Label Tec Scotland has installed the first Konica Minolta AccurioLabel 230 press in the UK to increase capacity in its digital department.
Label Tec Scotland has been using Konica Minolta’s technology for many years. In 2004, it brought in the first VP8020 laser colour printer, a sprocket-fed machine which offered 25 impressions per minute. Powered by a Konica Minolta print engine, this was the company’s entry into digital at a time when this technology was still very new in labels.
Running at the company’s Airdrie facility in North Lanarkshire, the new press replaces a Konica Minolta bizhub PRESS C71cf, also a UK first when it was installed in 2015.
Label Tec Scotland managing director Paul Dunne, who is also one of the printer’s founding partners, said, ‘We found that as soon as customers heard the word ‘digital’, they got very excited about it, but it was very much in its infancy when we moved into it.
‘The bizhub PRESS C71cf had a stable web path, which was important to us, because up until then that had been a constant problem, taking digitally-printed stock and then re-registering offline on our foiling machines. We worked closely with Konica Minolta on this project and the press produced very nice work for us over the years.’
Mr Dunne continues, ‘We are very happy with the AccurioLabel 230, because it has everything we wanted: web guides, higher speed and even the ability to slit. And the toner works incredibly well with our foiling, which has been a nice added bonus, so it was an easy choice to invest.’
The Konica Minolta AccurioLabel 230 has been vital in keeping Label Tec’s customers supplied with labels during the COVID-19 crisis, despite a large part of the company’s 20 staff being furloughed while most others are working from home to comply with social distancing.
‘The AccurioLabel 230 is so easy to run, and with no plates to worry about our pre-press guy can work from home and just transfer the print files via Dropbox.
‘We are now putting a lot of specialist jobs on the press that we wouldn’t necessarily have printed digitally before, and it is coping well with it all. The print is even resistant to alcohol – I tested some polypropylene by rubbing it with hand sanitiser and it’s bulletproof.’
As well as an upsurge in demand for durable labels for hand sanitisers, ventilators and diagnostic equipment, Label Tec Scotland has reported picking up new customers seeking to spread risk and order from several label printers, while others are ordering extra stock in, ‘so they can hit the ground running when production starts to ramp up again,’ added Mr Dunne.
Steve Lakin, label press sales consultant at Konica Minolta Business Solutions (UK), said, ‘With supply chains disrupted due to the pandemic, there have been many changes in the market. We are seeing jobs coming back from places like China, as buyers are forced to find more reliable ways of supplying labels. With the AccurioLabel 230 well-established in Airdrie, Label Tec Scotland can support all types of customers with high-quality labels, with just minimum staff on site. And with its long history with Konica Minolta, Paul knows this technology better than anyone else and he’s not afraid to push the boundaries.’