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Printing Tips & Troubleshooting

30cm DTF Printer, Dye Sublimation, or Mimaki JV150: Choosing the Right Production Route

por iColorPro Editorial Team 17 Jun 2026 0 comentarios

The June 17 Search Console data for iColorPro included 30cm dtf printer, dye sub printing, epson i1600 vs i3200, i3200 printhead, gravure ink filters, inkjet capsule filter, maintenance tank, mimaki jv150-130 series 54 inch printer, mimaki jv150-160 series 64 inch printer, and mimaki ts100-160. Those are not random searches. They show buyers comparing production routes: compact textile transfer, sublimation, and larger roll-to-roll signage workflows.

The useful question is not which printer is best in the abstract. A shop choosing between a 30cm DTF printer, dye sublimation setup, or Mimaki JV150/CJV platform should start with the finished product, daily volume, media width, printhead platform, and the maintenance parts that will keep the ink path stable.

DTF dye sublimation and Mimaki JV150 production route comparison bench with inks media and printer samples

Use the job type to separate the three routes

A 30cm dtf printer search usually points to a compact transfer workflow. DTF fits small apparel runs, gang sheets, logos, patches, and shops that need flexible textile decoration without committing to wide-format roll equipment. It is useful when the buyer values short setup time and wants to print transfers for cotton, blends, and mixed garments.

The dye sub printing signal belongs to a different workflow. Sublimation is strongest on polyester textiles and coated hard goods. The iColorPro guide What Is Dye Sublimation Printing? is a good reference when the job depends on heat transfer, coated blanks, and wash-resistant color inside the material surface.

The Mimaki JV150 and CJV searches are wider-format signals. The Mimaki CJV150-130 Printer Second Hand, Mimaki JV150-160 Printer Second Hand, and the Mimaki printer collection fit signage, decals, banners, vehicle graphics, and longer roll media work where width and production consistency matter more than desktop footprint.

Epson i1600 vs i3200 is a throughput and support decision

The query epson i1600 vs i3200 is a practical buyer signal because printhead choice affects output expectations. The existing article Which Printhead to Choose: Epson i1600 or i3200? explains the comparison in more detail. In short, a buyer should evaluate print width, desired speed, ink type, board support, service access, and whether the machine builder can supply stable parts over time.

The i3200 printhead signal also led to the Epson i3200-A1 printhead. That product is relevant to aqueous ink systems, so the exact suffix and ink chemistry matter. A head name alone does not decide whether a machine should run DTF, sublimation, eco-solvent, or another ink family.

Printhead and maintenance detail bench with Epson style heads CMYK ink bottles test sheets and service parts

Do not ignore filters and maintenance tanks during workflow selection

The phrases gravure ink filters and inkjet capsule filter both point toward filtration. The ink filter collection is relevant here, but the important detail is compatibility. Filter body material, micron rating, fitting size, flow direction, and ink chemistry should match the printer instead of being chosen by shape alone.

The maintenance tank signal is also part of the same decision. Waste ink handling, capping station condition, pump strength, cleaning fluid, and filter replacement intervals are not glamorous, but they decide whether daily output is repeatable. A production route that looks inexpensive can become costly if the consumables and service parts are hard to keep in stock.

Mimaki TS100-160 belongs to the sublimation side of the decision

The mimaki ts100-160 query connects to dye sublimation planning, and the iColorPro article Mimaki TS100-1600 Entry-Level Dye Sublimation Printer Explained is worth reading if the buyer is focused on polyester fabric, flags, soft signage, sportswear, or coated blanks. It is a different conversation from buying a JV150 for eco-solvent signage or a small DTF unit for garment transfers.

A shop that prints shirts today and banners next month may need more than one workflow. That is normal. The mistake is forcing one machine to behave like three different systems when the ink, media, curing or heat transfer process, and maintenance parts were not designed for that job.

A practical selection order

  • Start with the product: garment transfers, polyester sublimation, decals, banners, rigid coated goods, or mixed signage.
  • Choose the ink family: DTF, sublimation, eco-solvent, UV, or aqueous should follow the product, not the other way around.
  • Match the printhead platform: compare Epson i1600, i3200, and other heads by ink support, speed, and service availability.
  • Confirm media width: a 30cm unit, JV150-130, JV150-160, or TS100-1600 solves different production sizes.
  • Plan maintenance parts: include filters, caps, pumps, waste handling, tanks, and cleaning consumables before calculating real cost.

For most shops, the right route becomes clear after the finished product is defined. DTF is practical for compact textile transfer work, dye sublimation is the natural route for polyester and coated blanks, and Mimaki JV150/CJV equipment is built for broader roll-media production. The printer decision should follow that production reality.

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