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CanuckSigns Just curious... how do folks send you orders for big ADA jobs?
In my experience, 95% of the big jobs literally start with a GM walking in with a big stack of blueprints "Here, figure out what we need to be compliant and bid it". Oof. Who has time for that?
(This was great when I...
I don’t do much braille, so I couldn’t justify the inserter cost. Maybe 10-12 small signs per year. I mostly use my EGX for routing acrylic and ACM letters.
About 25 years ago I worked for an electronics company (PCB board mfg. and board population -- aka soldering parts to motherboards). Employees used those "electronic tweezers" to handle the tiny parts for soldering. That's where I got the idea.
The tips are aluminum -- straight tips are plenty...
That makes sense!
Think I'll just have to tell the client -- yeah, we can do metal if you really really want, but here's "that" cost ($$$$) vs. going with a plastic option. Thank you!
What about making a square tube frame that matches the radius (paint it white to match the brick) and assemble everything in-house. Then bolt the frame to the brick wall with traditional masonry anchors. Think that might look okay?
If the letters are made with .25" aluminum, I could drill...
With a 6ft wide "flat" logo, the right edge ends up about 15" away from the building. It's such a thin swoosh to be hanging out in "open air". About 4.5" thick at the widest point, down to under 1" on the left side.
And if done this way, the letters and logo end up on different planes since...
Hi all!
I've got a customer requesting dimensional letters / logo (metal), to be installed on this curved brick wall. Who out there can fabricate this sort of thing? Seems like it would be pretty difficult to fabricate -- probably in the neighborhood of .75 - 1" thick (similar appearance as...
You can step it up (from DIY) a notch with "electronic tweezers". Never mind the list prices -- I picked up a couple on eBay for about $100/ea., years ago. They work great! (I also use them for pulling ink through lines)...
We've come close a few times to make a solid poutine. Really squeaky curds overnighted from Wisconsin (cheesebros.com), duck fat, etc... all the things. Still didn't quite match what I've had across the border though.
Lower ink costs if Canada becomes part of the USA? I'm all for it -- if that allows us to make poutine our national dish. +1 for squeaky cheese! :D Closest I can get is overnighting Wisconsin curds. :s
I haven't seen a price hike on the S80600 inks (yet). Still payin' $165/ea. (regular colors), and $225/ea. for white/silver.
(sorry I can't disclose the distributor. I know -- it seems like an azzhat move -- but I don't want Epson catching wind and forcing a price hike on them) I'm sure it's...
Yep. I'm sure they've beaten up installers for years on price. It's hard to negotiate with clients that have their own in-house sign shop (and way more buying power than us). Only good thing is -- unless they have a crew that's traveling the country for them (doesn't appear to be the case)...
For sure. I haven't priced a job this big before -- it's hard to gauge how many hours will be involved. This company has 119 locations, so they should already have a good idea about what pricing to expect. I should probably come in at something comparable, but how would you price something...
They used 3mm, but everything has a plywood backing. Appears to be pretty solid. I'm guessing that's why they started off with a 3ft wide panel on the ends -- to offset the plywood seams.
And yep... more stuff for a lift. These lift jobs just keep rolling in. Hopefully I can get one secured...
Jake's Fireworks requested that I re-do a sign at one of their locations, and sent "this" material to their store. I assume it's a really basic calendared film.
I don't think there's a way to recover these old panels (8 years old). They're terrible.
They used single-sided ACM for this job...
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