Piece-by-piece sublimation fits producers running pre-cut panels and mid-volume variety — sportswear, cushion covers, team kits. Roll-to-roll is the continuous-fabric choice for soft signage, home textile yardage and…
Drum diameter is the single most important spec on a sublimation calender. A larger drum wraps more fabric around the hot surface at once, so each square centimetre gets longer dwell time at the same speed — or the sa…
Sublimation calender presses rely on two heating principles: thermal oil circulating inside the drum, or electric resistance on the drum surface. The choice determines temperature uniformity across wide fabric, recove…
Buyers often compare a sublimation calender press with a digital textile printer as if they were rival machines. They are not. One creates the printed image on transfer paper, the other transfers that image onto polye…
A compact workshop calender and an industrial factory calender are not smaller and larger versions of the same machine — they are built for different shop floors. A workshop unit runs single-phase power, a 1700 mm wor…
A pneumatic heat press applies consistent cylinder pressure across thousands of cycles and removes operator fatigue from the equation. An automatic digital heat press keeps the same pneumatic pressure, then adds PLC r…
A narrow ribbon calender and a wide-format sublimation calender share the same thermal transfer principle, but they are engineered for entirely different fabrics, buyers and production economics. The Mearic MO series…