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News
Release August 4, 2003
With
a new contract to print fifty thousand plus copies of Women’s
Wear Daily, an international daily fashion newspaper owned
by Fairchild, AFL Web Printing, a 29 year old commercial
web printer, will more than double the size of its Heidleberg
Mercury press.
Thirty-six
printing couples will be added by September at the company’s
Voorhees, New Jersey facility. The expansion will give the
press a total of 68 couples configured within 11 towers.
“Our
decision to expand the Mercury was based on the volume demands
of the new daily contract and the tremendous success we
have had with this Heidleberg press,” according to President,
Dennis G. Forchic. AFL Web Printing installed the original
Mercury with 24 printing couples and two JF-35 jaw Folders
in 1996. The company added 8 couples in 2000.
AFL
Web Printing produces 900 different titles annually for
close to 300 publishers. These non-heatset jobs include
daily, weekly, monthly and specialty publications. Along
with Women’s Wear Daily, the Mercury press will continue
to print the Philadelphia-area Metro newspaper. With a circulation
of 160,000 plus copies, the free paper is believed to be
the largest daily circulation newspaper in the United States
printed on a single-width, one-around press, on one folder,
according to Forchic.
“The
Mercury delivers superb print quality and reliability, but
for the type of work we do, the versatility and makeready
speed are equally important,” Forchic explains. Each week
AFL Web Printing completes an average of 300 press transactions,
a term Forchic uses to refer to complete job changeovers
and edition changes. For added flexibility of webbing, the
new system will increase the total number of pasters located
on the gear side of the press to 16.
Forchic
cited engineering, technical support and service as critical
factors in his company’s relationship with Heidleberg. “They
have worked side-by-side with us over the past eight years
to help us customize a press for our unique requirements
and then expand it as those requirements have evolved,”
he explains.
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