Mayer & Cie ships 77,777th circular knitting machine
Interviews
Mayer & Cie. technicians recall early days of Relanit
In this interview, they recall their pioneering days with the Relanit, which celebrates its 30th anniversary this week.
11th October 2017
Knitting Industry
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Albstadt
Relanit, one of Mayer & Cie.’s (MCT) most important and most successful machine types, is celebrating its 30th anniversary this week. Launched at ITMA in 1987, it uses relative technology, the circular knitting machine manufacturer’s proprietary development.
From the 1987 ITMA on, Mayer & Cie. began to receive orders. The first three Relanits were shipped to Berlin in January 1988. Jürgen Müller assembled them. He is still with Mayer & Cie., as are his colleagues Johannes Bitzer, Axel Brünner, Rolf Gonser and Thomas Maier. All five of them worked as technicians in final assembly back in 1987.
In this interview, they recall their pioneering days with the Relanit.
Even before the Relanit went into series production there must have been talk about the new technology. Were you aware that this new machine was going to be something special?
Johannes Bitzer: That much we knew, but we weren’t consciously aware of the fact. At the development stage we still had no clear idea of what was different about it. That only happened when the machine arrived in the assembly department and we had to deal with it – especially as we were the ones who went with it to the customer to set it up and explain it to him.
Axel Brünner: The system was different then from how it is today. Technicians were sent out from the assembly department to set up and service the machine. Today that is the job of the service department with its full-time travelling fitters. That was why, back then, everybody had to be up to speed on the subject because, as a rule, the technician who assembled the machine was in charge of setting it up at the customer’s.
More than 500 machines were sold in less than three years and 1,000 in four years. That was remarkable. What did this success mean for you personally?
Axel Brünner: For us it was good. We were still greenhorns but we knew as much about the new technology as the old technicians. They were something special and they didn’t tell us young ’uns everything. They had their little books they made notes in about how to do this or that. That was an opportunity for us to grow with the new technology. We saw how successful it was out there. With the old machines you needed a lot of knowledge and experience, you could do a lot more adjustment yourself. With the Relanit, technically speaking, there is nothing to change but the stitch length. So the Relanit was a springboard for us youngsters to acquaint ourselves with the technology. For that reason alone I have always been fascinated by the technology.
Were there uses of the Relanit that surprised you?
Axel Brünner: Difficult yarns, poorer qualities. That was why it was a success in countries where these kinds of yarn were often used.
Did that really come as a surprise to you?
Axel Brünner: Well, it was a surprise for the customers. For us, of course, it was more the objective. The relative movement and with it fewer deflection points was precisely the advantage we wanted to put to good use. That was why we were very successful right away in Egypt, for example. The good our performance for your profit cotton – hand-picked – was sold by the state to earn foreign exchange and the local knitters were left to process the rest. That worked extremely well with the Relanit.
Jürgen Müller: It wasn’t only poorer quality yarns but thicker yarns too. Yet the machine ran at full capacity where others would have had to slow down by 50%. The Relanit ran at 80, 90, 100%.
Axel Brünner: That was then a cost benefit for the customer because thicker yarn costs less than finely spun yarn.
Did you feel proud once it was clear that the technology was so successful?
Axel Brünner: It’s always a good feeling when things work! One of our competitors was at the same level as Mayer back then. So it was great to see our own machines compared with the competition and to know that the sales figures were good. For me that was certainly quite an experience. If you identify with the firm, you identify with the product too.
Thomas Maier: It was also soon clear that the success of the product safeguarded our jobs. For a while, we manufactured nothing but Relanit, nothing else ran off the assembly line. That proves you have got something right and it makes you feel satisfied. It also shows that your job is safe, especially after the lengthy crisis of the 1970s.
Why is a technology still cutting-edge after 30 years?
Axel Brünner: It’s like the GTI. It’s no longer the car it was 30 or 40 years ago; it went on to be developed to where it is today. You have to realise that manufacturing options today are a far cry from what they were 30 years ago. They too have grown over time. In the past you might well have liked to have one part or another work differently, but that was simply not possible production-wise. In production today we are now able to put ideas of the past into practice. The technology has grown over the years.
Rolf Gonser: In the past many things were not possible to the tolerance required or could not be manufactured at acceptable prices.
And the customers: Do they stick with Relanit?
Axel Brünner: Yes, some certainly do. We have regular customers who swear by these machines. They are aware of the benefits and put them to good use. For a certain product range the Relanit is then their perfect solution. It wouldn’t be true to say that it is always the right solution, but there is a certain product area for which it is perfect. Better than any other machine. If the fit is right – the product, the machine and the customer – you are onto a winner.
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