After a four-year, Covid-related break the German circular knitting machine manufacturer Mayer & Cie. is again exhibiting with its Turkish representative Mayer Mümessillik at the important International Textile Machinery Exhibition (ITM) in Istanbul.
At Booth 713 in Hall 8, Mayer & Cie. will present three machines: the D4-2.2 X interlock machine, the OV 3.2 QCe for double jersey structures and the MV 4 3.2 II for single jersey fabrics. For the Mayer & Cie and MMÜ team the focus will be on in-person contacts with customers, suppliers and partners. Despite the tense international situation both the manufacturer and its representative are positive about the medium-term outlook for the Turkish market. The portfolio of machines that Mayer & Cie. is exhibiting at the ITM is tried, trusted and popular. The OV 3.2 QCe is a specialist machine for interlock fabrics and double jersey structures that it knits in both filament and synthetic fibre yarns. With a conversion kit, the OV 3.2 QCe also qualifies as a producer of 8-lock structures, spacer fabrics and fine gauges. The machine is available in a choice of three frames: from open-width and industrial to giant frame.
“Not for nothing has the OV 3. 2 QCe been one of our most popular machines for years. It is mainly used for sportswear and for leisure- and outerwear,” said Stefan Bühler, regional sales manager for Turkey, adding that in Istanbul, the OV 3.2 QCe on show will be a 30-inch, E40-gauge model. Also on show will be the double-jersey D4-2.2 X which is described as obvious choice for knitting fine rib fabrics of up to E28 gauge. Spacer and interlock fabrics are also part of the machine’s established repertoire. It can also produce elastomeric plating in both cylinder and dial cam. No matter which of these tasks is assigned to the D4-2.2 X, it performs it with impressive productivity, Mayer & Cie says.
In the single jersey sector, the company will demonstrate the fine gauge MV 4 3.2 II in E38 gauge. The machine, which can also be supplied for gauges from E14 to E60, is a highly flexible model with a repertoire that ranges from piqué and double piqué to one-thread fleece and smooth single jersey. Despite many of the current challenges facing the market, Bühler and Kahraman Güveri, CEO of MMÜ continue to hold a positive view of the market outlook for the years ahead. “The challenges that the global economy faces are at present enormously wide-ranging, of course,” said Bühler. “The Russian invasion of the Ukraine, supply chain outages, shortages of raw materials and skyrocketing energy prices all create uncertainty.”
In addition to this, there is also galloping inflation in Turkey and elections in 2023. Yet despite, and in part because of, this state of affairs, large orders, especially for standard products, are on the increase. As Kahraman Güveri explains, this leads to new investments, new companies and a growing demand for refurbished machines that then need to be replaced by new machines elsewhere. And former commission merchants are now enterprises in their own right.
“Apart from that, Turkey benefits from its proximity to Europe, transport routes are manageable,” says Bühler. “This location advantage attracts brand manufacturers who together with their orders bring new approaches, new designs and new technologies into the country.”
That Turkey is already very highly developed textiles sector benefits too. That, says Kahraman Güveri, is why one can be confident for the next few years, “at least for as long as nothing unforeseen happens”.
The last ITM was held in 2018. Held every other year, the show fell foul of the Covid pandemic in 2020. It is not yet clear how attendance will compare with before the pandemic. “The ITM, together with the ITMA, was definitely a highlight in the trade fair calendar,” Bühler says. “I have my doubts as to whether it will attract such a large international turnout this time round. Yet we nevertheless look forward to it eagerly. There is no substitute for direct, in-person contact with customers and partners, and after two years of online meetings it is simply an urgent necessity.”