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letters coming up on the weed

depps74

New Member
Recently I have had inconsistent weeds. I mostly cut large section texts for museums so lots of 1/2-3/4" sans serif letters. I use a graphtec and mostly Oracal matte material. This last job was cutting on Oracal 751 had it perfectly dialed in on the previous job, cut the new job and lost about 12 letters per line!!! Replaced the blade, dialed in the force and blade height, but I still lost too many letters. Just wondering besides the basics if there are any useful tricks out there. I replaced blade, increased foce and knife height, changed blade holder, the strip looks ok, and the speed is always about 25.
 

Boudica

Back to "educational purposes"
Slow down when you're weeding? If you're going slow enough, you won't loose the letters. They might come up a little, then stop and take your time to get it fully separated, and back down in place. I assume you have dialed in your cutting force to leave a slight imprint in the liner. Not actually cut into, but leave a marking, so you can see where the letter goes.
 

rjssigns

Active Member
For small lettering I use 3M Electrocut with the poly backer. More money but way less frustration.

And Tex is on point. I call it the Band-Aid weeding method. Grip it and rip it. I've had good results with Electrocut losing maybe a letter or two on large jobs.
 

Joe House

New Member
Try backing off the force. It sounds counterintuitive, but when I'm do a demonstration on small cuts, I'll set the force 1 or 2 lighter than what I would normally cut at - and replacing the cut strip.
Also, are you letting the vinyl sit between cutting and weeding? Sometimes - especially if it's warm the adhesive can flow back together and hold the letters to the background vinyl. Weed as soon as possible.

Good Luck
 

bob

It's better to have two hands than one glove.
The 'just rip it off' technique works just fine. Especially if you do the ripping in a series of sharp tugs instead of one mighty snatch and jerk. When possible I try to reduce frustration by running a weed line horizontally right through the center of the text. How you do this depends on what software your wrangling, some packages are easier than others and with some it's not worth the effort. Whatever method you use, technique is vastly more important than plotter settings.
 
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jtiii

Beautiful day, great to be alive!
This is far from a universal solution but when it's appropriate it works. If you are applying yourself, weed out all the letter centers, apply the not-weeded lettering to the substrate, and just pull the trash off the sign. Works great with small text and the right vinyl/substrate. Be SURE to weed the holes though, otherwise that gets old fast.
 

Solventinkjet

DIY Printer Fixing Guide
This is far from a universal solution but when it's appropriate it works. If you are applying yourself, weed out all the letter centers, apply the not-weeded lettering to the substrate, and just pull the trash off the sign. Works great with small text and the right vinyl/substrate. Be SURE to weed the holes though, otherwise that gets old fast.
Similarly, sometimes it can be easier to weed small lettering by masking it before weeding, and weed from the masked vinyl.
 

depps74

New Member
Slow down when you're weeding? If you're going slow enough, you won't loose the letters. They might come up a little, then stop and take your time to get it fully separated, and back down in place. I assume you have dialed in your cutting force to leave a slight imprint in the liner. Not actually cut into, but leave a marking, so you can see where the letter goes.
I usually have it dialed in so well that I can pull a whole 24" sheet of 1/2" text 20 lines or so and loose less than 3 letters and a fe I dots. If I had to slow down to the pace your talking about I would be out of business as its only me. The down side is that its a deep cut so sometimes on the install paper will tear up but recently got it to weed well and separate perfect too.
 

Notarealsignguy

Arial - it's almost helvetica
Nobody weeds slow so they don't have to cut stuff again? Be careful and you won't have this problem, even if the pressure isn't exactly right.
 

Notarealsignguy

Arial - it's almost helvetica
how do you do that in illustrator? Is there a way to do that all at once. like if you have hundreds of letter?
Im sure illustrator is similar but in Corel, convert to curves (outlines) select all the nodes and filet by .01. Then the knife won't pick up on corners. Like Bob said, you can also cut a middle line.
 

Geneva Olson

Expert Storyteller
Im sure illustrator is similar but in Corel, convert to curves (outlines) select all the nodes and filet by .01. Then the knife won't pick up on corners. Like Bob said, you can also cut a middle line.
So, I was playing around in Corel trying to follow your instructions. I just typed in a name in a cursive font. I welded it..I can't select convert to curves because I welded it. BUt then I need to do what? where is the filet? do i add an outline at .01?
 

d fleming

New Member
Put a weed border around lines of text with a cut being horizontal at halfway thru the letters. Then weed top half, bottom half. Helps with smaller text. I normally rip weed small stuff off of my graphtec. My wife simply can't do it from fear, lol. It is either cut right or it isn't.
 

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