FlyingSquirrelBrigade
New Member
Bit of a novel here but: I'm doing some wayfinding signage and the design client settled on Acrylic letters with back mounted vinyl (blue) mounted onto some brushed silver acm... we did a batch of 100 for one building and we used our router table to cut the acrylic letters to shape. There's 7-8 letters a piece so 800 letters. Our method was printing the outline of each letter to the ACM and then usually what we do is use double sided tape but the letters are small and peel that and applying it would take forever so we tried a double sided clear pressure sensitive adhesive and our test seemed to work for the most part. So we applied vinyl to the acrylic back, then applied the PSA to it and then cut it all out together so we just peel each letter and apply to the outline. (we ran the finished product through our laminator rolls to activate the psa) Out of the 100 signs i've had to replace about 4 letters that fell off so 0.5% failure rate . The process worked well for a couple of signs but at scale we ran into problems of the router bit starting to pull off the vinyl in places. Could be adhesive getting gummed up on the router bit or it dulling. Just wondering if anyone had some other ideas for production method? I've theorized maybe we could run the zund with a cutting blade first on the outline of everything and then cut with the router... but I also have concerns at the failure rate of the letters and have wondered if using a glue or something else might be better? We have a second batch coming up in a month.