I want to thank all the members that have upgraded your accounts. I truly appreciate your support of the site monetarily. Supporting the site keeps this site up and running as a lot of work daily goes on behind the scenes.
Click to Support Signs101 ...
We have a flatbed and no sewing machine. We do have a hem welder though. I'd hate to know how poorly I'd finish a banner with a sewing machine :roflmao:
2 heads in the S80600. 10 channels each. They are exact copies of each other, so all inks pass through both heads with the same colour arrangement.
It's weird that it looks like you can see multiple mis-alignments though.
What head height are you running? Maybe it's too high for the material...
Saw that earlier today... VR has come a long way recently and is better to get a sense of vertical scale and furniture/object placement.
VR also doesn't need 10,000sq ft of floor space to do it.
You'll have much better luck getting 12.2 loaded in Windows 7. I'm not sure I was ever able to get it working properly in 10 either.
Do you have the hardware dongle for Onyx? Without it you won't be able to get it running.
Onyx can be a bit funny about importing SVG files sometimes. In Illustrator we export as SVG 1.0 format which always seems to work.
Spot colours are irrelevant in the 1.0 spec, so Onyx will convert any hairlines into cut lines. I've just tested this on a multi-colored file exported to SVG 1.0...
New strips are under $10 on the Roland DGA website... maybe just stock up on a couple while you're waiting.
https://dgastore.rolanddga.com/pad-cutter-bn-20-1000007739
Think of how large this banner is and how far away people will be viewing it from. It's not a 6x4" photo print, so doesn't need the same resolution artwork.
I wouldn't be using anything higher than 75dpi for images in this design.
Makes no sense to remove the application tape *if* this was layered as you claim. You'd just have to mask it up all over again to apply.
That said, you could try a low tack app tape which you could try to pull back off to achieve this.
Pretty sure Onyx will only give you a discounted rate if upgrading from the previous version of whatever is "current". Same as their driver download policy.
Fan shrouds out of the 3D printer:
Shrouds installed in place of factory 25mm fans:
Noctua 40mm fans installed. Had to use zip/cable ties as I couldn't be bothered 3D modelling screw threads:
Factory fan specs:
2cfm @ 11,000rpm
Noctua fan specs:
4.8cfm @ 4,500rpm
Saturn is spot on... these are the fan shroud adapters coming out of the resin 3D printer. The bottom "square" replicates the small factory fan skeleton. These attach using the factory holes and screws.
At the other end of the shroud is where the new silent 40mm fans are attached.
All of this...
It's normal... they drove me absolutely mental, so I converted mine to silent Noctua branded 40mm fans by 3D printing some new shrouds which stepped down to the 25mm size. The printer is now absolutely silent when idle.
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.