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I would agree with most here in saying i would sub out most of your larger items until you can get your shop into your garage or something with more space (and not a second floor). HP Latex is probably your best bet though once you have your space issue figured out. low odor and the ability to...
i would go 1 size up tbh. dont know what your budget is, but going a little bigger is going to open you up to more items to sell and media down the line.
what about fabritac, or the similar alternatives? removable, reusable (even after getting crumpled. can be saved if the contact paper is saved. would take some testing to see how it reacts with the surface but ive done them on golf carts and my fridge and my guitar without killing the finish...
yeah the market has become dominated by shops with quick turnarounds, some offering same-day or 24hr prints. when you are trying to keep up with shops with 15 printers in them and a fully staffed production facility, it puts anyone not in that state in a bind where theyre losing out on business...
Quite a bummer, considering the hype behind this thing. I remember seeing it encased behind plexiglass at ISA last year if i remember correctly. That was disconcerting. I would've liked to have seen this be successful considering all the things i had read before it actually made it into shops.
Yeah i would say that becomes a one time use type of deal if you are using any sort of adhesive. ill do a test on my end to see what happens. but have you thought about a heavy duty hooknloop option with a smaller either diecut or straight cut piece of corro? ive done that for a couple clients...
check your rail strips for wear on that side. ive heard of people wearing user side down a bit faster on smaller one off stuff if thats all theyre doing. also see if you can feel around your carraige wheels for binding or flat spots.
yeahh i would just make sure you put the tape over the read strip on the platen. when i was first figuring it out i wasnt always hitting the strip and would end up misaligned and have to clean and retape the thing. annoying but once you get it set, you can mark your platen so you can return to...
on our roland, we had to cheat the machine with a bit of tape on the platen to think the media was a bit bigger on each side. then from there its just using that base point and scooching the print over in the rip till you're clean edge to edge. im not sure with an epson it would be the same but...
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