MPP-250S on Tour

The first guest appearance in Berlin at the World Money Fair.

MPP-250S on Tour

The first guest  appearance in Berlin at the World Money Fair. 

Stars go on Tour. And a star it is, the MPP-250S manual production press, the latest and definitely the most compact member of the Sack & Kiesselbach product family. In terms of price, ergonomics and space requirements, it represents a new dimension – currently unrivaled, there is simply no getting around it.

And so it is only logical that the MPP-250S should go on Tour – so that anyone who wants to can experience it live. 

MPP-250S: Everything you need for embossing.

Whether coins, medals, bars, medals, jewelry, glasses or watches: The MPP-250 is always just right. And to give you an even better idea of the qualities of the MPP-250S, here is a brief profile.

A Star without airs and graces

Little space required, little effort and sustainable

  • Minimal footprint and minimal overall
  • height
  • Simple installation – even without an S&K specialist
  • Energy-saving direct drive
  • Ideal for small batches

 

Optimum workplace

  • Ergonomically designed workstation – shortest possible distance to the work surface
  • Safe, enclosed tool area
  • Intuitive user interface
  • Fast tool change

 

Proven quality

  • Equipped with the proven Sack & Kiesselbach precision medal tool – customized for every customer
  • Sturdy cast iron press frame (GGG)
  • Precise stroke guidance
  • Press control based on the proven Siemens PLC

Welcome the MPP-250S as your guest

You can be there when the MPP-250S goes on Tour. Simply apply via our contact form or by e-mail to: sales@sack-kiesselbach.de and invite the MPP-250S to your premises.

You only bear the transportation / logistics costs and can test our manual production press at your premises and with your products for the agreed period of time.

Follow the MPP-250S on LinkedIn and Instagram. We’ll keep you posted on where the journey takes us.

other technology topics 

New dimensions of minting

The Mint of Poland produces a coin in the shape of a sphere. An upstroke hobbing press by Sack & Kiesselbach is being used for this.

Control over quality and costs

The State Mint in Berlin produces bimetal/bicolour collector coins in one single processing step on a TMP by Sack & Kiesselbach.