certification is very costly.
Check
HERE
Go for it.
John
Re: WHICH HEAT PRESS
Posted: 02 Jan 2010, 23:33
by JSR
Stitch Up wrote:I bought one of these just before Christmas - build quality is good and thus far, it's worked faultlessly.
I'm unsure if the CE marking is genuine however! My gut feeling is it's not as obtaining CE certification is very costly.
Check
HERE
Go for it.
John
What makes you think CE certification is very costly? Back at the factory I used to work at, CE was self-declared. You identified the directives that apply to your product and, if you comply, you issue a "Declaration of Conformity". It only became costly if you lied and someone challenged you and you couldn't prove your declaration.
I did read an amusing article which claimed that some companies put a slightly modified "CE" mark on their product which they state stands for "China Export" rather than the real "CE". You may wish to check on that (there is no legal marking for "China Export" with this near-CE symbol).
Incidentally, if you have any concern whether the press is really CE then you can ask for a copy of their Declaration of Conformity. This is a legal document and if you later find out the product doesn't conform then whoever signed the declaration could literally be locked up.
Re: WHICH HEAT PRESS
Posted: 02 Jan 2010, 23:38
by Calypso Bay
cheers, thanks for your responses guys
Re: WHICH HEAT PRESS
Posted: 03 Jan 2010, 10:14
by Stitch Up
I thought CE 'self' Certification was only for the product produced in the EU - perhaps I'm wrong.
Re: WHICH HEAT PRESS
Posted: 03 Jan 2010, 11:28
by JSR
Stitch Up wrote:I thought CE 'self' Certification was only for the product produced in the EU - perhaps I'm wrong.
Perhaps you're right. It seems a bit bizarre to charge and regulate products from outside the EU and then allow self-declaration within the EU. What makes EU manufacturers any more trustworthy than non-EU manufacturers? Being unfair towards non-EU manufacturers would simply encourage fake marks anyway. They may as well just have an agent in the EU who signs the declaration for them.
Re: WHICH HEAT PRESS
Posted: 03 Jan 2010, 12:02
by Stitch Up
There are so many bizarre rules and regulations.
Somewhile ago I used to supply PCs to small businesses. I used to build the PCs myself. I'd been doing this for years then one customer refused to pay for a network I installed.
To cut a long story short, I received a list of reasons for his refusal to pay from his solicitor, one item on the list was that the PCs I'd supplied didn't have the CE mark! It was then I contacted the relevant department and I'm quite sure they informed me I could download the 'mark' and print out myself providing the product was assembled in the EU. All parts were made in China

- What isn't these days?
Incidentally, I won in court
John