In Search of a Better Folder
Tired of putting up with an outdated folding machine, Iowa Bankers Association’s in-plant began its quest for a new one. Here’s how it all turned out.
March 2010 By Bob NeubauerLIKE MANY in-plants, Iowa Bankers Association's two-employee print shop had been getting by for years with old, inefficient folding equipment. Its friction-fed Baum folder had been around since Gerald Ford was in the White House. It was slow, inconsistent and could not handle heavy stock very well.
"We run a lot of coated stock, and it would pull doubles all the time and scuff the paper really bad," remarks Todd Palmer, print shop coordinator at the Johnston, Iowa-based in-plant.
So last fall, he made a trip to Chicago for PRINT 09 to see some of the latest folders on display there. He had a few requirements:
"It had to be air-fed, for the coated stock. It had to be automated," he notes.
He found a couple models he liked, and sent out a purchase order for one of them. Then he got some disappointing news: the folder he wanted was a prototype. It wouldn't be available for at least three months.
Since Palmer had also been impressed with the Baum Flexifold, with its small footprint and user-friendly controls, he talked with his xpedx dealer about it. What he most liked was that, unlike the prototype model he initially wanted, "it's been in the field and tested."
His request went before the association's board and president, and was approved.
"They knew that it was time," Palmer says.
In November, the new Flexifold arrived in his shop. The Installation went well, he says, with only a few minor issues for the technician to take care of. By December it was up and running.
"I'm pretty happy with it now," says Palmer. "This folder actually does a lot of the folds that we couldn't do before."
The consistency of folds from piece to piece is much better than what the previous folder could do, he says. The Flexifold is faster and can handle more sizes and thicknesses of paper too, so the shop no longer has to outsource any folding jobs.
It's also helping the shop save postage. Palmer was able to fold a banking brochure printed on an 11x17˝ sheet down to 5.5x8.5˝ to fit in a 6x9˝ envelope.
He likes that the controls are easy to understand. This is important because some of the designers and other Iowa Bankers Association employees who use it are not trained in-plant staff.

A Field Guide to Folding
Introduction to Graphic Communication
Digital Paths to Profit
The Ultimate Guide to Multi-Channel Communications Solutions